Monthly Archives: March 2014

[From Pete] Fancy: My First Delivery In Africa

One year ago, Pete wrote wrote his only post to date on what was then our Little Olsen blog.  The piece was and is deeply meaningful. It offers a small glimpse into the heart of who he is as a physician.  After being submitted to Minnesota Medicine magazine by a colleague, the article was selected for publication in its August 2013 issue, and Pete was later invited to share it at the annual fundraising gala for the hospital at which Pete now works. I could not be more proud to stand beside this man, husband, father, friend, and physician as we prepare to make Africa our home.

Here’s a look back at the post he wrote on a rainy evening near Tenwek Hosptial in Kenya, East Africa…

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I’ve been wondering for months, maybe even years, what my first delivery would be like after we arrived in Africa. Would it be a vaginal delivery? A cesarean section? Would instruments be available? What about assistants? Would I even be in a hospital? You see, I’m used to the very best.

As a 3rd year resident at the Duluth Family Medicine Residency Program, most of the vaginal deliveries I’ve participated in are attended by two or more physicians—an attending, a resident and sometimes even an intern. By the time the patient is ready to give birth, she and the baby have been carefully monitored for hours. We have a good idea of what to expect, and we have everything we need in case something doesn’t happen the way it should.

For those vaginal deliveries that take an unexpected turn, we can change over for a cesarean section in about 10 minutes. By the time we arrive in the pristine operating room with the patient, an array of sterilized, neatly wrapped surgical tools is waiting for us, along with a team of trained surgical technicians who will later hand them to us when requested (often even before–they know each surgery so well!). An anesthesia team is there to provide pain control and to intubate and breathe for a patient in case of a “crash section” (emergency surgery to save mom and/or baby). The Neonatal Intensive Care Unit has a resuscitation team and an incubator ready in addition to all the tubes, lines and cords needed for the most serious of resuscitations. Oh…and our awesome obstetric nurses are there, too.

I could go on, of course. But we’re not there. We’re in Africa. And it’s different here.

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It didn’t start the way I expected it would. I was paged to Casualty (the emergency department) to attend to an 18-year-old who was pregnant with her first child. She hadn’t reported any contractions or vaginal bleeding. I didn’t even have time to ask her if she felt her baby moving.

There wasn’t time for questions. When I arrived in the small room crowded with eight beds and even more patients standing or sitting as they waited for care, the clinical officer (CO, similar to a physician’s assistant) looked at me with panic. He pulled back a curtain to reveal a flurry of activity: The young woman was lying on a bed. A nurse was hurrying to start an IV while humming a hymn. Another nurse had just arrived with an oxygen mask, freshly washed and ready for reuse.

The CO rapidly explained that two girls had dropped the patient off at the door; they couldn’t be found. I felt the young woman’s pedal pulse. It was weak and thready. I glanced up at her face. She looked slightly ashen, and was gasping for air. Her uterus was at or below her belly button, meaning that the baby was either small or at about 20 weeks gestation or less. (A nurse confirmed she was 20 weeks pregnant shortly thereafter.)

Don’t forget the ABCs, I told myself. Airway, Breathing and Circulation. She has a pulse, and she’s breathing (albeit with difficulty), but she’s losing her airway. As I moved to the head of the bed, a dark, liquid began spilling from the patient’s nose and mouth. We suctioned, intubated and started breathing for her. Then we placed a nasogastric tube and suctioned another 200 mL or so of the black substance from her stomach. We still don’t know what it was.

By now the cardiac monitor was on and the patient’s heart rate was in the 130s. One of the nurses looked up and told us the initial blood pressure was 70/50 mmHg, but now she couldn’t get one. I felt the patient’s neck for a carotid pulse; there was none. “Start CPR,” I said.

With the chest compressions we heard intermittent cracks (ribs breaking from the pressure). At two minutes, we checked for a pulse and gave epinephrine to shunt blood back to the heart and encourage cardiac activity. We kept doing CPR and giving her epinephrine every three minutes, checking for a pulse each time. After 40 minutes without a pulse, I called it. “Time of death: 10:24 a.m.,” I said softly.

I helped the nurses clean the patient, remove the lines and apply fresh linens. Then I prepared for the hard part—talking with the family.

I had a room prepared so I could tell them thatthe mother and her baby had died. They were inconsolable, of course. I spent a few moments with them before I left them with the chaplain and returned to the emergency department where another patient needed care.

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Two days later, the family returned with one request: to have the opportunity to bury the mother and baby separately. I spoke with my supervising physicians who agreed this was reasonable.

I led the family to the morgue and had them wait in the office. It was time for my first delivery in Africa, a postmortem cesarean section.

She laid draped in a perfect white sheet on a rusty, steel table. Even though the mother was dead, I used a surgical technique very similar to the one my attendings in Duluth had trained me to do. As I cut, the smell of formalin filled my nostrils. A moment later, I delivered a beautiful, tiny, lifeless little girl. I carefully closed the mother’s tissues, using a subcuticular stitch to close the skin.  It wasn’t necessary, but it felt right.

I draped the mother again and then carefully attended to her little girl, who was only slightly larger than my hand. I washed her gently and placed her in a new swaddling blanket, her arms gently folded.

One of the morgue attendants went to get the father and the rest of the family. They arrived, not knowing what to expect, but when dad saw me holding his baby girl, his eyes started tearing. I asked if she had a name. “Fancy…Fancy is her name,” he said, barely audible. “Well, Fancy is a beautiful little girl,” I said, handing the swaddled baby to dad. “I’m sorry that her time with us was so short, but I believe that she is now with Jesus where there is no pain and no suffering…where we’ll all be together again.”

I began to pray, my two fingers on the side of Fancy’s head as we invited God to be with us and bring His peace. Everyone, now in tears, slowly filed out of the room. Dad stayed a moment, took one last look at Fancy, handed her to me, and said, “Asanti” (thank you).

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 The rain refreshed us as we walked from the morgue back to the hospital where we parted ways. It was early evening, and I was done for the day. I loosened my tie and draped my white coat over my arm to the let the rain gently wash over me on the way home.

I was greeted by a beautiful little girl who came dashing up to me yelling, “Daddy, Daddy, I have an umbrella for you.” I scooped Ella into my arms and kissed her. I walked toward apartment No. 7 and let my eyes meet Angela’s. She knew instantly. She simply has a way of knowing that no one else does. I kissed and snuggled Sam, our son, before she quickly swept both children into their bedrooms for the night. I let the warm shower wash off the formalin, then I dressed and sat on the living room couch, reflecting on what had happened.

Yes, this young woman losing her life and her baby was tragic. But in the end, I’ve never been able to stop someone from dying. Hester Lynch Piozzi, an 18th century British author, once said, “A physician can sometimes parry the scythe of death, but has no power over the sand in the hourglass.” It’s true.

But I’ve also learned that one of the most compassionate acts we can do for one another is to relieve suffering and pain—to make room for healing. And tonight, when one dad looked back at another, there was a silent understanding that healing had begun, and then a quiet “Asanti.”

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Spread the Word to End the Word

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Today is the day, friends! It’s a day that you can take action to end the use of the R Word. A few years ago, a small campaign was started, offering people the opportunity to take a pledge to remove the words retard or retarded from their vocabulary. I wrote about why using the R Word actually does matter last month and was amazed with the outpouring of support and personal stories of why you, the incredible readers of The Mango Memoirs, choose not to use the word. At the same time, I realized that there are many, many people who just aren’t aware yet of the impact and hurt the word can have. By joining in this campaign and spreading the word to end the word, we can stand up for and with those who are being labeled with this hurtful, outdated term and we can rid it from our language altogether.

Spread the Word to End the Word has a fantastic website dedicated to sharing the message and educating people on the use of the R Word. Their Why Pledge page has answers to questions about the history of the term as well as the effects of the word in identifying those with intellectual disabilities. Please take a moment to read through some of those to become more aware of the issue. When you’re ready to make the pledge to toss it from your vocabulary, click on the Pledge & Be Heard button at the top of any of the pages on their website to make your commitment.

Do it for this little guy and his friends, so that they might someday live in a world where the R Word doesn’t exist.

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And when you do make your commitment, comment here! I would LOVE to hear about it! And from one mama who never, ever wants to hear the word, no matter what context it’s used in…THANK YOU!

 


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{inspired} Soapy Bathtub Paint

 

Soapy Bathtub Paint // The Mango Memoirs

This winter has been crazy cold, and that’s saying a lot coming from northern Minnesota. I’m doing my best to avoid complaining about it since we may only have a couple winters left with any snow at all. The hard part, though, is that it’s so cold we can’t really play outside. Because of that, I’m trying to get better about finding indoor activities, especially for Ella.

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In the last two weeks, we’ve come up with a few things that Ella has been super excited about. She’s gone a bit crazy over baths ever since I introduced color to the picture. She now begs to play in the water every afternoon during Sam’s nap, which seems a whole lot more like a treat at that hour of the day. I also don’t feel like we have to rush through it to get ready for bed. I can clean the bathroom or catch up on emails while she splashes. I’ve even taken the time to paint my toes after soaking my feet in the warm water. She thinks this is hilarious, but I’ve convinced her a couple times to give me a little ‘mermaid’ foot massage. (Seriously, parents, we just have to get creative with our self-pampering time!)

So yes, we’ve introduced a little mermaid bath time. Simplest thing ever. She puts on her swimsuit, which she insists is a must for a mermaid, and carefully chooses a color. The colors come from a little box of food coloring I have. Just the typical liquid drops of coloring, the same ones I grew up dripping into vinegar water for Easter eggs and powdered sugar frosting for Christmas cookies. Nope, it doesn’t stain a thing. It leaves absolutely no trace on skin or the bathtub after we drain the water. I put 5-8 drops into the tub once it’s filled and Ella happily stirs it with her ‘mermaid tale.’ Voila! Beautifully colored mermaid water. What a treat!

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The other thing we tried last week was bathtub paint. Simple simple simple. Here’s what you need:

  • 1/2 cup baby shampoo or baby wash
  • 1-2 tablespoons corn starch
  • liquid food color
  • small bowl for mixing
  • muffin tin or other container for paints
  • paint brush

Mix the shampoo with the corn starch in a small bowl. The more corn starch you add, the thicker the paint will get. Pour the mixture evenly into the cups of a muffin tin or into small containers. We used a little muffin pan, which worked well for setting on the edge of the tub. Put 1-2 drops of food color in each and stir with the paint brush or your finger.

That’s it! Ella loved being an ‘artist mermaid’ and painting the walls of the bathtub. The paint isn’t very thick. Since it’s mostly made up of soap, it can be used to wash during the bath or to clean the tub. It all comes off beautifully with a little water.

Do your kids have bath time games or activities they love? Do you? I’d love to hear them! The more ideas we have, the merrier!


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