25 January 2010

Small miracle

The Western Hemisphere and most of Europe are gripped by the tragic events unfolding in Haiti. Modern media transports those of us who have televisions to the center of the misery and captures us with heartbreaking and touching stories.

I always considered myself a knowledgeable person, but it wasn’t until I joined the Foreign Service and traveled to the, shall we say, more unusual parts of the world, that I realized how little I really knew about life outside of my sphere. I understood American poverty and I understood the chasm that existed between those who have and those who don’t—in North America. After all, I grew up in south Texas and had visited our neighbors to the south many times. I thought I knew.


What I know now is that the events currently taking place in Haiti are occurring all over the world, on a smaller scale, daily. I don’t just mean earthquakes. I’m talking about desperate circumstances, poor nutrition, unsafe water, lack of shelter, and poor medical care. The World Health Organization estimates that one million African children die each year from malaria. That’s just one continent and one disease. To extrapolate is truly disturbing.


And while I now know, and have seen firsthand, some of the terrible conditions people survive, I have also seen small miracles occur, without international coverage or support, that make life better for these unfortunate people. I’ve already mentioned a few, but I want to tell you another.


When I worked in Conakry, Guinea, I was introduced to six nuns of the Missionary Sisters of Charity—the order started by Mother Teresa—who operated a clinic. I began assisting them in small ways. The clinic usually had a full load of 25 inpatients, mostly children 3 years and younger who had nutritional needs.

One day, I received a phone call asking me to come to the clinic to see a sick child but I was unprepared for what I found. A village woman had come to the clinic with a premature infant. She was the infant’s grandmother. The mother of the child needed to stay in the village with her other children. This baby weighed 1 kilogram. I had no experience with preemies and looking at this little boy was like looking at a tiny, skinny doll. I was afraid to touch him. In spite of his small size, he looked pretty good. He was alert, he was feeding well (breastfeeding mothers at the clinic were pitching in) and he had no respiratory problems. But he was only a few days old, and I couldn’t imagine he would survive. In a developed country, this child would be in the NICU for weeks with all sorts of advanced monitoring and treatments. This baby was in an open crib in a room full of sick children, with just a mosquito net between him and certain malaria. If he needed specialized care, it just wasn’t available. The clinic didn’t even have hot water.

I went to the clinic every other day and watched in amazement as this child survived, developed and eventually flourished. When he was 3 months old, he was a plump, smiling and cooing little boy, and his grandmother took him back to the village. I think of him often and wonder if his miracle continued. He would be 8 years old now. I hope he is.


For Reflections on Nursing Leadership, published by the Honor Society of Nursing, Sigma Theta Tau International.


1 comment:

  1. This really touched me, I have been looking at several blogs about Foreign Service experiences, as I am hoping to join some day. This post hit close to home for me though because I was born three months premature, of course I had the fortune of great care in the U.S, but even so they still thought I wouldn't make it. I did, and always love to hear stories like this. I appreciate you sharing these experiences!

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