Since being in Zambia I’ve swam in Lake Malawi and visited
Livingstone to go on safari and see Victoria Falls. One would think I’ve spent
thousands of dollars on these two trips, but each trip cost under 400 USD
including travel to and from my site. It is incredibly cheap to travel
in-country and in some of the surrounding countries. Being here I will continue
taking advantage of the opportunity to see other amazing places that most
people only dream of visiting.
Joining the Peace Corps had been a dream of mine since my father handed me a brochure about "the toughest job you'll ever love" when I was 15. Thirty years later, I found myself living in a mud hut with no electricity or plumbing in remote Zambia. The following entries describe my early struggles to blend in with a culture foreign to my own, my work in conservation farming, and becoming accepted as a community member by the Kaonde People of Northwestern Province, Zambia.
Thursday, January 29, 2015
Little Lions...
Almost two months ago my friend Karen brought two kittens to
me because of a rodent problem I was having. The kittens are brothers. The one
with white on his face is Knuckles and the smaller and lighter color one is
Onion. They are growing fast and keeping the rodents away; they are great hunters.
They are turning out to be amazing companions, too.
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Food Deprivation and Malted Milk Balls...
I’m learning there are different kinds of food deprivations.
There’s the kind I see here in my village among the villagers; not enough
food to eat. Children, I believe, are always hungry unless they just finished a
hearty meal of nshima, which is mainly to fill the tummy, not to please the
pallet. This may be accompanied by a relish, like pumpkin leaves, or bush meat, such as song birds slayed
by slingshot. It’s hunger season now and yes, those are some of the few things
available.
There is another kind of food deprivation I’m personally
experiencing - limited access to American food. Here in the village there is
very little to choose from. There aren’t any restaurants or pizza delivery.
Chocolate is not found at the tuck shops. The only way I can satisfy my
American cravings is to buy food I like at the Shoprite in Solwezi - a forty-five minute cab ride away. I make this trip about once a month.
Shoprite is a supermarket, but a little different from what
we’re used to in the States. You won’t find Kraft Macaroni and Cheese, or
Tootsie Rolls, and the cheese they have is very expensive. I don’t buy ice-cream for two
reasons: I don’t have a freezer and it would melt by the time I get back to the
village anyway.
I’m becoming creative with my cooking since living in a
Zambian village. I have a broad array of spices I use to literally spice things
up such as sauteed cabbage with tomatoes and onions and maybe some soya pieces
added in. My sometimes intense chocolate cravings are quelled by powdered milk
and cocoa mixed with sugar and water. The only meat I eat is with my host
family when they serve village chicken (tough and stringy), or sausage along
with nshima.
The number one craving I’ve been experiencing starting three
months into my service is malted milk balls; can’t find them here. I dream
about eating a carton full of them. I asked my brother to send me some a while
back, but when I received the package it contained two cartons of milk duds.
“Malted milk balls,” is what I told my fellow PCV who is
returning from a trip from the States who asked me if he can bring me back
anything. Right now the carton is waiting for me in my mail box at the
provincial house in Solwezi. In six days I will indulge in the little
marble-sized delectable chocolate balls.
Will this treat satisfy my on-going craving? Will I begin
another new craving of a food I can’t get here in this country?
Stress is what brings on these cravings for American food.
The cravings can be very intense sometimes which adds…more stress.
I am glad I have these cravings instead of just wishing I
had something to fill my stomach like the village kids. They may never know the
cravings I experience and I may never know their need to just fill their
growling tummies.
Interview with a rural health clinic nurse...
Eliack Shikamo, RN
My *host father Eliack Shikamo works at the medical clinic in our village. I decided to interview him about his work at the clinic because of
the interesting and challenging work load he and his staff encounter
daily.
Eliack is a registered nurse and he runs the clinic.
On staff there are two enrolled nurses or CNA equivalents, an environmental technician, nursing support, and volunteers. There are no doctors on staff, though doctors occasionally make rounds during the year.
On staff there are two enrolled nurses or CNA equivalents, an environmental technician, nursing support, and volunteers. There are no doctors on staff, though doctors occasionally make rounds during the year.
Eliack was born in a village of Solwezi called Shikamo
Village under Chief Mukumbi
of the Kaonde tribe. His father was a house maid for a white farmer in Kabwe,
and second born of eight children: three brothers and four sisters
Eliack was educated through Ngungu
Primary School in Kabwe, Kimale School (basic school) 1-9th, then
high school at Solwezi Technical Secondary School grade 10- 12th. In
2004 he attended Solwezi School of Nursing and received a certificate of nursing
in 2005. He worked for the government
from 2006 to 2008 then went back to school to become a registered nurse at
Lusaka School of Nursing from 2008 to 2011. He graduated with a registered
nursing diploma.
Eliack is married to Brenda Mwelwa
Lunda who is an enrolled nurse. He and his wife work at Mumena Rural Health
Center in Mumena Village in the Solwezi district. They have three children
under the age of seven.
*Most Peace Corps Volunteers are placed with a host family in
the village they reside. The role of a host family is to ensure the Volunteer’s
basic needs are met, offers guidance with entering in the community, and shares
occasional meals.
________________________________________________
Tell me about the
clinic. What services are offered? Mumena clinic is a rural clinic 56k from
the referral hospital Solwezi General Hospital. We offer a variety of services
from outpatient services, such as screening, dispense of drugs, and wound care.
Maternal health services which provide prenatal and labor services-- a tiny
room allows mothers to recover-- and postnatal services. Within maternal
services we offer HIV screening to mothers aimed at preventing mother to child
HIV transmission.
We counsel pregnant mothers and encourage them to come with partners to test both of them for HIV. If both are positive, they are counseled how to live with the disease and encourage taking the prophylaxis medication that helps slow progression of HIV. We offer a children’s clinic with programs of growth monitoring promotion and a segment that deals with immunization monitoring. We also offer family planning counseling, but have not been able to counsel on nutrition. General HIV/AIDs care is offered.
We counsel pregnant mothers and encourage them to come with partners to test both of them for HIV. If both are positive, they are counseled how to live with the disease and encourage taking the prophylaxis medication that helps slow progression of HIV. We offer a children’s clinic with programs of growth monitoring promotion and a segment that deals with immunization monitoring. We also offer family planning counseling, but have not been able to counsel on nutrition. General HIV/AIDs care is offered.
Our clinic has minimal testing equipment, but can
draw blood and transfer to the hospital to help with treatment, especially HIV
positive patients. The clinic wants to improve a transport system for treatment
to the referral hospital. Our clinic is not a hospital. When cases come they
are screened, admitted for 48 hours, initiate treatment; if patient is not
doing well, then continue for a few more days and may be referred to the
hospital.
How is clinic funded? This is a government clinic; very limited funding. Every three or four months
the clinic receives money to pay electricity and to buy supplies, but limits
ability to work on other projects.
What challenges does
the clinic have? Limitations because of funds, and limitation of number of
staff, the clinic should have at least 13 health workers, but barely has six. The
few nurses the clinic has cause the nurses to work too much. Not enough accommodation
which creates a hindrance for nurses to live here. Support from missionaries has
improved water--garden taps to help staff to draw water closer to their homes.
Don’t have the ability to have toilets in the clinic. The burden of disease and
not being able to implement outreach programs for residents who live far from
clinics. Services are limited to only 5k radius. People live 22k away without
transportation. Emergency care is a challenge, for example, a mother is
pregnant with complications has to find money from others to pay for a cab to
the hospital. One government ambulance
is located in the township servicing the entire Solwezi district. It can take 1
hour 45 minutes to get to the hospital. Mothers use public transport and deliver on
the way. They need an ambulance.
Most common ailments? Top ten: malaria; diarrhea; respiratory tract; STDs due to population growth; HIV and AIDs; skin infections; eye infections; tooth infections. Anemia is an issue,
children and nutritional problems during rain season due to not a lot of food
available.
I’ve heard you are
calm, cool, and collected when dealing with snake bites. What is the procedure
when treating a snakebite victim? No natural skill, it is a skill that you
learn: treat snake bite as an emergency, though depending on the snake that
bites a person there are certain snakes that are really poisonous, but some
aren’t as poisonous. At least what I do when handling an emergency there are
four things to look at: one, ensure that patient’s airway is patent, then
ensure patient is breathing. These two can be dependent on how they are
positioned, then monitor circulatory system, feel for pulse, quick assessment,
ensure access to a vein by inserting a cannula, set the cannula. You have to
choose intravenous fluid or a plasma expander, and sodium solutions. If no
saline solution then lactated ringers. Then after quickly give a cortical
steroid. We don’t have the snake antivenin; government does not provide it.
Depending on the snake, antibiotic is given and pain killer. Black mamba bites
need treatment within 30 minutes or can cause organ collapse. Steroid and fluids
prevents shock, reduces inflammatory
response from venom….may be referred depending on shape of person.
Do you deliver babies?
We assist delivering babies. In past people delivered from home, but now with
Chief’s efforts, we have an increase institutional deliveries as the
mothers are encouraged to come to the
clinic. Community teachings encourage this; about 60 percent of women go to the
clinic, but number on staff is small, so
may refer to a traditional birth attendant In village which defeats the purpose
of encouraging people to go to clinic.
What’s your thought
on Ebola? Ginny, Ebola is real. Because I’m told it has been there in the Congo
since 1976, except for being saved from getting Ebola in Zambia is surprising.
Maybe its because of the location
affected is very far. Not because we have special precautions, but distance has
been the savior. What the fatalities and the conditions cause I pray the disease
does not spread to Zambia, because our preventative measures are still poor and
challenging. So we’re just crossing our fingers; we are able to deal with
measles, but we aren’t there to manage Ebola. People do not know what Ebola is;
they call it bolla, like in football. They don’t understand what the disease is
about.
How does your clinic
compare with other clinics which are found farther in the bush? It’s not easy
for me to gauge of course, but then the only thing that makes me feel that
want to come here because of the effort we put into the treatment
of people. We are centrally located. Of course with the same challenges. But
we are trying to address them in an appropriate way. Infrastructure we are the
same, . Sometimes it is because of the sacrifice one just makes. We are
available on Sundays. Other clinics just close down on the weekend.
With my host father Eliack Shikamo
Since this interview
I started volunteering at the clinic. It is a very busy place. The staff is professional and they make do with what little supplies and equipment that is available.
Eliack and his staff
and the volunteers work very hard every day. When on-call at night time Eliack
and his wife will respond to knocks on their door at any hour, usually to tend to
an emergency case. Right now three new houses are being built to house more
nurses. This will ease the workload on the present staff once new nurses move
in.
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