| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
A letter from Andy and Ellen Collins
in Nepal |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
September 2004
Once Upon a Monsoon
It was the middle of the monsoon when Sharmila finally went into
labor. Three times during her pregnancy she had dutifully walked
the two-hour path to the government health post in Tinggun for
pre-natal check-ups. Unfortunately the male health worker there
provided only cursory exams, and gave her no indication of anything
out-of-the-ordinary. Since she already had two children, Sharmila
figured this delivery would be a straightforward one.
She soon found out how wrong she—and the health worker—had
been. After five days of pain, Sharmila gave birth to a daughter.
As most Nepali women do, she delivered in a shed beside her house,
which, incidentally, is no more than a hut itself. And, like most
Nepali women, she had no trained birth attendant to help out.
The baby seemed healthy enough, so Sharmila assumed her trouble
was over. But when the placenta did not emerge, her trouble had
only just begun.
Far from any modern medical care, Sharmila was at the mercy of
her relatives and neighbors. Juti, a friend who had been with
her during the birth, urged Sharmila’s husband Ganesh to
do something. He went in search of the local healer, while Juti
tied a hoe to the umbilical cord (as is the custom, to prevent
it from re-entering the womb). The women began to massage Sharmila’s
belly. They used herbs and pressure in attempt to deliver the
placenta, to no avail. The healer did his best as well, for the
cost of a chicken, but nothing happened. More villagers gathered,
spreading the word that Sharmila had a ball of water inside her
belly that was keeping the placenta inside. Sharmila suggested
that the “ball” was perhaps another baby, because
she still felt movement, but everyone (except Juti) dismissed
this notion as nonsense.
The next day Juti persuaded her own husband to send someone to
call the volunteer health worker from Malta, the village across
the river. This woman had received training from the Community
Development and Health Project (CDHP) of the United Mission to
Nepal. It took two days for her to arrive. As soon as she saw
Sharmila’s condition, she insisted that Ganesh take his
wife to the hospital immediately. “She has another baby
in there, and unless it comes out she’s going to bleed to
death,” the woman said, but still no one else believed the
cause of the retained placenta.
In this part of the world, making a referral to the hospital
is one thing, getting there is another matter. Ganesh was in a
state of panic. He and his wife are poor farmers who work on land
owned by someone else. They have one goat and a few chickens.
And while many Nepalis live with relatives, this family lives
on its own, with only Ganesh’s elderly father nearby. Who
would look after the other two children? Who would make sure the
corn didn’t get flooded? And, the greatest question of all,
how could Ganesh afford to have his wife carried to the nearest
road, to hopefully meet a vehicle that would take them into the
city? And then how could he ever afford the costs of the hospital?
Thankfully things were not left up to Ganesh. Juti’s husband
took the lead, and the quest for funds began. Urging the village
men to contribute, he also borrowed from the local money-lender
to supplement the donations. He then presented Ganesh with 2,400
rupees ($34) with which to try to save Sharmila’s life.
Five men took turns carrying her in a dhoko (basket), while Ganesh
followed behind with the newborn. It took the party seven hours
to reach the road—a one-lane, dirt track plagued by landslides
at this time of year. With the help of the staff at the nearby
Bhattedara Health Post, they managed to get a vehicle to take
them to Anandaban, the site of a hospital run by the Leprosy Mission,
just outside the Kathmandu valley. “We crossed the river
three times to get there,” Sharmila told me, “and
as soon as the doctor saw me he said we had to go on to the hospital
in the city. I needed an emergency operation to deliver my second
baby. Finally my husband believed me.” By then night had
fallen. The final hour of the journey was a taxi-ride, bumping
over the ruts in the road to their final destination.
No one thought that Sharmila—not to mention her baby—would
survive the surgery. So much time had passed, so much blood lost,
such a difficult journey endured. But that night, nearly five
days after her daughter had been born, a twin son was delivered.
“The doctors thought he was dead, but then, as soon as they
lifted him out he started crying,” Sharmila said, eyes brimming
with tears. The little boy’s right arm was broken, probably
a result of all the earlier efforts to release the placenta, but
otherwise he was amazingly healthy. His mother, however, was weak
from anemia and exhaustion. On top of the caesarian section, Sharmila
had to undergo a hysterectomy due to the trauma to her uterus.
For several days she kept bleeding, and couldn’t eat.
Just when it seemed that things were finally improving, Sharmila’s
incision became infected. Then the baby’s arm had to be
reset after a failed first attempt. The days in the hospital became
weeks. |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |

Sharmila feeds one of her twins. |
|
About five days into this saga I
found out about Sharmila, Ganesh, and the twins. I heard through
a woman named Urmila, who cares for our toddler while I am at work.
She had gone to the hospital on Saturday to visit a fellow church
member’s infant son. She noticed that in the next incubator
was another baby boy, whose father was standing by in tears. Urmila,
being a caring Christian woman, asked the man what was wrong. The
man was Ganesh. All the money he had left after the journey was
now spent, and he was distraught. He had been sleeping on a piece
of cardboard on the floor next to his wife’s bed for several
nights now. Urmila said he was a pitiful sight. |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
When she told me about Ganesh and
Sharmila I was moved, not only by the story itself, but by the way
Urmila had responded. She had immediately contacted other church
women to visit the couple, and had begun taking nutritious soup
to Sharmila in the evenings. She was worried about these village
people because they were poor, because they had no one to help them,
and because the staff did not seem to care. When Sharmila’s
breastmilk was insufficient for the hungry twins, and the hospital
did not provide formula free-of-charge, Urmila bought a can of the
expensive formula herself. When Sharmila needed a blood transfusion
and the hospital did not provide enough blood, Urmila’s husband
offered his own. They prayed over the couple, and shared the good
news of a God who cares. Urmila and her husband live in two rented
rooms, they make about $100 a month, and yet they saw themselves
as fortunate, reaching out to these strangers with compassion. God
truly has His angels here on earth. |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
It didn’t take much persuading to get me
to visit. I was particularly concerned when I heard that the couple
came from Makwanpur district, where CDHP has been working. We have
tried our best to assist patients when they are sent into the big
city for care. Unfortunately Sharmila and Ganesh come from a village
outside the current working area, and CDHP has just been phased
out by UMN, otherwise they would have had assistance earlier. |
|

Nursing students were assigned to help Sharmila (center) in post-natal
care. |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Nevertheless, I spoke with another
Nepali Christian friend of mine, Martha, who works at the hospital
as a referral coordinator. I urged her to contact the hospital’s
social services department to ensure that Sharmila’s bills
and food would be covered. She did so, and also provided clothes
for the babies.
Meanwhile, I alerted one of the last remaining staff members
of the now closed CDHP office, asking her to look in on Sharmila
as well. This dear woman, Kopila, was another inspiration to me.
She has worked at a low-wage job as a cleaner and is losing her
job in less than a month. Furthermore, her husband is unemployed.
Yet Kopila bought meat for the new mother (a “must”
in Nepali culture), cared for the babies, and took it upon her
self to assist when Sharmila was finally discharged 23 days after
admission. (This task, incidentally, was no small feat. The total
bill came to $419—eventually paid for in full by social
services—but an apparent lack of communication between social
services and the various other hospital departments delayed Sharmila’s
release by two days, causing considerable stress and disappointment
in the meantime.) |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |

Ellen Collins (left) and two nursing students attend to Sharmila's
twins. |
|
Another of God’s “angels-on-earth”
helped with the above situation, and that is my friend Vijaya. She
served with CDHP for ten years and is now one of the leaders of
a new Christian organization called Shanti Nepal. She has a heart
for the poor, and has facilitated many a case such as this one in
the past. Vijaya did more than smooth the way for Sharmila to leave
the hospital—she extended the path. |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
I shared my concern that Sharmila
was being sent home, but was expected to return within eight days
for a check-up. By the time the family got to Makwanpur in the
monsoon rains, they would have to turn around and come back again!
How could Sharmila make it? Vijaya immediately had a solution.
Shanti Nepal had just assumed responsibility for running Chapagaun
Health Post, one of UMN’s earliest health facilities located
half an hour out of the city. “We can arrange for her to
stay in our Nutrition Rehabilitation Center,” Vijaya said.
“It’s empty right now, and there she will have the
best care ever.”
What an answer to prayer. Assured that his wife was safely in
the hands of the health post staff, Ganesh could return home to
see about his two elder children, his fields, and other matters.
Relieved that she would not be making the difficult journey home
for now, Sharmila happily “checked in” to the simple
mud-brick room with an attached kitchen, complete with wood stove.
The nutrition worker immediately took her under her wing, serving
up snacks full of Vitamin A, and soups made with jwaano, to increase
her breast milk production. The person in charge of the health
post accepted the additional responsibility as an opportunity,
rather than a burden. “We have 15 nursing students at our
health post this month for their practical training,” he
told me. “I have assigned them on a rotation basis to look
after this post-natal case, and to help with the babies. They
will learn from our two nurse midwives, and will in turn provide
the extra hands that this mother needs.”
One week later, Sharmila is healthy and happy. Her check-up went
smoothly, her strength is restored, and now she is preparing to
return home. Life will not be easy with four children to raise,
on land that provides enough food for only six months of the year.
Nor will it be easy to survive in a district suffering from the
internal conflict devastating this country. But I told Sharmila
that I believe God will continue to provide, as He has done thus
far. I prayed that the many hands that have reached out will be
a witness to God’s love, and that through Him Sharmila,
Ganesh and their children may enjoy a more abundant life.
Once again, I thank God for His hand at work through the dedicated
Nepalis I have the privilege to know. Through them, He has broken
down barriers, made paths straight, and restored lost hope. Through
them, He has reminded me that together we can be His hands, feet
and heart on this earth.
Those two little babies—born days apart in such different
locations and conditions—may never know what a blessing
they have been to all of us. They revealed to us once again the
desperate needs around us, and they gave us the chance to give.
Ellen Collins
Previously a health educator with the Community Development
& Health Project, Ellen is currently advisor to Shanti Nepal
and other Christian NGOs.
The 2004 Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study, p. 203 |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
|