I arrived down here two days ago with Kyle Josephson, a recent graduate from Hope College with a pre-med focus. He is helping/observing while I am in the clinic here at Escalon. Much of the school is the same as last year, with a few additions. The clinic now has a permanent nurse on staff who can help clean wounds and enter histories/symptoms/etc into our database. Last year we had no official way of keeping track of what we gave to whom and who had an allergy to what medication. I would substitute my notes as a way to keep track of the students who visited, but it was hardly sufficient. The addition of a database has been a huge help.
Thus far Kyle and I have had two intense mornings. Yesterday morning we went to a new village and set up a medical and dental clinic. We treated the villagers for 3 hours-seeing everything from diabetes to infections to your common cold. Going into the experience we were woefully unprepared: not enough medications, didn't have the right medications, etc. But in the end we did what we could and helped as many as possible. Yet as I said earlier, the time we spent helping was tainted by the fact that these infections and diseases we were treating would only come back. We were using a band-aide to try and fix a problem which requires surgery. Ill explain that analogy in a later post, for now I need to get back to work. Thank you all for your support. It means an incredible amount. If you are a praying person please continue to pray for Kyle and I and our work down here. If you are not a praying person then a few thoughts now and again would be appreciated.
En el creador,
Eric
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