Monday 30 March 2009

Touching lives in PNG

Today, I want to share two stories with you...


I first met Robert a couple of weeks ago.  He is a 3rd year student at Melanesian Nazarene Bible College which is located just down the road from Kudjip.  He became a Christian several years ago and is now following God's call to ministry.  During a clinic visit, I noticed that there was something wrong with Robert's eyes.  I learned that he is completely blind in his right eye, and almost blind in the left due to an abnormal pupil and cataract.  He tries to read by holding a small magnifying glass very close between his face and the book.  Another student sits with him in class to take notes and his wife also helps him with the reading.  This week we were able to refer him to an eye specialist in the district capital.  Someone from the US. has made a donation to purchase a Pidgin audio Bible so that Robert can listen to and study the Word even if he can't read it.  I'm not sure if anything can be done to improve his sight, but I am excited to explore every possibility for helping this young pastor!


Meti is one of my dearest PNGian friends.  She is our “haus meri,” helping to keep Becky and I in order by cleaning our home and working in the garden.  She is also teaching me Pidgin and other such things about PNG.  Meti has an amazing testimony.  As a young woman, she was forced to marry a man she did not know.  Her husband later abandoned her for another wife.  She is now a single mother, supporting and raising three children on her own.  She feels that God has called to minister missionaries, widows, and orphans... and what a ministry she has!  Meti has been elected as a delegate to General Assembly for Church of the Nazarene.  It is her prayer to travel to the US and represent PNG at General Assembly this coming summer, and she has incredible faith that God will answer.  She has been working and saving for two years now, and has almost enough for 1/2 of a plane ticket... but so much farther to go!


These are two people who have so touched my heart.  Travel, doctors visits, and glasses are expensive and can be a strain on a student budget.  What if I could help this young pastor to read and study the Bible?  For a single mother from a small village in PNG, the dream of attending General Assembly is a big one.  Would God use me to help answer her prayers?  Can God use you?


I recently learned that I have fund which is processed through Church of the Nazarene but held in PNG.  I can use donations to this account to help people like Meti and Robert.  Funds can also be applied toward other needs such as building, equipment/supply, and medicines at the hospital.  If you would like to give a gift toward this fund, send your contribution to:  General Treasurer Church of the Nazarene, 17001 Prairie Star Parkway, Lenexa, KS, 66220.  Please mark in the memo line of your check:  “work of Stephanie Doenges” (this part is very important to make sure it gets to the correct account).  Any donations through the church are tax deductible, as with gifts toward my deputation account.  Drop me an email if you send in a donation, and I will forward updates on how this money is being used to help the people in PNG.


Thank you to those who have already given to my deputation fund, which helps to support my existence here!  And thanks for all of your ongoing support through correspondence and prayers.  I could not do this job without you.

Friday 13 March 2009

Fun times :)

So what does one do for fun when you live in the middle of the bush?  Oh, there are plenty of good times to be had around here.  

Take Friday night, for example.  Hop from house to house and you will find missionary friends and volunteers gathered for pizza and games.  Watch out for Becky Wallace... she really knows her Bible trivia!  Of get yourself moving with a game of ping pong courtesy of "The Complete Works of Charles Dickens."

Sometimes we have a special movie night, such as the recent showing of Princess Bride at the Bennett home.  We also had a ladies' evening with Jane Austin.  We enjoyed fondue goodies and the BBC's most recent edition of Sense and Sensibility.

One of our biggest events since my arrival was a mystery dinner, complete with character costumes.  The "who done it" evening was a blast!  Here I am with Judy and Becky Wallace... the three "Tiaras."  And BTW, WE were the guilty ones ;).  Who would have guessed?

Tuesday 10 March 2009

"Chicken and a basket of eggs"

Previously when I talked to folks about what it would be like to live and work in PNG (and mostly when I was complaining about medical insurance), I joked that I would one day be paid with "a chicken and a basket of eggs."  Actually, it is more likely to be fruits and veggies than a chicken.

Today a mother brought her baby in to clinic.  I had seen the child several weeks earlier for a rash.  I thought the skin condition was caused by some sort of virus, so I treated the mother's worry by giving a couple of tubes of over the counter hand cream.  Well, whatever it was it didn't get better and was actually getting a bit worse.  Oops... time to reevaluate and try something different.  Despite the fact that there was no improvement, mom returned today with a thank you:  17 gi-normous oranges from her garden.  (Thankfully they are not lemons!)

So sometimes we do receive "a chicken and a basket of eggs" so to speak.  But the true gift is not what is tangible.  The true gift is the graciousness of our patients.

"Every good and precious gift comes from above..."
~ James 1:17

Saturday 7 March 2009

X-rays and other interesting medical pictures


Pretty classic picture of TB. 20 y/o woman came in with months of productive cough, fevers, weight loss. Notice the cavitary lesions on both the left and the right, as well as infiltration of the right upper lobe.

Here are some interesting pics for the medical folks out there.

Bush church

One of my favorite weekend activities is going to "bush church."  A bush church is generally a one room building where a village congregation gathers for Sunday service.  The decorations are colorful flowers neatly arranged across the front of the church.  Benches or pews are a rare find.  Worshipers either stand or sit on the floor:  women and children on one side, men on the other.  Hymns and choruses are sung in Pidgin or "tok ples" (the local language), a capella or perhaps accompanied by a guitar or tambourine.  The offering is given not only in kina and toea (dollars and cents), but also in fresh produce from gardens.  And last but not least, the pastor preaches a sermon in Pidgin and/or tok ples.


This day I joined up with Niles and Patty and Niles Jr. (two volunteer docs and a PT from Minnesota) and Dr. Erin (here in PNG for 2 years with Samaritan's Purse post residency program:  http://www.samaritanspurse.org/index.php/Serving_Overseas/Post_Residency) for a hike up the mountain to Konduk church.  It is an intense but amazingly beautiful walk, about an hour straight up.  The view from the top is well worth the climb.  You practically get an aerial look at Kudjip Station.  The service was wonderful; I think I understood quite a bit of the sermon.  Hurray for Pidgin!  And the people of Konduk are so welcoming; always excited to have visiting missionaries.  One of the neatest things about such experiences is evidence that the family of God crosses barriers of language and culture.  The Papua New Guineans are our brothers and sisters!


"You are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus... For there is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, [black nor white, Papua New Guinean or American, or anything else for that matter], for you are all one in Christ Jesus."

~ Galations 3:26, 28


Tuesday 3 March 2009

Tough decisions

I promise that not all of my stories will be heavy ones.  But I want to share about one more patient...

Joyce was brought into the ER my first weekend on call.  She was a student at one of the nearby Bible colleges, having recently moved to PNG from the Solomon Islands.  She was about 30 weeks pregnant (7 months) and was referred to our hospital because of very high blood pressure.  I evaluated her and gave the diagnosis of pre-eclampsia, or "toxemia" of pregnancy for the non-medical folks out there.  I admitted Joyce to B-ward for observation.  Lab tests and continued blood pressure readings confirmed that this disease was in the severe stage.  I did an ultrasound and there was very little water around the baby; this supported the diagnosis.  The only treatment for severe pre-eclampsia is delivery.

Back home in the States this would have been a no-brainer.  Let's the kid delivered and he or she will live in the NICU for a couple of months.  In fact, babies as small as 1 pound and early as 24 weeks can survive.  Not so here in PNG.  The smallest of babies cannot survive here without the incubators, ventilators, and fancy equipment of modern day NICUs.  Our nursery is a small and very toasty room where the premature babies share a couple of warming beds.  Oxygen is given by a tiny tube in the nose.  Mothers help to provide the care, feeding their babies expressed breast milk through another tube that goes into the stomach.  

So I here I was facing a difficult decision, though I knew the answer.  Do nothing and both mom and baby would become very sick and possibly die.  Inducing labor would save mom's life, but Joyce's baby was right on the edge of survival in our nursery.  I ordered medication that would start the contractions.  The next morning, Joyce delivered a baby boy who weighed only 1.4 kilograms, or about 2.6 pounds.  Baby Josh did surprisingly well for the first few days, breathing easily and tolerating feeds.  Then he took a turn for the worst:  pulse rate began to rise, breathing became labored, body temperature elevated.  Antibiotics were able to hold down the infection for a few days, but his tiny body was unable to continue the fight.  After just ten short days of life, Josh lost the battle.

Sometimes it is hard to understand God's plan in something like this.  The Father was watching as little Josh was being formed.  He knew that he would be born early and that he would only have ten days with his earthly family before going to heaven.  His love is so great, and I will trust in that love when things don't make sense.

"For you created my inmost being;
you knit me together in my mother's womb.
I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made;
your works are wonderful,
I know that full well.
My frame was not hidden from you
when I was made in the secret place.
When I was woven together in the depths of the earth,
your eyes saw my unformed body.
All the days ordained for me
were written in your book
before one of them of them came to be.
How precious to me are your thoughts, O God!"
~ Psalm 139:13-17a

Sunday 1 March 2009

Sik cancer

Cancer in PNG is unlike almost anything I've seen in the States.  O.K., maybe you could compare to JPS (the county hospital in Fort Worth where I did residency) because we served an indigent population.  Maybe.  Patients here don't go to the doctor until they are really sick.  And by the time they are really sick with cancer, the disease is quite advanced and often untreatable.  Not that we have much in the way of chemotherapy agents.  The cancers we can treat are lymphoma, some leukemias (i.e. CML), early cervical or other gynecologic cancers (with a hysterectomy), and Wilm's tumor in children.  Palliative care is generally all we have to offer, which means we do what we can with medications so that the patients are comfortable until they die.

Hepatitis B is very prevalent in PNG (as high as 20% by some estimates) and is a known cause of liver cancer.  I have diagnosed three cases of liver cancer over the past one month, and will likely see many more.  Mouth cancers are not uncommon due to smoking or chewing beetle nut.  Lung cancer is another one.  If patients don't smoke they are probably exposed to smoke from cooking fires.

Paul sleeps in bed 21 on C-ward.  He has been diagnosed with CML, a type of leukemia.  He has been in the hospital for more than a month now because of a large ulcer on his foot.  I am showering him with all sorts of antibiotics, but the leukemia prevents his body from healing the wound.  For all the medical folks out there, his WBC count is currently > 100K.  The first chemotherapy medicine (busulfan) has failed, so I started him on the second line treatment today (hydroxyurea).  There is another treatment that has recently become available, but you can only find it t in Port Moresby.  Traveling to Moresby is an expense that Paul's family cannot afford.  Paul is praying and waiting for God to heal him.  Will you pray with me for Paul?


I wrote about Ai in one of my previous entry.  She is the young woman with advanced cervical cancer.  My best guess is that she is about 30 years old, because her children are seven and nine years old.  She came back to see me in clinic today.  The Tylenol and ibuprofen I had prescribed had significantly reduced her pain and she was feeling great.  Ai told me that she had shared about her diagnosis with her church, and that the pastor had prayed for healing.  She was certain that God had answered and the cancer was gone.  I examined her and found that the tumor had grown from her previous visit.  She continues to have faith that God will heal her.  He will answer her prayers.  She will have a new body someday.  Will it be in this life, or in heaven? Will you pray for Ai, too?

"Have faith in God," Jesus answered.  "I tell you the truth, if anyone says to this mountain, 'Go throw yourself into the sea,' and does not doubt in his heart but believes that what he says will happen, it will be done for him.  Therefore I tell you, whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours."
~ Mark 11:22-24

Lord, increase my faith.