NicaraguaFebruary 24, 2006 2:10 pm

Our last day in Nicaragua is always a roller coaster of emotions. We are saying goodbye to our friends; sad to leave them, but looking forward to the day. Tired from an exhausting week of clinics, but excited to experience the sights. Grateful for a day of rest from the endless patients, but unable to rest because this may be the longest day yet!

nicafriends1
David, Julio, Yorleni
nicafriends2
Terry, Arlene, Rigoberto, Roberto
nicafriends3
Jessica (el pequeño), Mariella, Oscar, Herman

We have a long drive to Managua to drop off our luggage at the hotel where we will stay tonite. Once we do, then we head to Tipitapa and the canopy tour. The road is not good (are you beginning to detect a pattern here?) and is full of holes…no…holes, craters and the occasional abyss.

On the side of the road, little boys, girls and old women stand with a finger raised asking for a cord. They have filled potholes in the road with dirt from the roadside to make our ride a little easier.

At first, I view this as begging and it feels intrusive to me, but after considering it, this is quintisential bootstrap capitalism. With no resources whatsoever, they have found a need, filled it (literally) and are saying to the passing motorists: “if you think we have provided you with a useable service, pay us; if not, pass on. Once we’ve had time to cogitate on this, people start tossing out coins as we pass.

jeaniecanopy

The canopy tour is in Parque Nacional del Mombacho; Nicaragua’s first and only (I think) National Park. It’s well cared for, the canopy tour is safe and there are plenty of guides. The equipment is first class and safety is emphasized. The tour is on the side of Mombacho volcano. Below the trees, platforms, and zip lines is a coffee farm. Apparently volcanic soil and shade are the perfect combination for coffee.

groupcanopy

The canopy tour takes longer than we expected, so we’ll have to skip the visit to Masaya volcano this trip, so we go to lunch, then shopping in Masaya.

Before the bus pulls up at the open-air market in Masaya we are spotted a block away by the “guides”. These are young men ages 10 to 20 or so who offer their services as you shop. They will carry your bags, take you to find specific items, bargain on your behalf (yeah, right!), and help you find your way around. In the end they expect you to give them from $5 to $10 USD!

shopping

They swarm the bus and many in the group, unsure how to ask how much something is, or unsure of their math to do the exchange, hire one to accompany them. It’s really an OK thing to do. They need the money, God knows, and I’ve not known any of them to rip anyone off. After 2 or 3 hours of shopping, everyone has found their treasures and loads back onto the bus.

ryanandjessicshopping

For supper, we’re going to a place called “Catarina” it’s a rather large complex of 4 restaurants and another “touristy” kind of open-air shopping area which sits on the rim of a not-quite-extinct volcano-lake. Even though the volcano is full of water, there is a rather active “cauldron” at one end which serves as a pressure relief valve.

The view from the restaurant is other-wordly: (click picture for a larger image)

catarina

To the right is Masaya volcano and below that a private home nestled in the trees. It is quite cool here as the wind is whipping off the lake at about 30 mph.

They have a great selection of foods which I could not possibly detail here, but I was able to get 3 lobsters for about $11. Everyone enjoyed a great meal, a little more shopping and an uninterupted time of fellowship.

We load the bus one last time after dinner and travel to the hotel in Managua just across the street from the airport. In the morning, we’ll take the shuttle across the street to check in at about 6:00AM and get home in time for dinner.

Many of the ladies are excited because the hotel has hot water and they look forward to a shower; but nothing is a sure thing here. All of our showers have 2 handles, but many have only one temperature. No matter…we’ll be home soon enough. Too soon for some of us.

Don’t forget - Terry and Arlene will be at Forest Park on Sunday, May 20th. They are bringing David and his wife Tania as well - it will be their first time in the states and you will enjoy hearing David sing.

If you just didn’t get enough of Nicaragua, consider coming with us again in September when we will be going to Honduras to do a building project and evangelism. Here’s a link to more information: Honduras Building and Evangelism Mission / September 23 - 30, 2006

NicaraguaFebruary 20, 2006 6:25 pm

to sebaco

Traveling

Bright and early we arise to a breakfast of sweetbreads, fruit, juice and coffee. Once everyone has completed their morning routine, we load everything on the two buses. Totes of medicine strapped down on the top and luggage on the inside, we head out at 6:00 for a 2.5 hour ride to Sebaco .

According to these roadside signs, they have apparently put this road right through the middle of a giant herpatarium. This looks more like a food chain to me. Can these creatures actually all live in the same place? And by the way, what the heck is that first thing? It looks like a fat little german shepherd puppy.

road

Sebaco is in the Matagalpa region which is mountainous with few (read: “one”) good roads. The direct route from Leon to Sebaco is so bad our drivers have elected to go almost to Managua, and then pick up the better road. (here’s a map.)

Every mile or so of every road in Nicaragua contains at least one tire repair shop. “Shop” may be misleading. Often it is just a kiosk or shed with no machinery other than a compressor. The tire is removed and replaced by hand – even large truck tires. Outside every one of these shops is a large tire, painted white, perhaps mounted on a post, on the building or just sitting inside another tire by the road, with the word “vulcanizacion” painted on it in a circle.

Of this I am certain; the chemical action of vulcanization does not take place in these little sheds. No one seems to know why they don’t just write “reparacion” or “reparación del neumático” (tire repair). Anyway, everyone knows what they are and we needed one after about 2 hours of driving – a flat.

We back up 30 yards to a repair shop, everyone gets out and they go to work. The little shop is right next door to a small fruit stand manned by two sleepy gentlemen. One had on a t-shirt stretched tightly over his generous belly which read “My Next Husband Will Be Normal”. I don’t care who you are…that’s funny.

Back on the road, it’s not long before we pull up to the church in Sebaco where we will set up the clinic. There is an orderly crowd out front, people smiling and greeting us as we load in medicines, supplies and equipment. It doesn’t take long and we are seeing our first patients.

order up

Eso Es Justo Cómo Rodamos (That’s Just How We Roll)

The church is one large room, very clean with shiny ceramic tile floors, concrete block walls and a tin roof. The exam rooms are divided out with colorful sheets and tablecloths. There are iron bars in intricate designs over each window and the doors. Outside the back door is an outhouse and a garden that runs the length of the building.

As people approach the building there is a table set up for registration. Workers from our host church write down name, age, weight, complaints, etc., on a sheet of paper that will follow them all the way through the clinic. The doctors will use it to write in the prescription, make referrals to physical therapy or the eye clinic and any follow up notes. After registration, people are directed next door to wait for the triage nurse and hear the gospel message while they are waiting.

Next, the patient enters the building and the triage nurse, Jeannie Guerin, takes blood pressure and pulse. By the end of the week Jeanie will have seen every patient in the clinics. She speaks no Spanish, but she thoroughly entertains everyone as they wait. She performed this critical component 100% by herself the entire week.

Next stop is the doctor. Cindy Lewis, Janie Witten, Arlene Dupont and Mariella Sanchez (a Nicaraguan doctor). All have done this before, know what to expect, know what we have in the pharmacy, and start work immediately.
clinic and farmacia

Everything we do in the clinic is designed to serve the doctors. We try to make sure they have everything they need. People ask all the time what they could do on a medical team. We need probably 4 helpers to every doctor or nurse to run the clinic efficiently. Registration, triage, pharmacy, traffic directors, evangelists, people to run errands, pack and unpack. There is more than enough work for everyone.

After the exam, the doctor will write a prescription and may refer a patient to one of our other areas. We are fortunate to have on this trip an optometrist and 2 physical therapists.

Scott Denison, our optometrist, is seeing patients in the front of the building on the stage. He tests eyes with the help of Herman, his interpreter. From there, the patient will step over to Ryan Denison (Scott’s son) and his friend Jessica Anderson who look at the prescription and try to match it up with a pair of glasses which have already been labeled. Scott has brought over 300 pairs of glasses and when packing at the house, he found another 200 or so pairs left by a group from a previous mission trip.

If the referral is for physical therapy, the patient will see Donna Cole and Amanda Fife who have set up their clinic near the entry to the doctor’s area. Donna owns “Healing Hands Physical Therapy” and Amanda is an employee. On the drive in, we passed a man selling “mattresses”. They are so thin, I would almost call them mattress pads. Anyway, Donna purchased a couple for her treatment area so patients do not have to lie on the floor directly while being treated.

After the referrals, the next and last stop is the pharmacy. There is an enormous amount of work that goes into the distribution of these medicines. Once they arrive in Louisville, we get together, unpack them, combine them into as few bottles or boxes as possible discarding any extraneous packaging, and then divide them into totes, distributing them by weight. Once in Nicaragua, we divide them up by type, then in the clinic, we package them for prescriptions. As the pharmacy workers get the prescriptions, they fill out the instruction labels, then an interpreter gives verbal instructions to the patient.

David Hashman and Jim Lyon start out packaging medicines while Stacey Stewart and Rex Brace fill prescriptions. When they are ready, Susan Strange (who speaks Spanish very well) gives instructions to the patients along with the package of medicines.

The whole operation looks like an American diner in the 50’s. The cacophony and activity level all around require some extra effort to be heard when a prescription is ready. As if Rex needed any additional encouragement to be loud, he came up with what is now our standard “your order is ready” notification; “ORDER UP!”. Even the Nicaraguans, having not a clue as to the meaning or context of this expression, can be heard yelling “AUDERU!”. I watched Rex try to explain it to one of them one day. After about 20 minutes he gave up claiming success, but the next time, Julio still said “AUDERU!”.

Day One

The entire day was a model of efficiency. There were never more than 10 or 12 people waiting for a doctor at any time, 2 people waiting in the pharmacy and for glasses. Physical therapy was recruiting customers. The children waited patiently on their parents laps and said “gracias” when we gave them candy. We didn’t even need fans. The temperature was perfect, even a light breeze blowing through the building.

We only saw about 120 patients all day. We closed the doors at 4:00 PM and finished the last patient before 5:00. The only incident for the day was another flat when Terry Dupont tried to drive to Managua to get our other totes from the airport.

We set out traveling further north about an hour and a half and pulled into to Esteli where we had a home-cooked meal at a pastor’s home, then checked into or rooms at the “Panorama 1 y 2” hotel. “1” had been completed back in the 70’s it looked like and “2” was just barely started although the sign that said “1 and 2” was at least 15 years old. Planning? More like wishful thinking. Nobody was working on the expansion while we were there.

The hotel had a computer with internet connection in the lobby. More importantly, there was an internet cafe just a block away with international calling. We were able to call home for about $.06 a minute! Internet use was less than that! Most of us called or wrote home, bought a coca or coca light, chatted in the lobby and headed off to bed. This was shaping up like a vacation without the little umbrellas or hair braiding. But not for long.

Day Two

We arrive at the church…is this the same church??!! People are crowded out into the street. kids are pushing people and the door is guarded and locked. We have to push through the crowd to get in and prepare. There are as many people at the door right now at 8:00 AM as there were all day yesterday. The faces are not as inviting. There is a look of underlying desperation; like a fear that they may not get in.

On this day we set up 30 or 40 chairs in the waiting area and they were never empty. The line for glasses extended out the side door at times and some people actually got a little beligerent about keeping their place in line.

Here’s how crazy it was: An elderly lady was carried into the clinic by her daughter. We then carried her from place to place within the clinic; physical therapy, eye doctor and pharmacy. When it was time to go home I picked her up and carried her out (she lived nearby). As I got into the street, some 12 year old Jesse James who had seen me giving out candy, stuck his hand in my pocket and grabbed the candy from it along with about 40 cords. I don’t think he was after the money - that was just a bonus. I didn’t think I could catch them while carrying the old woman, so I gently laid….no I didn’t. I couldn’t have caught him anyway.

elderly lady

In this picture everyone is having a hearty laugh at my expense. Maybe the old woman was part of the scam and they will split the take later on. (It was, after all, soft candy)

The medical problems were more severe as well. The doctors treated several wounds that had become infected due to neglect with at least one close to requiring an amputation of the foot. Cindy was giving people shots in every part of the body you could imagine. I had to peek before walking in her exam room for fear of passing out while someone was getting a shot in the neck.

I had a lovely 4 hour bus ride to pick up our errant luggage in Managua with Roberto, our driver, who doesn’t speak english… I don’t speak spanish…sure was pretty scenery…both ways. You always see intersting things on the road in Nicaragua…

truck nap

Anyway, we picked up 3 of the 4 lost totes. The last one is still lost to this day - someone, somewhere has a lifetime supply of laxatives and sterile syringes…that’ll come in handy.

Day Three

On Wednesday, we travel further north into the mountains, to a small border town called Somoto.

somotoview

We find the church larger and perfect for a clinic of this type. Everyone has plenty of room and the patients are not all crowded into one room while waiting.

Everyone knows the drill by now and we can get up and running very quickly. There is simply not enough room here to tell of all the needs that were met, the divine appointments that were kept and how the extraordinary came to be expected.

By now it was apparent to me that everyone on this team knew they were truly on a mission - not a mission trip as we think of it in our church life, but a MISSION - a purpose and a work to be accomplished. Each person owned their peice of it and carried it out with verve and passion. The doctors stopped to pray with people, the interpreters asked medical questions on their own, even patients who spoke some english jumped in to help. The physical therapists didn’t wait for referals and began to recruit people from the waiting room to be blessed with their healing touch.

A lady came to the clinic today with one of her children; a baby. She said she was pregnant with her 4th child and that when her husband (or maybe live-in boyfriend) found out, he left her with nothing. She said they had not eaten for a few days and an examination of the baby appeared to support this. Some folks from the clinic went to the store and bought 2 weeks worth of food. Susan Strange then went with the family and the pastor to deliver the food. She found the woman’s home no bigger than a king size bed, a single thin mattress on the floor, a fire pit outside for cooking and 3 eggs in the house. The pastor will follow up with her to get some help.

Unfortunately, it is very neccessary to control access to the clinic. Once the word is out, people come from near and far for treatment, to try to get a prescription filled, for eyeglasses, etc. Church members work each day at the gate to take the vouchers previously handed out to people in the community. There is no way to see everyone and every day the doors will close with people still in line.

Day Four

Our last day for clinics. By the end of today the eyeglasses are all gone. Many medicines are depleted and everyone is willing to stay until the last patient is seen which puts us on the road back to our hotel and dinner no earlier than 7:00 PM. No one is complaining though.

waiting for clinic

After dinner, as usual, is our share time. Observations of the day, personal epiphanies, funny stories. I wish you could have heard how people were impacted by their participation in this mission and I hope you will get a chance to ask some of them.

We end our day saying goodbye to Arlene and Terry Dupont, our interpreters Yorleni, David, Herman and Oscar and to Julio. Roberto, our driver, and Jessica (the little Nicaraguan) will stay with us tomorrow for our sightseeing and shopping. Tonight we pack up and make ready to move out early - it will be a VERY long day.

At least 4 missionaries from this trip plan to return in September for a mission trip to Honduras where we will be working on a building project; either building onto an orphanage or building a basketball court at a police station for the sports ministry.

Why don’t you consider going with us? Hit the contact button at the top of the page and send me an email for more information.

NicaraguaFebruary 19, 2006 6:33 pm

Church

Sunday morning half the team get up early for church. The other half sleep in planning to attend evening services.

Most all the protestant church services I have attended in Nicaragua are animated, passionate and LOUD! REALLY LOUD!! And it seems like they prefer their sound systems with broken speakers so you get that “bee-in-a-tin-can” tone to everything you hear.

el sesteo

There are plenty of Assemblies of God churches here, but even the Iglesia de Bautiste (Baptist Church) services resemble more charismatic services in the U.S. The freedom and joy these people exhibit in worship combined with the welcome we received helped everyone to worship with abandon and anticipate His presence in our work for the week.

As if to model the hospitality and love of Jesus, the pastor invited the entire busload of missionaries to his home for refreshments after the hot service. Although he did not know it or intend it, his willingness to share his humble home and meager provisions set the tone for the rest of the mission.

Sightseeing

Meanwhile back at the ranch: The rest of us who slept in decided to use our time off for a little sightseeing in Leon. We visited the Cathedral of the Acension – the largest in Central America, taking 100 years to complete which is also the burial place of Ruben Dario , the famous poet. It sits on a beautiful city square with benches, vendors, lovers and strollers everywhere.

leoncathedral

You can take a tour of the whole cathedral for around $2 USD – roof, belltower, AND the catacombs where bishops and priests of the past are interred. There is a story accepted as fact by most Nicaraguans that a tunnel runs from the cellar of the cathedral, to a fort some 15 miles outside of Leon formerly occupied by Sandinistas during the revolution. It was supposedly used to help priests and others escape bombings in the city. The entrance has been bricked up - this much I know to be true!

cityscapeleon

A couple of blocks away is the market; food clothing and all the neccesities of life. Here is the unbelievable variety of fruits, vegetables and beans grown in the surrounding countryside we traversed the previous night. It is disconcerting to see meat and seafood for sale, hung on bars or sitting on counter-tops unrefrigerated in the hot air – you smell it long before you see it. Some of the fare in this section remains alive and thus – fresh. A basket of crabs (a little boys guides one on a string like a pet on a leash), a bowl of wriggling iguanas wondering if they shall be frita (fried) or sopa (soup), chickens and even a duck or two.

We stop to exchange some dollars for cords and head to my favorite place in Leon; El Sesteo. No one can tell me what it means – even the Nicaraguans, but they are well known in Central America for great fruit smoothies (fruta refrescante) and ice cream deserts. I can also tell you that their camarones (shrimp) are as good as any I have had anywhere.

There are tables on the sidewalk if you like, or inside, out of the sun, no walls to obstruct your view of the square and the Leon Cathedral. We sit and talk for an hour or so, then catch a 15 cord cab ride back to the house. Click here to do the conversion and see how much this costs.

Packaging Drugs

Soon our friends arrive back from services, we eat lunch and dive into the inventory and packaging of medicines.

We want to seperate medicines by type – antibiotics, vitamins, pain relief, etc. so that non-medical people working in the pharmacy can find things easier. Once the doctors begin seeing patients, it is 90 mph, non-stop.

Our inventory varies each year according to what is available through our suppliers. This year we are fortunate to have plenty of vitamins. This is not always the case and vitamins are particularly expensive in Nicaragua. We are good on Tylenol and other pain relievers, blood pressure meds, and antibiotics, but we are short on anti-fungals; we will have buy some at the local farmacia (pharmacy).

We have 2 full totes of eyeglasses and another 2 of orthopedic supplies. The rest of our 15 total are medicines. Added to those there are about 10 or 12 others with medicines left over from other mission trips, and even some left from our trip last year. There are empty bottles for liquids, small plastic bags for pills and the greatest time saver of all – LABELS!

Laura Hay, a nurse from Forest Park Church who went on last year’s medical mission has printed out labels; hundreds of labels; in Spanish AND English for everything we will be dispensing. This means all the pharmacy people will have to do is fill in the blanks for days, hours, # of pills, teaspoons or whatever and they are ready to go. The new people will never know how good they have it, and the veterans will bless her name.

3 hours later, it’s all done. The containers are stacked waiting to load on top of the busses in the morning. Everyone cleans up, has supper and the church-goers from morning become the sightseers this evening and vice-versa.

By 9 or 10 everyone is home, bags are packed and waiting by the door. We are staying in a hotel the rest of the week and will not be back to Leon, so we say our goodbyes to Claudia the lovely cook and housekeeper and retire to prepare our minds, hearts and bodies for the clinic tomorrow.

Nicaragua, United StatesFebruary 18, 2006 8:53 pm

Prelude

On Thursday, 2 days before our scheduled departure for the medical mission, I received an email from Terry Dupont, our missionary host in Nicaragua. He had met with MINSA, The Nicaraguan Ministry of Health (Ministerio De Salud), who had informed him that we could bring in no drug that was less than 6 months from expiration.

doh

The reason we are able to have so many drugs available to us at very little or no cost is that they are nearing expiration and we take delivery just weeks before leaving the country with them. 75% of the drugs we packed weeks earlier did indeed have less than 6 months before expiring.

About expiration dates; drugs are required to have an expiration date by the FDA. This is the date that the manufacturer will guarantee absolute, 100% full potency and safety of the drug. A study by the FDA, however concluded that most drugs are perfectly safe and retain their potency even 15 years after their expiration date. There are some exceptions, of course, for specific drugs like tetracycline, but we didn’t take any of those.

So, with our drugs already in the hands of the travelers, spread out over 2 states and with just 2 days left before departure, there was no way to get together and pull out the medicines with the offending expiration dates. I wrote our host and told him of our situation and that we would just take our chances at customs. The worst that could happen would be that all of our medicines would be confiscated at customs which would shut down our clinic. Leaving behind 75% of our medicines would have the same effect, so we became smugglers or humanitarians depending upon your point of view.

Departure and Arrival

On Saturday, 2/18 we began meeting at the airport at 1:00 PM for a 3:00 flight, but as the first few people arrived, we were confronted with new problems – some of our totes full of drugs were over the 50 pound limit.

We began shifting drugs around between totes to keep each one under the limit. Right in the ticket line, bottles and packages of drugs were all over the ground being moved about, weighed, moved and re-weighed. The agents were strict about the weight limit – we were not even allowed ½ pound over. In the end, we spent over $500 in excess weight charges to save leaving behind many hundreds of dollars worth of medicines. Of course it may have been money wasted if all the drugs were to be confiscated upon our arrival.

We finally boarded our flight to Houston after a short delay in loading luggage. However, upon lifting off, we were confronted with strong headwinds and our flight was late in arriving. So late, in fact, that our plane to Managua was held for us at the gate as we raced through the airport. (We’re 45 minutes late).

We board the plane, but the captain announces we are overweight and must de-board some passengers and luggage. We finally take off and wave good bye to some of our totes sitting on the tarmac. (We’re 75 minutes late) Strong headwinds again, but we finally arrive in Managua. (Now we’re almost 2 hours late)

In customs I hand over our drug inventory (which does not include expiration dates) to the MINSA representative who says thank you and disappears. There are no inspectors on duty, no one at the exit to conduct random luggage inspections… we simply walk out into the Managua night with all our totes, still sealed, never even noticed. It’s as if some Jedi Knight waved his hand and said “these drugs are OK, let them through”. Should I have expected any less?

We will later receive a call from MINSA asking us to turn in all of the Flucanazole tabs . No reason given and we will ask no questions. 4 totes did not come in, but we have everything we need to start our clinics without delay.

There is excitement on the bus as we travel 90 minutes in the darkness to the missionary’s home in Leon. There are several who have not been here before, a couple who have never been out of the country before and at least one of us has never before flown. The rest of us, knowing something of what to expect, are anxious to get organized and on with the task at hand. The foreign sights, sounds and smells all around us elicit a heightened awareness of our surroundings, nostalgia for some, a comfortable familiarity for others, and all in all, a feeling of anticipation.

We finally arrive, make introductions all around, find our beds and drift off. 18 hours ago we left snow on the ground and now we are turning on fans trying not to stick to the sheets from sweat. What an amazing world.

Nicaragua, United StatesFebruary 2, 2006 8:05 pm

totes

Well, the missionaries and others all gathered at Forest Park last Saturday and packed drugs for the clinics in Nicaragua February 18th to 25th, 2 weeks from now.

$120,000 worth of drugs and supplies and we packed it all in 15 Rubbermaid totes. No wonder health care is so expensive. There is no way the people in the towns of Somoto and Sebaco, where we will be ministering, could afford these medicines any other way. Our Optometrist, Dr. Scott Denison is also bringing 300 or so pairs of eyeglasses. I wish you could see peoples faces as they are able to read again after years of failing eyesight.

Our plane leaves Saturday, 2/18/06 at 3:05 PM. If you can come out, we’ll be checking in at around 1:PM and we’d love to have your prayers and good wishes as we leave (you can also help carry some totes!).

If you will send me your email address, I will send you updates as I can while we are in Nicaragua. However, we will be staying in a hotel in the town of Esteli during the clinics to avoid having to travel a long distance home each evening afterwards. So, unless I can find an internet cafe, updates may have to wait until Thursday night.

Forest Park conducts a medical clinic every year in Nicaragua. Every year medical people of great skill, ministers of the gospel, people willing to give and people willing to go all combine to be Jesus to a people in need. If you have not yet participated on a short term mission, seek the Lord’s will for you and then see me! He’ll give you the will - I’ll get you the ticket!

It will be a blessing to them and an honor for us to go in the name of Christ with healing in our hands and on our lips.