Monday, May 2, 2016

Nkhoma Hospital

Here's a note from the hospital in Nkhoma where I lived for 2.5 years. They do great work at the hospital and could use help in realizing their plans for the future of the hospital:

At Nkhoma, a small village in Malawi (the 5th poorest country of the world) is Nkhoma Hospital, now in its hundredth year.

The people of the community as with any other municipality need health care. Currently the hospital is under-resourced with sick children having to share beds, eye care patients waiting for hours on hard benches to be guided to their operations, no any privacy in the labour room and very bad facilities for the guardians (those who come to take care of the patients).

To serve the patients with love and care, Nkhoma Hospital needs better facilities not just for the patients and their guardians but also for the hospital staff too.
SOMETHING NEEDS TO BE DONE !!!!!!!

In June 2009 together with hospital managemenent and staff, I have put together a plan for the future. We have created a master plan and concept designs for throughout the hospital.
To realize the plan we need help, your help.
To find out how you can help please visit our website (www.nkhomahospitalfoundation.com). With your help we are sure Nkhoma Hospital can give the health care the community needs and the staff the working conditions they deserve.

Please do feel free to send this message to your family, friends and network.

With kind regards, on behalf of the board of Nkhoma Hospital Foundation,

Thijs Noordhoek, chairman

Monday, April 25, 2016

Eye clinics

In Bayonnais, Haiti, we had 3 optical professionals come with us for the beginning of the week. Dr. Paula, from Friendship Baptist church in charlotte, had been down last year. When she visited the school, she noticed that none of the 2000+ students had glasses. She knew that it couldn’t be possible that none of them needed them so she went home gathered her resources and 2 colleagues and came down with us. The first 2 days of our week there we spent checking the eye sight of the students from 3rd grade and up. That is over 1500 students! And then we managed to see adults in between the morning and afternoon school sessions!

In our whirl wind arrival, we were given instructions on conducting the eye test with an eye chart (that big E chart we all know). In the church we set up 4 stations with the charts and taped out the distance on where to stand. There were 2 of us and a translator for each station. I was designated the “gate keeper.” Each student filled out a card with their name, age, and class. Then the classes would come to me at a table outside the church. I would write a number (1-4) to designate which station to go to—in the hopes of separating friends and cut down on copying and some peer pressure. I think it worked.

Talk about some organized chaos! Someone worked out that it was about 2 minutes per student for the test. Each station saw roughly a fourth of the overall number—but I saw them all—and often more than once! If the kids could read the chart they were sent back to me (or my table where I got my translator to help as I didn’t really need a translator) to get a hygiene pack that had been prepared and sent by our home churches. The packs had a wash cloth, tooth brush, tooth paste, soap and comb (or some variation). If they couldn’t read the chart they went to the doctors where they were tested to get a prescription. They had brought (or sent) down many glasses of different prescriptions based on some research that Dr. Paula had done with her many mission trips and so the student would then go to Dr. Burke to get glasses. Everyone got a hygiene pack at the end of the eye exam.

So 2000+ were tested. About 573 were sent to see the doctors for further testing. 135 people got glasses and more prescriptions were brought back to Charlotte to be filled and sent down with the next OFCB group! That is some good work!

It was a very busy 2 days—hectic, crowded, chaotic, but so good to know that some people were getting to see clearly for the first time!
Many of the adults we tested couldn't read so we found this poster of animals to help with our assessments!

Monday, April 18, 2016

Lights

the many different ways to use the solar lights: as a lamp/flashlight, in a diffuser to light up a whole room (that doubles as an amplifier for sound), to charge your phone
testing the lights so we know how to explain (or demonstrate)

giving a light to a family

Friday, April 1, 2016

Solar lights

A Haitian house is often 2 or 3 rooms with walls of mud brick or concrete block. The windows if they have them are very small because there isn’t glass to keep out the unwanted animals (and people) and so they don’t let in much light. Going inside in the day time is like walking into a very dark closet—we would reach out to flip the lights on but that isn’t possible in Haiti. In Haiti the electricity (assuming you have it) is still off more than it is on. After the sun goes down, most of life goes to bed because there is no light, unless you have a generator which is very expensive to buy and then to run. So with the only light coming from the doorway the rest of the room is always in dark shadow, with the contrast of the blindingly bright sunshine and the darkness your eyes don’t really adjust.
We took 27 solar lights from Montreat Presbyterian Church’s alternative Christmas giving, provided by the Light Foundation which was founded by Olsen and Marilyn Huff (members of Montreat Pres) and their son Steve to Haiti. That means 27 households now have a reliable source of light in their homes. We cannot imagine what that means.
Personally, I got to deliver solar lights to 2 students’ families. The joy and pride on the students’ faces as we walked to their homes amidst the crowd of children that always surrounded us was priceless. They knew that this was going to help them. As we went over the many different settings and ways to use the light, I watched the fierce concentration of everyone around trying to remember everything that was said (and/or to understand my explanations as I was the translator into the French/Creole that I speak).
At the second home, it was only the 8th grade student who was at home. We had passed her mother at her roadside stall selling food, and she sent us up to the house. I misunderstood and thought she would be coming, but then realized my faulty reasoning that if she came then she wouldn’t have anyone at her stall. There were some neighboring children there, very curious and interested. I was a little worried about leaving the light but as we went through the settings and explanations she was very attentive. As we finished and put the light away and were getting ready to go back, her older brother arrived home. She wanted me to go over it all again with him so that they would both know what to do. I agreed and then had her do all the explanations and demonstrations to be sure she understood. She did a great job and was so proud. Her brother was very impressed as well. As we passed her mother’s stall on the way back to the guest house, she thanked us again and again. She knew that the light would be used to help her family and she was grateful.

Friday, March 18, 2016

Haiti--Bayonnais

At the end of January, I returned to Haiti! I was there for 2 weeks. The first was spent in Bayonnais with a group from Montreat and Charlotte, NC. The second was back in Port-au-Prince with Haiti Outreach Ministries.

Not much had changed at the airport. There is a new $10 fee to enter the country but that isn't much compared to many places. All of our bags came through though it did take some time. Another mission group had used the same bright green duct tape on their bags which was a little confusing. Got out to the school bus that would take us the 3+hours north to Bayonnais to find the reverse beep was broken and now ON all the time that the bus is on. Not a bad rode though the last hour is off the highway and very bumpy (I'm used to off roading). We were even more relieved than normal to get off the beeping bus!

The US organization that helps in Bayonnais is Friends of OFCB. The Haitian organization is OFCB. Operation Force Christ of Bayonnais. It is now headed by Pastor Actionnel Fleurisma. In 1993 he helped to start a school in his home village of Bayonnais with 105 students and 3 teachers. Now there are more than 1,700 students in kindergarten thru 13th grade. And they have started 2 satellite schools for the children who have been walking for 2 hours to get to school! Want to sponsor a student?

There is also a church there that has grown from a small cinder block church to a larger space used for education classes and community meetings. Along with a clinic for healthcare, and agriculture program, a local bank with a micro-credit loan facility many great things are going on in Bayonnais. Graduates are returning from university to work in Bayonnais at the school and in the clinic.

It is a very friendly area and there is always someone aaround who would live to practice their English, share ideas and ask and answer questions. I visited briefly in 2013 when mom was down with FOFCB and am glad I had the opportunity to return.

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Food distribution-Malawi

200 bags of maize ready for distribution
waiting for the distribution


signing for the bag of maize
thumbprints or signatures


leaving with a month's worth of food
visit Marion Medical Mission to learn more!

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Famine

Malawi is going through a terrible famine right now. The harvest was bad last year in that there really wasn't one due to the flood in November 2014 and the the rain stopping completely. People are starving. The harvest for this year is looking pretty good right now, but it is still growing and not ready to eat yet. Marion Medical Mission is helping to provide maize (the basic staple food) for families to get through this hunger time. I'll let this letter from Tom Logan tell more (and will follow up with pictures I took at one distribution) :

February 16, 2016

The famine in Malawi is real.

Marion Medical Mission’s (MMM) impossible goal in September of 2015 was to buy and distribute 10,000 110 pound bags of maize.

As a result of many wonderful giving people and Churches MMM has purchased 29,200 110 pound bags of maize and by February 20, 2016, will have distributed this maize to an estimated 80,000 people. And for only $16 per 110 pound bag.

Rev. Kachipapa, General Secretary of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian Synod of Nkhoma, took on the task of identifying vulnerable families and getting the maize distributed to them. He asked each rural Congregation* working together with the Traditional Authorities, to identify 400 of the most vulnerable families in their areas regardless of religious affiliation. These Congregations (Women’s Guild, Men’s Guild, Deacons, Elders) along with Synod officials, monitor the maize distribution.

Lorries carrying 200 110 pound bags of maize are hired to deliver the maize to the distribution centers** where the selected vulnerable families receive the maize. The roads to the distribution centers are dirt and because this is the rainy season the transport becomes increasingly difficult resulting in increased delivery costs. The government of Malawi, seeing the effectiveness of the distribution system, is providing 7 trucks decreasing the transportation cost by an estimated 75%! God is good all the time!

Marion Medical Mission’s Synod of Livingtonia, and Synod of Nkhoma Well Program Field Officers distributed 2,800 bags of maize to rural communities within their catchment areas. Rev. Mwasakifwa and the Tanzanian Well Program Field Officers donated $600 to buy maize for their Malawian brothers and sisters suffering from famine.

There remain many in Malawi at risk of starvation. Famine means people are weak making it difficult for them to work in their fields, leading to another poor growing season. Famine means well maintenance people too weak to repair wells, and villages unable to offer a gift of food when their well is repaired…leading to a return to unsafe drinking water.

We have a most effective and efficient way of reaching those impacted by the famine.

We again ask your help in feeding the least of these as Marion Medical Mission struggles to buy and deliver additional maize to the most vulnerable. The cost is still just $16 per bag distributed.

100% of your designated donations will go directly to Malawi to purchase and distribute maize. No overhead expenses on the US side. In Africa 3% goes for monitoring and distribution.

Mail your tax deductible donations to Marion Medical Mission, 1412 Shawnee Drive, Marion Illinois 62959. To donate online go to: www.mmmwater.org, or on Facebook go to Marion Medical Mission.

Thanks so much for all you do…only together as God’s people.

Tom Logan, President

* Rev. Kachipapa explains these Congregations average 1,000 members and 11 prayer houses.

** The rural Congregations that selected the vulnerable families.