Sunday, June 23, 2013

Lout Open House This Wednesday


We had a very encouraging time tonight with the Tramonte's Open House.  A big thank you to Val & Katie for hosting us!

Our next Open House to hear from us and hear about our mission to PNG is this Wendesday evening June 26th for dessert at 7pm with Jerry & Ann Lout, elders at Believers Church.  Please RSVP to crouchm@gmail.com or esther4vs12_16@yahoo.com if you would like to join us.

If you aren't able to come this Wednesday, we have two additional Open Houses - look to come for one of those and let us know if you will attend!

Thank you for checking in periodically here and remembering us as we prepare to move to Kudjip this Fall.


Sunday, June 16, 2013

 

First Meet & Greet

A huge thank you to Central Church of the Nazarene and Believers Church for letting us share our mission today - a privilege and a blessing.

Our first Supporters Night will be next week on June 23rd at the home of Val & Katie Tramonte at 7:30 PM.  Please come hear our heart and mission for our time in Papua New Guinea.  We will also allow plenty of time for questions and answers.  Dessert and coffee will be provided.  

Childcare will not be provided this time and you are encouraged to make arrangements for childcare on your own.

Please RSVP by Thursday via email to crouchm@gmail.com or esther4vs12_16@yahoo.com for address and directions.



As you can see we will also have an opportunity to hear from and meet with us on the 26th with Jerry and Ann Lout.  Let us know by Sunday the 23rd if you will plan to come that Wednesday night!

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Back in the Fray





Back in the Fray

In the spring of 2002, my wife Esther and I met while working aboard the Africa Mercy.  At that time, we both received a call to pursue long-term medical mission work after completing our training.

Fast forward eleven years: we have been married eight years, have two children, have seen and been a part of medical work in four continents, completed medical, nursing school and residency and, thanks to the CMDA Steury Scholarship, we have also been able to pay off our debts a single year after graduation.

Now our family of four prepares to leave Tulsa, Oklahoma and move 7,000 miles across the world to labor at Kudjip Mission Hospital.


Kudjip is run by the International Church of the Nazarene.  Though not Nazarene, we are able to serve in this hospital through a Nazarene agency called MissionCorps, which places volunteer missionaries in various locations around the world.  Our initial term through MissionCorps will be between one and two years.  Beyond our initial term ... we would appreciate your prayers about our next steps.

I have blogged previously about our experiences in PNG in the Spring of 2011.  The challenges to this nation are many.  The culture is particularly violent, marked by tribalism, feuds and warfare of the past.  The geography is tropical jungle without a road connection between the capital and the bulk of the population in the mountains.  The people are Christian, but congregants and even pastors participate in domestic violence and theft.  The church needs to experience the transformational effects of the Gospel in many areas.  Most of the people live their entire lives without visiting a doctor and diseases like Malaria, Tuberculosis and Malnutrition claim many lives.

Kudjip hospital makes a difference in all of these areas of need.  Through medical ministry, a nursing college, and community health programs the lives of those in the highlands of this island nation are improving.

I will join the medical staff at Kudjip in the Fall of this year, serving as a family physician alongside other missionary doctors.  While the medical work at Kudjip will stretch and challenge me, I anticipate contributing to the hospital's goal of improving the health of their community and the overall mission to make Christ-like disciples in this nation.

Esther will continue her calling to bring up our children Anna (4) and Levi (18 months) in a Godly home.  While the transitions of moving our family will be taxing, we pray and trust that the Lord will direct their hearts as we serve in this setting overseas.  There may also be an opportunity for Esther to contribute at the Nursing college in the future.



We plan to leave Tulsa at the end of September 2013, just four months away.  While we prepare ourselves spiritually for this mission, we are also responsible to raise funds that will offset our initial expenses and monthly cost-of-living while serving as volunteers with Kudjip.

Our initial expense will be $12,000 to fly four individuals into the highlands of Mount Hagen, as well as covering visa costs and other start-up expenses.  Once in the field, our living expenses are estimated at $2,000 per month which covers some basic insurance and our housing, lodging, basic internet fees, etc.  Praise the Lord, we will not have to raise any additional funds to pay off student loans!  That means that for one year of service we will need $36,000 or $60,000 for two years.

As of this writing, we are 55% of the way into covering our $12,000 startup expenses.  However, we have received only about 25% of our required monthly donations in pledges.  Our biggest need at present is for donors who will begin supporting us on a monthly basis.  Any recurring donations processed before we depart go toward offsetting our start-up expenses.  However, one-time donations are a great way to support our mission as they will be applied to our future needs once our initial costs have been met.

We are very grateful to our home church, Believers Church, in Tulsa for providing a large portion of our monthly needs.

Please consider joining us in this endeavor through prayer and financial support.  You may contribute tax-deductible donations, which will be reserved in our ministry fund and not used by us personally, at this address:


Those of you who would prefer to contribute by mail may do so by sending a check payable to
"General Treasurer Church of the Nazarene" with "Crouch - Kudjip PNG - Mission Corps" written on it and mail to:

Church of the Nazarene
PO Box 843116
Kansas City, MO  64184


We also want you to have an idea of the roots, ministry and fruit that we expect from this mission and have created a 12-minute audio / visual presentation that can be viewed online below.




For those of you in the Tulsa area, several of our supporters have agreed to host "Open House" events.  We will be present to share a little about our mission, reconnect with you and answer any questions you have.  We will also provide the information you would need to give toward our ministry financially.  

Please RSVP to us by email (crouchm@gmail.com) if you would like to attend one of these events. 


 

Thank you for your support, friendship and prayers.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Final Day

My last day was a bit more relaxed. I had a big moment of weakness in the morning, though. As I went to collect Xrays and lab results I heard some commotion in the emergency room. Dr. Jim was already giving instructions, including some instructions on collecting resuscitation equipment. I knew he could handle whatever happened in there, so went on to my pediatrics ward. In full honesty, part of me couldn't stomach the idea of seeing another ill-fated resuscitation to start off my last day at Kudjip hospital. I rounded fairly quickly in the pediatrics ward, knowing those would be the last patients I saw the next morning.

I saw a little boy named Nixon. This was the second time I laid eyes on Nixon, and both have been miraculous. He is about 10 years old and was helping to push a broken down vehicle a week ago when he fell, the vehicle rolled and (according to bystanders) went over his lower back as he laid belly down in the dusty road. When we first saw him, I couldn't believe this story. He had some back pain, but no evidence of serious damage, and was able to walk out of the emergency room with some tylenol as his only treatment. Friday I saw Nixon in our outpatient department. His back was a little sore, but he was walking fine and had no major injuries evident in followup. I assured his mother that God had something for this boy's life because he should probably have died from his accident and came away without any serious injury.


Nixon doing very well at followup


I spent a bit more time the outpatient department on that Friday. There was the usual assortment of complaints, and the occasional trip the emergency room to cast a bone, sedate a patient for the nurses to drain an infection, perform a procedure, etc. Oddly, none if it felt dissimilar from any other day there. I found myself more comfortable in that environment. I could see patients largely without a translator. I knew where supplies were. I knew what treatments were available. I even knew how many pediatric beds we had in case a very ill child came in and needed to be admitted (and one did). A stark contrast to my first day at Kudjip.

Dr. Erin casted a broken bone in our orthopedic room. I noticed afterward her giving instructions to the patient's "wasman" (watchman). This is very common, but it is not common for the wasman to be a small child. It caught me off guard and I took a photo. The wasman is extremely important at Kudjip - they bring the patient in, get the instructions on how to care for them, give medicines, etc. They also care for the patient's hygiene and meals if they are admitted to the hospital. It struck me that this little boy was taking on such a big responsibility. But the children here grow up quite a bit quicker than they do at home.



Dr. Erin instructs a "wasman" on cast care

I saw a few final patients in the ER and got to do my last Kudjipian Csection before heading home for dinner. I was on call in the evening but only made a couple of trips to the hospital. One stood out. I met an elderly man who seemed extremely frail and, even in my limited Pigin, slightly demented. His family complained that he had been coughing and losing weight for months and left the hospital only 2 weeks ago (in a remote area) with no improvement. We couldn't admit him to our hospital, but within a few minutes I could tell this man was dying from heart failure. I told the family my thoughts, gave him some additional medicine to help him breathe better, and let them take him home, most likely to die. As they left they made a comment to the nurse that the "white" doctors were smarter and knew more than the other doctors. I thought two things about this. 1) It isn't true. The PNG physicians for the most part, if our Registrar Raymond was any indication, are on par with the medical knowledge they need to treat the illnesses they face. 2) There is a grain of truth in their concerns. Many patients come to Kudjip unaware of how sick they truly are. They will be told repeatedly at government clinics or hospitals that their surgery is just around the corner, the specialist will see them when they are here next week or that their illness has been treated and they can go home. They are very rarely told, it seems, if they are dying. I don't have a solution to that issue, but I do know that this family was almost relieved to hear the honesty of even a fatal diagnosis.

I went home and slept until the next morning with no additional interruptions. I rounded in the pediatrics ward on Saturday morning and walked back home a little more keenly aware of the uneven stones in the road, the smiling faces scattered around the street despite another body being added to the morgue that morning, the beautiful tropical mountains covered in cool fog all around me and the sense that my work wasn't over. Even though I had my bag, my water bottle, and my surgical shoes packed up from the hospital, I couldn't help feeling that it wasn't really the last time I would put my hand to work at Kudjip. We have a lot of reflecting to do on our time there, especially as we consider what God has for us next. But something about the people, and the place itself, makes me think that we'll be there ... and back again ... sometime.



Thursday, May 26, 2011

Footsteps

Today I was able to follow in the footsteps of one of my heroes.

Dr. Paul Brand was a British orthopedic surgeon who worked at a leprosy hospital in India for many years. During his time there, he developed a technique of serial casting to treat contractures and other bony deformities that occur from disease or congenital defects. Esther and I read about his time in India and his reflections on his lessons learned in a phenomenal book that everyone should read called The Gift Of Pain.

His work led to the development, about the same time, of a set of manipulations and serial casting techniques called the Ponseti method. This practice has led to dramatic changes in the lives of children born with congenital club foot.

Today was my chance to see this, and practice it, first hand.

2 patients came to the clinic today with club foot. One was a 3 year old boy who had no previous treatment and had already developed an ulcer on one of his feet from walking on his overly adducted tarsal bones.


A 3 year old with untreated club foot

The other was a 2 year old who is on his 10th week of treatment with some good results toward correcting his deformity. Dr Rosie let me watch and assist with this child's casting, and perform the manipulation maneuvers and cast the 2nd leg. It was a definite treat - probably one of the highlights of my being here. These patients will now be able to walk - and create footsteps of their own for their children to follow in.


Casting a boy with club foot - an exciting first for me


After work today, I discovered that Anna is becoming a little more adept at tree-climbing. At least, she can now hang suspended from a branch momentarily. There were several instances today that I couldn't believe how grown up she is. We now have a 2nd baby on the way and it is hard for me to imagine her being a big sister ... even though I know she will be great at it.


Anna goes spider-man on the tree outside our house


Unfortunately I did a pretty good number on my ankle today while playing soccer with some of the college of nursing students. The missionaries usually play American football, which I did for a while. I like to have a few minutes of soccer though if I can get it, and today I really should have gone straight home for dinner. My ankle is not swollen, but it's hard for me to remember a sprain that was this painful during the first day after injuring it. It wouldn't bother me much, except that we are going to be making the long trek home in about 3 days and I will need to be able to bear weight, and extra weight, for that journey. If you are running out of things to pray for here, please add my ankle to the list.

I may have another post to add before leaving. It will probably be something of a debrief. So much has happened, and it amazes me to know that it will go on happening here after we are gone. I don't know if Kudjip is part of God's plan for us in the future, but we will treasure our time here forever and have very fond memories of it.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Enough

I tried to share on facebook this morning about a little boy that had a very bad accident and came to our hospital. The image and message wouldn't upload, so I will share his whole story now.

John was playing outside like any typical 12 year old would, but was hit with a thrown stone. It caught him just under his ribs and he went home in pretty bad pain. Night before last he had severe pain and started vomiting so his parents decided to bring him to Kudjip.

On the way, John stopped breathing. He came to the emergency room not breathing and without a heartbeat. We thought John had died, but an ultrasound showed his heart was still pumping weakly, so Dr. Bill and I resuscitated him for 15 minutes in our emergency room. After being intubated, having CPR and getting adrenaline through an IV and blood started, John had his own pulse, a blood pressure and had some breathing - but Tiffini (a visiting PA student) and I took turns bagging him until the operating room was ready for him.


John before surgery

I got to perform surgery with Dr. Jim to explore what had happened to John. It turns out that this stone did quite a bit of damage. John had 2 lacerations to his liver and some of his intestine had perforated. We repaired the damage, and when he left the operating room John had a good blood pressure, was breathing on his own and had a very large incision newly closed along the length of his abdomen. It seemed like we did just enough.

Unfortunately, shortly after the surgery, John started breathing heavily, developed a fever and had a seizure. There may have been some damage during his resuscitation, but more likely the damage from his belly had already sent his body into a cascade of reaction called peritonitis. He died a few hours after surgery.



John's bed the day after his ultimately unsuccessful surgery

Today, the second of the twin babies that I performed a Csection for got very sick. It looked like she had neonatal sepsis (severe infection). This baby also has some underlying congenital anomalies (we think) and did not respond well to our treatments for her. Her twin brother is alive, healthy and doing very well. I wept with Betty, her mother, as we stopped ventilating her and let her pass on.

There were a couple of victories today, though. More than a couple I'm sure. One mother who had a placenta that was invasive into her uterus delivered at our hospital. She had severe bleeding after her delivery and Dr. Bill and I gave her blood transfusions, performed a small surgery to stop her bleeding, and stabilized her after the procedure. If she had delivered at home she would not have survived her delivery.

Two babies that I've been taking care of for two weeks were looking fantastic today. They are twins and both came with severe pneumonia and dehydration needing IV fluids and oxygen. Now, their lungs sound great, they are feeding well, off oxygen and going home.




My patient with diabetes, Anna, is doing much better. She has put on a little weight, has much more energy and is not having the vomiting and pain that brought her to us. As she prepared to leave the hospital, I got a quick photo with a fantastic smile that looked nothing like the frail girl that came to us just a week ago.


Anna ready to go home (I'll forgive the Chelsea jersey)


I wrote before that the blend of joy and grief rub against one another so frequently here. Over the past few weeks, I realize how terribly true that is. I consistently find myself thinking that we've done just enough for our patients here. It seems like we are in the nick of time to perform surgery, resuscitate a child or a baby, stop someone's infection or treat their heart failure. When one of our patients die, I find myself asking if we did enough. Did I know enough? Was I careful enough? Did we use enough of our resources and time for them? Do I care enough that they are gone?

I know now that the answer to each of those questions is no. If I am looking to myself to be 'enough' for the people here, I will invariably fall short. There is not enough of me for the great challenges here. Where, then, do I turn for hope? If the doctors and nurses, the staff and families that spend their time and energy in this place is not enough for these patients to live on, where is their hope? There is no natural hope. I would find it impossible not to trust God in a place like this without losing my mind to grief. If I didn't know that God's sovereignty was more than enough, I am sure I would despair. Amazingly, our hope (and because of that our peace) doesn't depend on the situations or circumstances we find ourselves in if we have something outside of us that we put it in.

I already wrote that I don't feel I have to explain the things that happen here, to justify why things are this way. I know that God is sovereign and that we simply find our roles to play, great or small, in how He chooses to work. Tonight Anna, Esther and I read about the Israelites in the Old Testament during a battle in the wilderness. When Moses, their leader, lifted his hands up they prevailed, when his arms came down they began to lose the battle. Moses' actual hands had very little to do with the battle. But as God's instrument, he was imperative to what God wanted to do for the Israelites. So much so that Moses had others alongside him that supported him when he was too weak to play his part alone. I am certainly no Moses, and I don't pretend to play a pivotal role in the things happening here as a visiting physician. But I recognize that I have a role to play, that my strength is not enough, that God is ultimately going to decide the outcome, and that the people around me are a large part of what successes I have in this place.

Thank you, again, to those of you that make it possible for us to be here with your support and your continued prayers.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Wokabaut

Catching some Z's on the couch in my retro quilt while waiting for calls

Thursday was another day on call. Slightly less traumatic than my previous. In fact, I only had a couple times to go down to the hospital. One for a young man who collapsed somewhat out of the blue ... who looks to have some form of heart disease. An echocardiogram (ultrasound of the heart) would be very helpful. Well - an echo with a cardiologist to read it. We also got a lady who came into the OB ward in labor, roughly 34 weeks along (about a month early). She was not far into her labor and was able to complete a dose of steroids which will help her baby's lung mature.

Friday was a busy day but in many ways very good. Our pediatric ward saw 3 or 4 patients improve and go home. A young lady named Sandy who has a brain abscess was stabilized this week. During my last call a week ago we came to the ward because she stopped breathing, but recovered during the week. She is still very sick and will need a miracle to return to the cheerful girl that said "Apinoon, Dokta Mark" a couple weeks ago.

I have been doing more Csections this week and Friday I got the icing on that cake. I performed a Csection on twin babies without complications and with two pretty health looking babies at the end of it. That procedure gave me a nice shot in the arm after such a difficult day in the nursery last weekend.

Twins a-la Crouch
Pray for our little girl on the right who may have some congenital defects

Saturday I experienced a wokabaut. Dr. Bill has been into the mountains around Kudjip a few times, but not in the past year or so. He agreed to take me on a "hike" through the mountains despite the fact that he just finished call the night before and had a sinus headache. He also put me to shame on the mountain - bounding and running on slopes that I thought might be the death of me. We started out near the station and went up the Kane (pronounced Kon-yuh) river into a gorge and up Las Mountain (Last Mountain). The terrain didn't remind me at all of some hiking I've done in the Rocky Mountains. Imagine the TV show Lost - thick jungles covering steep mountains. There is no way the characters in that show would last more than a week. We went through some serious bush country. As I write that, I have to admit that our "guides" for this hike were 4 boys from the local village who couldn't have been older than 10. They made this mountain look easy enough - but when two of their girlfriends showed up I was even more embarrassed to be huffing and puffing along this jungle path into the mountains. But once we reached the summit and had lunch looking out over the station in the distance, it was definitely worth it.

Las Mountain
That speck of tin next to my eye in the background is Kudjip Station

On our way back, we had a nice dip in the Kane which turned out to be freezing cold. We also discovered an outdoor prayer chapel up one of the nearby ridges.

One of our guides taking a dip in the river

It was such a refreshing trip. At times it felt we took our lives in our hands going up narrow jungle paths along the mountainside. But looking out over the valley and discovering the serenity of the chapel with naught but the sound of the river disturbing the quiet was very comforting. Many of the difficulties and failures of the previous week seemed to roll down the valley along with the clouds as we looked down from our perch. It reminded me of David in the wilderness being pursued by Saul. He had every reason to forget God, to dismay and become a recluse never inheriting the promise of God's kingdom for him. But he turned his moments of solitude into moments of refuge and composed some of the most thoughtful reflections on God's feelings towards us in scripture.

Prayer chapel near Las Mountain

I'm very grateful for the time that we've had in this place. The hospital and the medical experiences are one thing, but being able to "un-plug" for a while has been very good also. Admittedly, I miss the chances to spend time with friends and family, to watch a good soccer game, to "run down t'pub" for fish and chips or a brew - but this place has other treasures that are hard or impossible to find at home.