Hello, again. I hope God is blessing you wherever you are. We are doing well here. Our numbers in the clinic are trending up. I think the change in price along with word getting out that we will help regardless of ability to pay is making a difference. Speaking of numbers going up, our nurses delivered 7 babies in April. I forgot to mention it in the update for April, but I’ll give them a shout out now. The nurses are doing a great job and have grown into their role here. Sometimes I feel the staff here is doing well enough, they are almost working me out of a job. However, I will claim credit in delivering one of the babies here at the clinic in May. To be fair, the mom did all the hard work!
One of my biggest frustrations here is the difficulty in getting people to keep their appointments. For example, the girl with the burns that I mentioned last month. I told the mom to try to keep her burns covered and come back if the dressing came off. But she did a very poor job of this. On return visits the dressing would have been off for a day or 2. The burn was not healing well, so I told her she needed to come back in 2 days, but she quit coming. I don’t think they live far from the clinic, but we don’t know where, so I can’t go find her. Hopefully she will heal ok. We had a 2 year old come with burns on his left arm from dumping hot porridge on it. They come from much further away. Almost an hour by moto. They have been faithfully keeping their appointments, and he is healing well. I thought Friday might be his last visit, but they didn’t come back. Hopefully that is a good sign. Last week we had a man brought to the clinic for scattered burns on his left arm. He is fou (crazy) and had been trying to get into someone’s house and they threw hot water on him. He had some minor second degree burns, so I did a simple dressing. I talked to the man who came with him and tried to understand the situation. We don’t have much to help, but I gave him some valium pills and told him to give the man one if he needed to calm down. We don’t see many true psych patients here, thankfully. There isn’t much we can do for them. Around the end of February, if I remember correctly, we had another “fou” man brought to the clinic. The story was he had been in sendoming (the DR) and had been fighting with people there so his parents went to get him. He had only been back a day or so, but was causing trouble and they wanted me to give him a shot to calm him down. This seemed a little unnecessary to me as he was sitting quietly watching me. I tried to ask if it was possible he had taken any drugs in the DR. They didn’t seem to understand. I told them to go home and I hoped whatever he might have taken would wear off. Apparently normally he isn’t crazy? Anyway I forgot him until 3 weeks ago when Roosevelt and a couple other youth boys came to our gate. This man lived behind Fre Berlin’s house (Fre Berlin’s wife is one of our nurse aids) and he was causing trouble fighting with people. I got my moto, stopped by the clinic for a syringe and some valium, and followed them over to Berlin’s house. This man was up a path behind the house outside a little building. His hands and feet were tied together and another man was holding a leash. He was hopping around and yelling incoherently. His actions and incoherent speech reminded me of the psych/drug patients we see in the US. I asked if he had taken anything and they were certain he hadn’t. What could have caused this? They all said he was a good boy before. Did he fry his brain on bad drugs in the DR? Or some concoction from a witch doctor? Or an evil spirit? He was hopping around trying to hit people. They held him down while I gave him the valium. That didn’t even slow him down so I had to go back to the clinic for ketamine. After he was asleep, I gave them some valium pills to try to give him in the morning. The next day they said he was up and just as feisty as the night before. They didn’t ask me to come back, so I haven’t. Honestly a very sad situation, but there are no psychiatric hospitals in Haiti that I know of.
The situation in Port is very tense, but the gangs are letting people travel around again. They are hoping to get on the people’s good side before the Kenyan force comes to Haiti. After all their violence and destruction that seems very unlikely. However this does give us the opportunity to buy medicine in Port and for MFI to make a couple of flights and bring some supplies from the US and get our vehicle papers updated. Our agents in Port are working on this and hopefully we will see results in the next week or so. Thank you for your support and prayers. God bless you all!