I arrived at the hospital Thursday
morning and started seeing the babies in my nursery. Most Papua New
Guinean mothers don't name their children until they are a few months
old, because so many of them die that they want to be certain the
child will live before naming them. So baby-of Susan lay in her
incubator, but I could tell she wouldn't last through the day. Born
only 720 grams, she may have had a chance to survive in a country
with Neonatologists, NICUs and fancy gadgets and toys. In a
district mission hospital in PNG, I knew what would be coming for a
few days. But each day, the baby lived and sister Sylvia and I
prayed that we might, beyond hope, see a miracle.
Shortly after, the nurses got me for
one of our patients who had been to the restroom and returned
bleeding heavily. Pong had come to the hospital the previous day
bleeding from a placenta previa. My history with this condition is
terrible. Her bleeding slowed, though, and I had given her steroids
to try and help her premature baby survive. After my previous
experiences, I thought we could delay her operation and give her baby
every chance to come out strong and healthy. But now Pong was
bleeding again and I quickly performed an ultrasound. I could barely
discern the flicker of a pulse in the baby's heart. I knew we would
be too late. The operating team quickly took Pong to surgery, and
while she survived, her baby died.
As I went back to the maternity ward, I
noticed a nurse swaddling Susan's baby into wraps, preparing to send
the infant home with her mother for burial.
I finished maternity rounds, too
drained to collect all the staff together from their myriad tasks to
say our usual morning prayers.
I went to the outpatient department
deflated.
And on my desk was paperwork.
Actually, seven pieces of paperwork. Death certificates from the
past 10 days of patients that I had taken care of in the hospital.
Patients who lost their fights.
B/o Joyce, 1 day, Infant, Birth
Asphyxia.
B/o Meti, 16 days, Infant, Prematurity.
L.K., 40 years, Housewife, HIV.
M.M., 30 years, Farmer, TB/HIV.
J.P., 2 years, Child, Malnutrition.
A.A., 4 years, Child, Typhoid.
N.M., 5 years, Child, Malnutrition.
“I thank Thee that this Christian way
whereon I walk is no untried or uncharted road, but a road beaten
hard by the footsteps of saints, apostles, prophets, and martyrs.”
-John Baillie
A couple hours later, Grace came to my
door. Grace and I first met two years ago, when she came to our
maternity ward bleeding heavily in the eighth month of her pregnancy
from placenta previa. She delivered her baby who lived in our
nursery for a few days, but eventually died from prematurity.
Today, Grace was seeing me for a follow-up visit, now expecting her second child. Her blood pressure had been running high and I was monitoring her for the development of pre-eclampsia. Today, her blood pressure measured 160/90 and her lab tests showed that she had developed pre-eclampsia. She was still premature.
Today, Grace was seeing me for a follow-up visit, now expecting her second child. Her blood pressure had been running high and I was monitoring her for the development of pre-eclampsia. Today, her blood pressure measured 160/90 and her lab tests showed that she had developed pre-eclampsia. She was still premature.
I had to find Bill, my mentor, a couple
times that day because I could tell my frame of mind wasn't the best
to make some of these decisions. It became obvious that we needed to
deliver Grace prematurely (again) by C-section (again) and pray that
her baby would be strong and healthy. So I admitted Grace to the
hospital, planning to do her surgery the next day.
In the morning, Grace and her husband
Simeon were in the delivery room. I
confirmed her diagnosis with lab tests and confirmed the baby's
presentation with an ultrasound. Bill came to talk about our plan
with Grace and Simeon and we prayed together that this baby would
live. A few hours later, I recruited one of our surgeons, Dr. Ben,
to help with Grace's operation.
During surgery, Grace's blood pressure reached 210/120, but she had already received doses of medicines to protect her from seizures and she did well.
Her baby delivered crying and screaming, a small but vigorous boy.
Her baby delivered crying and screaming, a small but vigorous boy.
I prayed that he would be able to feed and grow, and not succumb to being born early, like his older sister two years ago.
But the next morning I was terrified to walk into the hospital. I remembered those seven stark reminders of patients who lost their earthly fights under my care. I remembered the three babies we lost, including Grace's, a couple years ago from this same illness. I thought about Pong, now recovering on the ward with no child because I didn't deliver her baby quickly enough. I settled into my chair to read, trying to summon the courage to face the fate of this day.
"Though a righteous man falls seven times, he rises again."
Proverbs 24:16
I went to the hospital to see Grace's baby sleeping comfortably next to her. He was small, but perfect in form. As I finished rounds, Grace smiled broadly as she cradled him in her arms and nursed him. Her husband Simeon found me later in the morning with tears crowding the corners of his eyes, took my hand in his and simply said, "Tankyu, Dokta Mark"
"With every morning light,
again we are redeemed."
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Update:
A few days ago an older woman found me in the emergency room. She had a baby with her and a gift of a new bilum (bag) that she made for me. It was Grace's mother holding her grandson that I got to be part of bringing into the world several months ago.
We hugged each other and she gave me the bilum and I shook hands with this miracle baby. Like I said, many parents in Papua New Guinea do not name their babies for a few months, because so many of them die. But at 6 months old I assumed this little one had been named so I asked the grandmother, "Ol givem wanem nem long em?"
She smiled a bit wider and said, "Mark"