NicaraguaFebruary 26, 2005 8:27 pm

Today is our sightseeing and shopping day. Nicaragua is not exactly a tourist’s paradise, but there are a few things to do and see. We head out early to drop off our luggage at the hotel we will be staying in tonight, directly across the street from the airport.

First, we head to Granada, the oldest city in Central America, founded in 1524. But we’re not doing a history lesson; we’re going for the canopy tour.

A canopy tour is nothing more than riding zip lines from tree to tree, 60 to 80 feet above a coffee plantation on the side of a volcano. Step one is to hook up your harness good and tight. It feels like…well… harness is a good name for it. Starting off at cliff side, you’ll jump out to glide across the open space to the next platform while your stomach falls the 70 feet to the ground – 14 more platforms to go. Further explanations will just make you nervous; let’s move on.

canopy

Nicaragua has volcanoes. Lots of them. However, there are a string of 9 in an almost straight line following the Pacific coast and inland about 50 miles that are still quite active. Masaya Volcan is Nicaragua’s first National Park and allows visitors to the top of Masaya, which last erupted in 2004.

Because of the sulphur dioxide constantly pouring from it, sometimes it is closed to visitors.

travellandscape2

A bus ride to the top takes a while, as the bus never gets out of first gear. At the top, you can look over the rim, into the center, occasionally seeing lava far below. There is not a lot to see, but, hey; how many people have looked into an active volcano?

Back in Managua, it’s shopping. A large, open market is filled with the kinds of handcrafted items we like to take home as souvenirs; brightly colored hammocks and pottery as well as the more mundane stuff of life like shoes, shirts, pants and socks. We’re happy to buy these items because we witnessed much of it being made in the homes of the people we served this week, so, we know it directly supports them – it’s not bought from China and re-sold in the market.

And then, our last meal in Nicaragua – Pizza Hut! We say goodbye to our hosts and translators all too soon with our thoughts torn between getting home to our loved ones and how soon we can get back here; not to do it again, but to continue the work He has started.

There are many more stories to be told about the days in the clinic, walking the streets doing evangelism and the people we were privileged to meet, but suffice to say, they are all a testament to what God can do with willing servants. I can speak for everyone involved in this mission when I say that it was an honor to be Christ’s representative to these people, and in His name bring health, healing and the word of God.

group

The Numbers

11,000 Cephalexin caps delivered.
4524 Miles traveled by plane, bus, taxi and foot by each team member
4285 Prescriptions filled.
1170 Pounds of medicines and medical supplies taken into the country.
1080 Salvations.
1018 Patients seen and treated.
94 Avg. daytime temp. 2/20/05 to 2/27/05
90 Vacation days used.
33 Injections administered.
18 Missionaries on the trip.
7 Translators.
4 Days, churches, clinics.
1 Wedding performed.

NicaraguaFebruary 22, 2005 5:50 pm

Breakfast, devotion, SHOWERS!!, then a 1 hour bus ride to Mateare ( ma-ti-ar’-ee) a very poor semi-rural town of about 30,000. Our clinics will be in this town for the next 3 days; a different church each day, then on to Brasilla for the last day (about 8 miles away).

All our travel is in the “Barbie Bus”. The color of the bus makes any explanation unnecessary.

loadingbarbie

It takes only a short time to load up and unload with everyone helping. Then it’s about a 40 minute ride to the clinic site for today.

Most of the homes we see are concrete block and tin with concrete or tile floors; some are dirt, however. There are various activities as we go through the barrio to the church where we will set up the clinic;

some folks are cooking over an open fire, others are washing clothes in a concrete sink in the yard. There are also some families working together to twist thread into long cords suitable for weaving hammocks or fishing nets.

As we pass a very small pulperia (a convenience store) operated from a home, a truck is parked out front and a man is delivering stock while 2 armed guards stand in the street…watching. Would someone really try to rob them in broad daylight for some cokes and chips? Maybe.

One of the focuses of Open Eyes ministry in Leon is the National Police. Terry Dupont offers regular leadership training for them as well as health care when he can put together a group to do so. Consequently, he has access to the police at many levels, a great relationship and many opportunities to share Christ with them.

police

Another block and we pull up at the church. It’s a concrete block building with iron bars on the windows and a tin roof. There is a raised platform at the front of the church at the opposite end from the door, and another door on the side. There are fluorescent lights and a few fans mounted on the walls.

While on the subject, this is for the electricians and handymen among you. Outdoor, open, electrical panels are common. Sometimes there is conduit, but mostly not, not even romex, just 2 of the same color 14 or 16 gauge wire running to a switch or outlet. I’ve never seen a wire nut in Nicaragua, just electrical tape. I saw an air conditioner hard wired to an electrical panel with 14-gauge wire in a hotel. I also saw a fluorescent light hanging from a utility pole with a wire attached to each end with duct tape. I once asked someone about building codes, but they didn’t know what I was talking about.

There is a plumbing fixture sold there referred to as a “widow maker”. It’s a showerhead with a heating element in it. There is a switch on top of the unit to turn it on, and 10 or 12 feet of lamp wire terminated with a 2-prong plug. 10 or 12 feet is plenty long enough to reach the bathroom outlet. No one there has ever heard of a ground fault interrupt circuit.

The church had been swept out and mopped. There was string running the length of the small sanctuary and hung from it with clothespins, were sheets of many different designs and colors. More string ran the other direction with more sheets hung there to construct dividers making 5 examination rooms. In each room was a table, a fan and 3 or 4 chairs.

clinic

About chairs: The national chair of Nicaragua (if there were such a thing) would be the white plastic patio chair – it’s ubiquitous. Everyone has them – poor, rich, businesses, churches, and restaurants. When I asked one of the missionaries when he felt like he had truly become Nicaraguan, he said it was when he purchased 15 plastic patio chairs. One other thing may be handy to know: they will hold a 250 lb. man standing in the seat. I know this for a fact. I weigh 252.

The doctors stock their rooms with antibacterial cleaner, latex gloves, stethoscopes and all the other scary looking stuff doctors always have around. I found out immediately that Nicaraguan children are exactly like US children when it comes to “injectcion” (a shot); they run away crying.

People begin to gather at a home across the street from the church where a triage center has been set up to screen our patients. Blood pressure and temperature are recorded on the pieces of paper the patients have with them as well as names and ages.

triage

The church has, in the past week, distributed 250 “vouchers” for people to be seen at the clinic. Half go to members, the other half to non-members. The voucher will serve as admission, the doctors will record complaints and write prescriptions, and then the pharmacy will fill the prescription from this piece of paper.

Health care in Nicaragua has improved and is still improving, but not as fast as some other social services like food and water delivery and sanitary systems. Many rural areas have no health care services whatsoever, even for emergencies. In cities, there are some free clinics available and some may be able to get in to see a doctor. However, a prescription may cost a week’s wages to fill, if the medicine is even available.

A poor water supply and lack of a sanitation system in rural areas is responsible for much of the disease and sickness prevalent there. Not to mention that wound care is nearly impossible when most people work in the dirt one way or another. Poor diet, harsh conditions and backbreaking work also contribute to the health problems of people in these areas.

We all notice that many of the little girls are in frilly dresses and shiny shoes, the boys in navy pants and hite shirts. It is obvious that this is a special occasion for many here and they have dressed appropriately.

Manuel, a local pastor talks to people as they wait to get in. He is engaging, animated, even entertaining as he presents the gospel in a winsome way. He will be there all day as people come and go, and many receive the Lord when he gives the invitation.

preaching

As the pharmacy is getting set up, the doctors arranging their exam rooms and the translators taking their place, an evangelism team is assessing the neighborhood and talking to the pastor of the church about the community and how they might talk to as many folks as possible. He gives them the location of a school and information about the principal, so David James, Brian Hardin, Kim Hay, Jeff Strange and Oscar (one of the translators) take off in a truck headed for the local school with a bag full of candy, prizes and tracts.

65% of the population of Nicaragua is under age 25 and elementary and high school education is mandatory and free. In the larger cities like Managua, Leon and Granada, most kids finish high school, but it is vastly different in rural areas. Most do not finish and a substantial number do not attend at all because they are needed to work at home, or do not have the resources for the minimal supplies that are required.

atschool

At the end of our first day of the clinic, Susan Strange hired a young man (10 years old, maybe) to pick up all the trash on the floors in the exam areas, the pharmacy and the waiting areas. She paid him 15 cordobas for his work and he happily left. Later, his mother returned to tell us that she had taken him out of school that very day because he didn’t have the money to buy the supplies he needed. The price of the supplies; 12 Cordoba’s. He was going back to school tomorrow she said.

Last January, Forest Park Community Church began communicating with an organization called King Benevolent Fund in Bristol, Virginia and another in Louisville called Supplies Overseas. These groups collect and redistribute donated overstock, obsolete or out of date drugs, supplies and medical equipment to humanitarian organizations for use in medical clinics overseas.

We supplied documentation about the church, the mission we were doing, where we were going, what group we would be working with, who would be responsible, medical license numbers and how we were coordinating the transportation of medicines into the country. After months of sending information to them as well as to the Ministry of Health in Nicaragua, we were approved to receive a donation of medicines. When our turn came, Cindy Lewis spent several hours online ordering the drugs we would need. She also helped us select supplies and drugs we would need from Supplies Overseas on a couple of different occasions.

In the end, we took with us over 1000 lbs of drugs and supplies with an estimate retail value of $200,000. What we did not use at the clinics we left for future medical teams as well as a dental ministry that is operated by Open Eyes Ministries.

drugs

One of the worst health care problems in Nicaragua is the lack of availability of medicines. Even simple cheap and effective drugs for parasites are hard to find and expensive. Insurance is nearly non-existent and outside Managua there are no hospitals. Clinics are rare and any doctor is out of the ordinary. Christian and other benevolent organizations are the main source of health care in all rural areas at this time.

Once we began seeing patients, the pace did not slow until lunchtime. Mothers would arrive with 3 to 5 kids in tow. Our Doctors examined each one with care and concern. Knowing that we could only treat them for a short period of time, the doctors would council patients on diet or exercise to help control diabetes or other ailments that could not be treated long-term with medication.

Sometimes, patients would bring in prescriptions they had received from a clinic months before, but could not afford to fill. As often as not, we were able to find the medicine they needed.

In one case Cindy Lewis saw a man who had had surgery on his eyes. His doctor gave him a prescription and was told that if he did not use the prescribed eye drops, his vision would quickly begin to deteriorate and he would loose his sight. She knew we did not have that particular medicine because she helped inventory all the drugs for the clinic, nevertheless, she walked to a table in the pharmacy and immediately put her hand on the exact medicine he needed.

Sometimes the doctors would refer their patients to Amanda Fife, a Physical Therapist, who could show a few exercises or suggest changes in a repetitive motion task that could help to relieve chronic pain due to repeated bending, stretching or lifting actions.

Our doctors performed a few minor surgeries in the clinic, a couple of cysts were removed, a few severe burns treated, etc.

surgery

One little girl was brought in who had not been to school for over a year because she could not hear. Her family was yelling to her to be heard. Upon examination, the doctors found her ear was impacted with wax and after more than an hour of work, she was hearing again. The next morning, her father met us to say she had gone back to school that morning and that he thanked God for her hearing being returned.

earwork

An elderly woman, age 82, was brought into the clinic by her relatives. Her breathing was shallow and fast, she was emaciated and had the look to this untrained eye as one that did not have long to live. This was confirmed upon examination by the doctor. She had Pneumonia. The doctors hooked up an IV and began a breathing treatment.

elderlywoman

While she was resting, her family told us she did not know Christ as her savior. Soon a pastor and translator were talking to her, crying as she accepted the Lord. The entire family was in the clinic rejoicing in her salvation even as they were told her condition was critical.

One gentleman who complained of pain in his knee offered to bring x-rays of his surgery to help determine what might be done to relieve the pain. After looking at the x-ray, it was apparent why he was complaining. He had 8 screws in his leg along with a plate, all of which looked like a 3-year old carpenter had installed it. He was fortunate to have saved his leg from whatever accident had damaged it, but nothing short of surgery would relieve the pain he now had and the chances of that are nil.

knee

The Sandinista movement put great emphasis on healthcare reforms for the country, which was fairly effective in a limited way. Instead of 3 separate agencies controlling different aspects of healthcare in the country, it was all combined into the Ministry of Health, which did in fact streamline the delivery of services. However, it also narrowed the delivery of services and concentrated almost 80% of all healthcare dollars in Managua, leaving precious little for the rest of the country after corruption and political favors took its share.

Meanwhile, the evangelism team arrived at the school, met with the principle, who is a Christian, and gained permission to talk to each of the classes, grades 1 through high school. In each classroom, they might play a game. sing a song, or talk about sports and do a few basketball tricks. In any case, the gospel was shared in a way appropriate to the age group and everyone was given a chance to respond.

Amazingly, or maybe not, teens in Nicaragua seems much like teens in the US. The guys want to act cool and aloof and the girls coy and flirty with the boys. Even so, there is an almost palpable hunger for hope in this country and the response to the gospel was great with most wanting to make a commitment to Christ this day and over 275 souls were added to the kingdom.

children

30% of the population of Nicaragua is teenagers. Illicit drugs are not much of a problem here because of the poverty. However, the most popular abused substance is glue. Huffing is a problem among youth in Managua and you can find treatment centers dedicated to this activity at about the same ratio you will find drug abuse clinics in the US.

By far the biggest problem among the young people of Nicaragua is teenage pregnancy. Half the country’s youth initiate sexual activity before 18 years of age and 15 percent before age 15. The teenage pregnancy rate is 25 percent - one of the highest in Latin America. The government has initiated several programs to combat the problem, but again the bulk of the problem has been left to be addressed by humanitarian organizations and Christian missions.

On successive days, everyone on the team will participate in evangelism, leaving others to man the clinic. They will visit other schools and simply walk the streets of the community looking for opportunities to share the Lord. A group of foreigners walking by your house does draw attention and Nicaraguan people are engaging, friendly and hospitable.

At one house, a pastor, Rex Brace learns that a couple living together with children is not married. When he asks why, he learns that the woman has no birth certificate and therefore cannot be married. As a pastor, he offer to marry them, they accept and a wedding takes place in the yard with our team members and the neighbors as witnesses. One of our translators draws up a certificate. Some of our group take pictures and make a commitment to bring prints back at a later date. The next day, on our way out of town, Rex drops off a Spanish language copy of “the Purpose Driven Life” to help give them a new vision for living as married people.

wedding

As if to remind us of the never-ending task here, the couple next door refuse the same offer of marriage because the “husband” claims he does not love his “wife”, he simply won her and has no desire to be married to her.

As opportunities arise to serve, a few of our missionaries head out to visit the family of the pastor of the church in which we are working and take along some medications and supplies. Once they arrive, they treat the pastor’s mother who has diabetes and a severe infection in her foot. She had not even intended to request medical attention, but was praising God that they had come to help her grandson.

treatment

Cultural traditions die hard and this is a patriarchal society. Many men take liberties here that are destructive; even criminal, yet are never prosecuted or even acknowledged for fear of being ostracized from tightly knit family groups that depend on each other for survival in many cases.

Since the early 90’s and the fall of the Sandinistas, Christian missionaries have flooded into the country and are having an impact through the love of Christ in many ways; changing the hearts and minds of people, even changing the notion of what a man should act like.

Last year on a mission trip, I was to give a short testimony in a seminar for men on raising boys. The teaching never got started, however, because the rest of the time was taken up with men wanting to know how to show affection to their sons. They had never been shown physical affection by their fathers and somehow had the idea that it was wrong to do so, but the bible had convinced them that strong Christian men were grown from loving Christian fathers and they wanted to know how to do this.

Since 1991 the religious affiliations of the people of Nicaragua has shown dramatic shifts; from 96% Roman Catholic down to 80%, and a corresponding rise in the percentage of residents describing themselves as evangelical Christians. Some projections predict a decline to 70% by the mid 2000’s. The Assemblies of God and other Pentecostal religions are primarily responsible for this shift, especially among the urban poor and rural families, though other mainline denominations have benefited as well. Because Nicaragua’s Roman Catholic affiliation is more cultural than religious, this shift is more a result of new religious conviction than actual conversion.

In spite of 100 degree heat and seeing 275 patients a day, as each day progresses, we are faster with the prescriptions, more accurate with the diagnoses and better with the language.

exan

Too soon our days run out, just as we think we have this stuff down.

NicaraguaFebruary 21, 2005 5:28 pm

The day starts at 7:AM with the cacophony of the birds outside. Already the sun is up and breakfast is waiting – cereal, coffee, milk, juice, fresh fruit and sweet breads.

Also waiting for us is the news that there is no water. They are working on it down the street and we have no idea how long it will be off. I hear not one grumble or complaint.

The house sits right on the Leon–Chinendega Highway; a very busy thoroughfare and a rare good road. Eating breakfast on the porch is a front row seat to a fascinating parade. Every mode of transportation imaginable passes by along with cows, pigs, horses and other farm animals.

Each day starts with a devotion from one of the group, then a plan for the day. Our first full day is devoted to preparations for the clinic, but first; we take a trip to a black sand beach near Corinto on the Pacific Ocean.

The beach is not scenic in the “Club Med” sense; no rising hotels, landscaped lawns, or chairs and umbrellas for rent; just a rancho here and there, someone selling fish, and a hotel with an open-air dance floor built in the 40’s that has had little maintenance since then and looks entirely deserted. The beach is littered with shells, fruit peelings and coconut shells where families have been eating and relaxing in the sun. Occasionally a group of young people wander by. It’s the most “organic” beach I’ve ever seen. Beautiful, but as casual as your own backyard.

After spending a few hours there, we head back for lunch and to get down to the business of tomorrow’s clinic. But first, a few of us elect to be bussed over to some other missionary’s homes nearby to take a shower – that’s for me! The rest decide to take their chances for water later on or in the morning.

Meals are prepared by Claudia and Riana; cooks and housekeepers for the Dupont’s. It is not uncommon for working people in Nicaragua at any level to employ household workers. A full time person (8 to 10 hours a day) may be hired for $100 per month – less if they live with you.

The meals are not meager and are not exotic; they are great!! And they have 2 things in common; rice and beans. Every meal has one or both. Always prepared with purified water and meticulously clean, you will not have a problem with tolerance for the foods you are served here. And you will not be having Iguana unless you ask for it and clean it yourself – Claudia refuses to clean them, although she will cook them for you; Iguana frita (fried Iguana) or Iguana sopa (Iguana soup, which, by the way contains one Iguana egg per serving).

After lunch, Becky Briar, our pharmacist guides as we divide up the medications we have by their application – hypertension, parasites, diabetes, antibiotics, pain, etc. Each goes into a separate container. The doctors; Shawn Clements, Laura Hay, Cindy Lewis and Carolyn McKee make notes on what is available and how it is prescribed. Equipment is inventoried, tested and packed. This will go on into the evening, after supper.

labeldrugs

While this was going on, a few of us went back to Managua to pick up some medicines from a couple who were bringing 2 more containers of medicines for us. Once there, we found out that one of them had an accident before leaving and could not make the trip. The other person was supposed to fly in from San Salvador, but we never were able to meet up with her. We later found out that she never made the trip either. It was a waste of 4 hours.

With everything packed and ready to go in the morning, we have our nightly share time. It is an important feature of these trips for several reasons; there is so much happening at any given time, no one sees it all. By sharing our individual impressions and experiences of the day, we get a better view of the work God is doing with us on these trips. The doctors and pharmacy talk about how they can communicate needs better and we all get to share in the joy of the salvations that day.

NicaraguaFebruary 20, 2005 5:02 pm

There are 18 travelers, each carrying a Rubbermaid tote filled with medicines or medical supplies of some kind. We meet at Standiford field and check in all our baggage, seal each one with a couple of cable ties and head to the gate.

departure

30 minutes before boarding we’re told that they cannot fit all 18 totes on our plane and they will have come on a later flight. After 20 minutes of searching for another route, it is determined that 10 of our totes will go to Baltimore, then on to Houston to meet us there. Since we have a 5 hour layover in Houston, this works great and the totes will be with us when we fly to Managua.

We met up with Becky Briar who was flying in from Colorado Springs and we all flew to Managua and traveled by bus to Leon (about a 1.5 hour drive through city and country).

Although it was dark, you could get a good sense of the country we were traveling. There has been no rain since November 18th, everything is very dry and yet we can smell wood fires everywhere once we leave the city limits. Trash is burned; there are fires for baking brick and cooking fires as well as fires caused by a careless cigarette thrown out a window.

travellandscape2

In the distance you can make out the silhouettes of volcanoes, which are scattered across the country. On the way, we pass bikes, motorcycles, cabs, horse carts, people walking and recycled American school buses now used as public transportation.

Still in their bright, familiar yellow, they now have been decorated with names (Desperado, Esmarelda), patron saints, cartoon characters (Wiley Coyote and Roadrunner) or sentiments like “A Dios La Bendiga” (God Bless You) and pictures of Jesus and Mary – always pictures of Jesus and Mary. Sometimes they still have signs on the side “Hampton Township, Cambridge” or Dillinger School District, Texas” as if advertising their proud lineage. You can load on whatever you can carry including animals. Remember how the driver told you to stay away from the emergency exit in back? Forget that – it’s usually not even there!

As we travel, the pace of life around us seems to slow to a steady rhythm, but through the rest of night and on until morning, it never stops. The first thing you learn about this country is that life never stops and it barely slows. In the US, you could drive for many miles or even walk for blocks in your own neighborhood and never see another person. Not here. At least, not in the western and southern most populated parts of the country.

Even though unemployment in Nicaragua is over 22% and you must add to that underemployment (30% +), commerce is vigorous in those cottage industries that mean survival, but are not necessarily reflected in government employment figures; farming, street vendors, black market, making crafts, household employment, taxi drivers, etc.

We arrive at Terry and Arlene Dupont’s home in Leon. A 12 ft. fence surrounds it with barbed wire on top. Makes you wonder why, but every home, place of business, church, etc. has some kind of fence or wall around it – it’s deterrent to petty theft which is, well….petty; but common, unfortunately, in this country that shares the dubious distinction of the poorest in the hemisphere with Haiti.

housewithfence

The house is large with 2 bedrooms full of bunks, 4 bathrooms, a large dining room, and living room. There is a large porch under roof in the front and the back of the house as well as a rooftop porch up a set of spiral stairs. We are welcomed to help ourselves to anything in the house, find our bunks and settle in for the night with a very comfortable 70-degree breeze, which will soon enough vanish with the morning sun.