Thursday, February 5, 2009

Big Splash


Growing up my brothers and I would compete to see who could make the biggest splash jumping into the pool. I never won.
As mentioned in my last posting, I succeeded in getting nothing accomplished in my first three months in Mwanza. Making a difference, making a measurable difference...is that what it is all about? A big splash makes a difference but once the ripples die away, the pool, perhaps short a small volume of water remains the same.
This visit I brought two vital sign monitors purchased with the generous donation of funds from my home church, Davidson College Presbyterian Church. We've put the monitors to immediate use at the triage station and in the wards of the casualty department.
Today another woman with white eyelids and abdominal pain was rolled in on a stretcher. The new monitor revealed her blood pressure to be 85/49 and her heart rate was 140. She was cool to the touch and her abdomen was tender. In a previous posting I shared a similar case that turned out to be an ectopic pregnancy. Today was a virtually identical experience as I squeezed in the only unit of O positive blood in the hospital and waited for her to get to theatre. After she was gone I walked around the ward with a nurse from Kenya on her first day in casualty and we used the new monitor to take the women patient's vital signs.
A woman who moaned quietly as the drama of the first patient unfolded shared with the nurse that she might be pregnant. The machine reported her blood pressure as 105/79 and her heart rate was 107.
She got up to provide a urine sample ordered by the gynecology intern and passed out.
We repeated the same interventions for this quiet woman who also had an ectopic pregnancy.
These new monitors will accomplish nothing that could not have been accomplished without them. Nurses taking vital signs and a history on the patient's arrival is a process that requires no more than mercury manometers which are present but in short supply.
The question whose answer disturbs me is: When these monitors no longer work and the big splash(ok, small splash) and ripples have subsided, will the pool short of a small amount of water remain the same?

1 comment:

Unknown said...

You made a Big Splash by sharing your experiences in Mwanza with us during Sunday School Steve and the ripples haven't stopped yet. Your thoughtful approach to your work there is inspiring and we're lucky to have you as a part of our church. For those of us who start thinking about that "red convertable", I hope I can follow your example instead. God Bless.