Continuing Education & Capacity Building

Equipping our Doctors, Nurses & Leaders

DSC_4534.jpg

We can’t talk about our Continuing Education Program at FAME without introducing Brad Snyder, our Clinical Education Coordinator. Brad joined our team in November 2014. A Family Practice Nurse Practitioner, Brad is a healthcare provider who is also a gifted educator. Having spent four years living in Rwanda and another couple of years in Burundi, Brad comes to us with a unique perspective and understanding. He is working closely with our senior doctors, nurses and volunteer specialists to develop a variety of training modules and meaningful learning experiences for our team. Brad is committed to making sure our educational programming is meeting the most pressing needs of our healthcare workers and the patients they serve. He is also spearheading a process that involves FAME’s clinical team leaders and specialist volunteers working together to create up-to-date, evidence-based protocols focused on the top 10 most common illnesses seen at FAME.

Trainings & Lectures so far this year:
Respiratory Infections
Asthma
Helping Babies Breather (HBB)
Prenatal Care & Shoulder Dystocia
Management 101
UTI/STD
Pylonephritis, PID, Prostatitis
Hypertension & Pregnancy
Advanced OB Nurse Training
Advanced Life Support in Obstetrics (ALSO)
Structured Operative Obstetrics (SOO)
Induction & Augmentation of Labor
GI: Endoscopy Training
Liver Function Tests
Common GI Complaints
Electronic Fetal Heart Monitoring
Supply Chain Management Systems
Pediatric Shock
LRTI
Constrictive Pericarditis
Pediatric Dehydration/Rehydration
Pre/Post Op Consideration for C-section
Diagnosis & Treatment of Abdominal Complaints

Caroline Epe
Godbless Joseph

by Volunteer Nurse Chana Schaffer

At the end of February a seemingly delicate, extremely premature baby boy was brought to FAME. He was hanging on to life by a thread when he arrived, and we weren’t sure if he would make it through the night. We supported him with warmth, oxygen, intravenous sugar water and love.

With the help of his amazing mother, our nurses and doctors helped Godbless Joseph (GBJ) to grow and thrive. After he survived that challenging first night, we all recognized that this little one had a lot of fight in him. He may have appeared physically weak, but he was drawing strength from somewhere.

Initially GBJ required an incubator to maintain his body temperature. We gave him sugar water through an IV, and then progressed to using a feeding tube that went into his nose and down to his stomach. His mother was by his side always. Even when she couldn’t hold him, she talked to him, touched him in the incubator, and played him music. Maybe it was her strength and continuous love and support that kept him fighting to live.

FAME Volunteer Pediatrician Dr. Verena Moreno with Godbless Joseph and his mother

FAME Volunteer Pediatrician Dr. Verena Moreno with Godbless Joseph and his mother

Our not so delicate miracle baby boy went home with his mama just over a week ago! He was cared for at FAME for four weeks.  When he arrived he weighed less than 2 pounds (800 grams), mostly skin and bones. On discharge day he weighed almost 4.4 pounds! Godbless Joseph astounded us all. On the day he went home he was wrapped in a colorful kanga and breastfeeding in his mother’s arms. All the tubes and supportive devices were gone, leaving a tiny, yet incredibly resilient babe.

Miracles, Losses and Pulling Together
Volunteer Nurse Chana Schaffer with new mother and her healthy twins

Volunteer Nurse Chana Schaffer with new mother and her healthy twins

By Volunteer Nurse Chana Schaffer

Days at FAME are long. About a week and a half ago I had an especially long day. It started at 7:30AM and ended at 3AM. Our labor ward was full. We admitted a very sick mom and preterm baby who arrived after the mom delivered on her way to FAME. She tried to make it to the hospital for the delivery, but had to stop along the way to give birth.

The baby looked to be about 30 weeks gestation and was cold, blue and barely breathing when he arrived. We put him under the warmer immediately and helped him breathe with oxygen and a resuscitation mask. We put in a nasogastric tube and an IV to give him dextrose. He was struggling. We were able to warm him up to normal body temperature and keep his blood sugar up.

In the meantime we also admitted his mama. We discovered that she had severe pre-eclampsia, explaining her pre-term delivery. It took the teamwork of three nurses and one nurse practitioner to stabilize her. We treated her pre-eclampsia and controlled her blood pressure with a combination of intravenous and oral medications.

The other patients on our labor ward included a woman in active labor, a woman with postpartum sepsis and a blood clot in her leg, a woman with a suspected intra-abdominal pregnancy in severe abdominal pain, and another woman with postpartum sepsis who had a C-section at another hospital and had to have a lifesaving hysterectomy at FAME due to severe infection. A very heavy patient load indeed!

We were short-staffed on the night shift; Mama Mshana was by herself in the labor ward. The level of care that this group of women required was far too much for one nurse. Safi (our Ward Supervisor) came in to help, and so did I. We rose to the challenge and worked as a cohesive team.

At 11 PM we got an admission. Our on call doctor came into the ward with another preterm baby. The mother of the baby had delivered a month earlier at another hospital. The baby looked to be about 28 weeks gestation. They kept the baby in an incubator at the other hospital for a week, and then the incubator broke so they sent mom and baby home. For 3 weeks, the mother did her best to keep her baby alive, finally recognizing she could not do it alone.

This little baby boy was skin and bones. He was barely breathing and gray. We all thought that the chances for survival were low. We warmed him and supplied oxygen, and then we waited. To all of our surprise, he made it through the night! What a resilient little one. The next day we started intravenous dextrose to maintain his blood sugar and continued our supportive care. He was fighting to survive and we would give him every chance possible.

The first preterm baby boy mentioned was in severe respiratory distress throughout the night. Mama Mshana knew that he and his mother would need one nurse assigned to care for them both. She was already caring for the young woman in active labor, so she asked me to stay in their room to provide 1:1 care. I held the baby’s hand and stroked his head when he cried. It was painful on every level to watch him struggle so vigorously to breathe. I wished I could breathe for him to relieve his suffering. He passed away the following night. We supported him physically and with love until he took his last labored breath.

Another nurse, Julieth, had come to our aid at 11 30 PM and so did Kelley, our Women’s Health NP. Between the four of us we were able to provide safe and quality care to all of the patients on the labor ward. In addition to caring for our two preterm infants, we welcomed a healthy baby boy into the world when our laboring mama gave birth at 2 30 AM. This night was another amazing example of the teamwork that happens at FAME.

As exponential growth continues, more nurses are being hired to safely staff the two inpatient wards at FAME. Finding experienced nurses is no easy task. According to WHO statistics, Tanzania has 24 nurses/midwives for every 100,000 people. By comparison, the United States has 981 nurses/midwives for every 100,000 people.

The miracle of this very busy night is our 28-week baby who is defying all odds. He is gaining weight, eating expressed breast milk by mouth, crying loudly, and spending time out of the incubator on his mama’s chest for kangaroo care. He has astonished us all, and I feel blessed to be part of the team caring for him. We may not have all of the advanced technology available in the more developed world, but the nurses and doctors at FAME are moving small mountains in the care they are providing.

When a Team Comes Together....

By FAME Clinician, Dr. Anne Ghati

Sunday mornings at FAME Medical are usually much quieter than other days of the week. But not always. During one of my last night duty rotations, a young pregnant woman arrived very early in the morning, having traveled over rough roads while in full labor. With two of our esteemed nurses at my side, we rushed her into the labour ward hoping for a normal labour and delivery.

In talking with her, it became quickly clear that she had a very complicated obstetrical history, with two previous C-sections, including one during which the baby did not survive. But then she never lost hope.

My heart began to race, as I knew this woman needed an emergency C-section. Just then, while one of our nurses was examining her, the membranes ruptured and there was meconium staining. We had to act very fast. Dr. Mshana was my back up and he arrived quickly, along with Mama Mshana, one of our lead nurses in the Operating Room. With the mobile phone network down in the area, I had to run to get our Anesthetist on call. Because he lives on campus, we were able to race right back.

The nurses were preparing the patient to go to the OR. Dr. Mshana and I scrubbed and the emergency C/S commenced under General Anesthesia. With many adhesions from the two previous C-sections, evidence of a ruptured uterus, and meconium staining, the surgery was complicated. The baby was extracted, but he did not cry and was not breathing. We quickly cut the cord and our Clinical Education Coordinator received the baby and began resuscitation. I believe prayers do wonders so I quickly said one. As we were busy removing the placenta, finally the baby cried! What a nice feeling. Everyone felt happy. The baby's Apgar shot up to 10. He was fine. Two of our nurses took the baby out of the OR and the team finished the surgery. The mother and the baby were saved and we rejoiced.

 

 

 

 

Neighbors, Newborns & FAME

Pascalina with her new bundle of joy

by Annie Birch

When my neighbour, Pascalina, became pregnant last year it coincided with the imminent opening of the RCH (Reproductive & Child Health) programme at FAME Medical.  To me, as a long time childbirth educator and doula, the prospect of comprehensive pre and postnatal care plus the possibility of a safe and caring delivery with emergency back-up for necessary C-sections right in our neighbourhood was exciting news indeed.

 Pascalina already had one uncomplicated pregnancy and delivery followed up by over a year of breastfeeding so she was a great candidate for the new anti-natal (pre-natal) clinics held weekly. The nurse in charge of the clinic welcomed us with a big smile and carried out the necessary tests—which all came back with great results. Pre-natal vitamins were dispatched and a due date of January 1, 2015 was established.

 As the end of the year and the holiday rush approached, Pascalina kept up her monthy then bi-monthly and finally weekly visits to the clinic. She continued working and kept up her good nutrition, which is pivotal for a healthy pregnancy and baby, and is also an essential component of the FAME programme. Christmas was upon us and still no baby…. Maybe this would be a 2015 arrival?

 Then, late at night on the 28th December my phone rang. Pascalina was at the gate; it was time!  I roused myself from sleep and we loaded into the car and headed up the hill to FAME, a short drive away but a long walk in the middle of the night. Dr. Isaac who was on duty, backed up by Dr Ivan and the wonderful nursing team, received us. Although contractions were minimal she was already 5cm dilated. Based on her previous birth, which was fast and easy, it seemed likely that the baby would arrive in a few hours and I left her with the capable team.

 As anyone who’s had a baby knows, every labor is different. When I came back at mid-day I was surprised to find that the baby had been born only a few hours before. Unlike her first birth, this one was longer and harder. We chatted in Swahili, comparing birth stories with the new baby’s Bibi (grandmother). Some experiences cross cultures with no translation. It turned out this baby was quite big, (something I’d attribute to Pascalina’s attention to nutrition) and she is quite tiny so the nursing team really stepped up at the end with extra encouragement to get this new little boy into the world.

 At the time of this writing the new arrival has not been named, and his brother Herrick is delighted to be a big brother. There’s nothing like the miracle of birth and life to open our hearts. Both Pascalina and I are grateful for the professional and compassionate care provided by the team at FAME.

Susan Gustafson