Sunday, November 17, 2019

A Hospital story


Drops of dried blood trail the sidewalk outside where I am walking. Sad lonely people sit waiting to hear news of their loved ones. A body completely covered with a sheet and a shrouded blanket rolls passed me on a bed as I move along the outside corridors. There’s no warning.  There is no preparation for what you will see and experience in this place.  The overall feeling I have gotten the few times I have visited the country’s main government hospital in the last 10 years, is just sadness and despair.  Or maybe despair isn’t the right word, because I think at times despair can drive you to action or it can drive you to do something. But this, it’s a resignation. Left to itself to think, well what more can be done? I guess this is what it has to be?

Many of the patients at UTH the University Teaching Hospital are there because they cannot afford to go anywhere else. Their only hope for help and healing is there, in this hospital where the poverty of the country shows itself so clearly.

For the last 3 years this place has been on my heart. So much so that at the beginning of the year one of my goals for 2019 was to begin visiting patients at the hospital. The year didn’t start off like I had hoped and so I just now in August found myself thinking I really need to try to find a way to go there.

I had tried to get connected via phone with different people to tell me HOW to go about helping. There are no candy stripe positions or volunteer desks where sweet old ladies with white hair, or teenagers in said pink striped uniforms can give out information and a smile to help those in need.

So, after waiting too long, especially when something is on your heart - one day I was driving by the hospital and just decided today was the day to start “trying”. 
That very week, a post my cousin had put on her FB account encouraged me, it said,  “Be someone who makes someone else look forward to tomorrow”.  
And I was reminded, “yes”, I can be that someone.

So I drove into the massive confusing complex of nowhere to park at the hospital and found a guard who was willing to give me a spot for “the lady”. I parked and began to walk around the hospital. It’s almost impossible to describe the hospital to a foreigners mind… but much of it is outdoors and lots of courtyards. There are lots of people and even more doctors and nurses and wanna-be doctors and nurses milling about.  There is no designated area for the random white woman who wants to help to go and sign in. So I walked around and around. I saw an administration office and thought about it but didn’t go in. Then I walked a second time the entirety of the hospital campus, trying to get up the courage to just walk into an office and start talking. I was nervous. I am not sure why, I think mostly because I knew this wasn’t a typical thing and also I feel often misunderstood in the Zambian cultural context. Its nothing at this point that I can do, but it is there.  So I literally was speaking to myself, “Come on Megan, you can do this. You are strong.  You are brave. Come on…”

Finally I heeded my own advice and walked into the administration wing and knocked on a random office door and explained what I wanted. The gentleman then referred me to another office, public relations.  There I met a nice lady who was happy to talk to me and in fact had a specific person that had needed help.  So I got the proper permissions and wrote the appropriate letters and after that I was given the ok to go to one of the wards and pass out fruit and toiletries and give assistance.

And so the awkward phase of it began.  ME walking around while everyone else is staring at me especially the staff coming up and wanting to see what’s going on and why am I here, etc. But, the good thing was that I was introduced to a young man Jonathon who has been in the hospital for the last 5 months. His younger sister Given is there staying with him at the hospital. They are double orphans and have no other family coming to help them. He is oxygen dependent and so he has had to stay there until an oxygen concentrator machine could be purchased for him. So I started visiting him each week. And this was exactly what I needed to feel comfortable to then go around to all the other patients in the ward on the given day of the week passing out fruit.


On one of my recent visits with Jonathon a man 3 beds over from them in the ward was calling for me to come. He had no strength to even lift his head or his arms but was beckoning me to go by his bedside. I had seen him a few weeks earlier and had given him fruit and briefly spoken to him and knew he was in bad shape. His stomach was very bloated and there in the bed laid a man with extreme malnourishment. Kwashiokor.

Since the time I was a young child watching TV, like everyone else in the Western world, I had seen the videos of starving children in Africa. Bloated bellies, pronounced ribcages, tight skin and lethargy. I had never seen an adult like this, let alone had any interaction with someone. But now right in front of me was a man begging for help. For food.

The hospital provides a soya porridge for breakfast and then nshima and beans for lunch.  Many patients have food brought in to them by the “bedsitter” the person who is allowed to stay at the hospital with the patient the entire time. But this man, Robbie could not eat the food that the hospital provided and he had no one staying with him and taking care of him.  His huge belly over the weeks was seeming to decrease a bit as the fluid was being drained often from his stomach. 

Draining fluid seems to be a very common practice at the hospital, as about every 8-10 patients I visit will have a drainage tube coming out of their side, flowing into an open basin or bucket underneath or to the side of their bed.  So for the past several weeks he just lay on his bed with a single drainage tube coming out of his stomach.

Languishing. 

When he called me over begging for food, I have never felt more clearly the passage of scripture where Jesus says, “I was hungry and you fed me.” So I went to the cafeteria bought him some vegetables and some food and tried to ask him a bit more about his situation and what he could eat.  One of the nurses later came back to me to say that he needed a low protein diet. So when I left the hospital I told him next time I came I would bring him some food.

I thought about him the next several days, and when I couldn’t sleep at night and he was on my mind I started researching Malnourishment- more specifically Kwashiokor. I tried to see what other foods to bring him and so when I went to the hospital on Tuesday I was weighed down with a backpack full of food for him and the fruit for all the other patients in the ward. I showed him the things I brought and offered to organize it in his bedside cabinet. I opened it up and cockroaches were crawling around inside of it. A cup of porridge sat on the top of it with about 10 dead flies in it. I warned him not to drink it anymore, that he needed to throw it out.

From his sunken in eyes, he looked at me and said thank you. I told him that this food was really from God. He was using me but it was ultimately Him that was giving it.
Though the temperature was about 95degrees outside and his bed lay by the window, (windows are kept open as there is no air conditioning and the room definitely needs ventilation) he was covered up in a blanket and was not doing well. He kept telling me that they had brought some medicines and fluid but they couldn’t get the cannula in his arm because he had no blood so they couldn’t give him anything. As he talked to me a fly landed on his face, just like the children in the TV ads- and he couldn’t even wipe it away. I moved to swipe it away from his hollow cheek. 

I finished my visits and before leaving he told a nurse to come bring me back to his bedside. He was asking for help to buy a $3 medicine. So I walked off the hospital campus across the street to the chemist to buy him his medicine.
I brought it back and found an orange in my bag and gave it to him. He smiled and said thank you- I have no one staying here to help me.

Since I last saw him on Tuesday, I found out he passed away yesterday.
Alone.

No one was there with him.

My heart aches. 

I don’t know anything. I don’t know the backstory, or why at the end of his life there was no one with him. I don’t even know his official diagnosis.

But He died alone.

That makes me very sad.

The same week 3 other patients died, 2 of whom I had several interactions with and was seeking to give help to. If I am honest, it has left me feeling so emotionally drained and raw. I don’t even know how to respond.

The encouragement both the kids and James have told me is that at least for this particular man, in his last days, he received kindness.

And that thought,
today Sunday evening, in the wake of a total personal emotional breakdown Saturday morning exhausted and spent, crying more than I have in a while due to life but most especially Zambia hardships of these terrible weeks we have had lately (with no electricity for 12-16 hours a day, water problems and excessive heat)…  

That thought that if I look away from myself and my problems and hardships, I can clearly see some “purpose.” That even a cup of cold water given to this man, was done for Christ.