Friday, August 13, 2010

By Beth McHoul

This is why you should consider giving to the Gwo Cheve Challenge:

A LATE NIGHT TRANSPORT/WE WILL DO BETTER!!!

It's near to 11:00 PM and most people are home in bed.  In my exaggerated thinking of the moment I feel like only scoundrels and midwives are out in Haiti this time of night.  Here I am doing another transport after a 24 hour labor and delivery effort that ended in no delivery.    When a c/section looms our choices are limited.  The small hospital with no doctor or the huge hospital with few doctors and hundreds of women.  I chose the latter.

Carline is 18, single, sweet and eager to please.  Although exhausted she responded to our every suggestion and was totally cooperative for two full days.  She sat defeated when we explained our findings  but she understood only one thing - we meant transport.  She cried.  We cried.

In the rainy dark we loaded up my car.  Two guards, one grandma, a nurse, a cousin, the mom-to-be and me.  Off we went.  The empty streets were full of puddles, trash and the occasional group of people brave enough to be out this late.  I speed past Cite Soleil.  I enjoy the speed, the lack of traffic jam, the empty streets.  I hate the reason I am on them.

I've been to this hospital twice before, I am prepared.  I've even made an acquaintance of  one of the doctors shaking my head in understanding as he told me how overcrowded they are.  I can see that.
If I thought last time was crowded tonight seemed doubled.   Laboring women were everywhere.  On benches, lying on the floor, on beds, walking about, yelling, crying, screaming and moaning.   Every hallway had laboring women on the floor.  Blood spots here and there.  Trash all around.  The new doctor I meet tells me yes, he agrees, our gal probably will need a c/section but she has to wait in line.  There are several before her.  I'm now moaning along with the laboring women.

I'm filled with disappointment, guilt and frustration as I leave this teenager here.  Due to government legalities I am not allowed to stay and help.  My heart is sick.  The doctor doesn't want one more patient and I don't want to leave our patient here.

We drive home in silence.    Once again I am defeated by the inability to provide a woman with a safe birth.    A woman we have cared for for months.  She knows us, she trusts us, she believed we would help her through this birth experience and now I find that we are not able to finish the job.  We are a maternity center and not a hospital.  We can only handle normal births.  Explain this to a frightened 18 year old who is staring at the multitude of swollen bellies, sweat, urine, vomit, blood and amniotic fluid all around her.

We clean up our fluids quickly, we give Gatorade with a straw, we wipe foreheads with cool cloths, we hug, we check on baby and mom continuously.  Not so in this hospital for the poor.

I'm not blaming the overworked staff.  The residents are doing their jobs under terrible circumstances. Foreign groups are making huge efforts at the free hospitals to make a difference.

It is not enough.  The conditions are like out of an old horror movie but it is all too real.  Too real for Carline.  Too real for all the women that have to go there because they don't have money to go anywhere else.  Somehow they come out with a baby.  Most of the time.

This is not acceptable for our transports.  The women entrusted to our care should not end up in overcrowded hospitals with broken equipment and filthy conditions if they need more care than we can give.

Heartline is committed to building a 20 bed hospital.  We need safe deliveries, safe surgeries and quality postpartum care.  Every transport nightmare reinforces to me how important this is.   Just ask Carline.
Beth McHoul

6 comments:

Terri in Colorado said...

Darling Beth,

I have seen hospital conditions like this in other developing countries. I know you are right in advocating for the building of this hospital now! Soon and very soon, it will happen. I am donating and hoping John doesn't take it personally. His lovely locks are part of his hippie charm.
Praying for the Heartline Hospital effort, Terri U.

Anonymous said...

My first grandchild was born in April in much different circumstances. I am so moved by this one story of which I'm sure there are hundreds more. I have shared this blog with my friends and family and hope they are moved as well.
Bless you.
Sharon

Maya said...

Dear T&T. My name is Maya Amelingmeier. I was born in Haiti and when i turned 4, i was adopted from an orphanage. My adoptive parents later took me and my sisters to the Dominican Republic where i currently reside. That was a long time ago. I am not 28 years old, have 3 foster children and havee been writing since i was 13 years old. I recently wrote a book called "P.S., I'm Eleven (Surviving Haiti's Quake)" http://www.unibook.com/Mae-Claire/P.S.-IM-ELEVEN-(Surviving-Haitis-Quake)

My parents are missionaries here in the Dominican Republic. They run Dominican crossroads here on the North Coast. They provide housing for those people who volunteer their time to serve the poor. I am very proud of them!

I am looking for someone who would be willing to translate my book to creole/French so that i can reach more readers. The book is extremely eye opening and I believe it is an essential read during this epic time.

Thank you so much for working with God, to surve my neighbors and my blood relatives!

Rebecca Barlow said...

Thank you Beth for sharing...! We will be praying for the progress on the hospital along with all of you.

Our family is nearing a final decision on whether we move to Haiti full time with World Orphans early next year. I am also an L&D RN with doula training, so am looking forward to hearing more about your work if/when we arrive!

God bless the mothers of Haiti as they struggle to bring new life into the world, and you in serving Him through helping them.

Patricia said...

Beth, you are loved!!!

mb said...

Please post a followup about Carline. Are she and the baby OK?