Window on Kisiizi

Window on Kisiizi

Tuesday, 25 August 2015

Crash out time...

Yes, in all the mix of things, we did have time for a break as we went on a last-minute package trip to Crete with Mark and Ruth... we have to confess we didn't see a great deal of the island as we were all just ready to crash out so much time was spent by or in the pool... it was lovely to have a breather and the weather was perfect, food good and we had many laughs as we did rounds of crazy golf, played a Dutch card game the kids enjoyed when much younger, and tried, not very successfully, to get photos of Ruth before she covered her face with her hands!
  
side view... well it was crazy golf!

"What do you mean, watch your steeeeeeeeeeeeeepppp??!!"

All Nations

time for a trip down memory lane... having been in Macclesfield for a few days juggling appointments for ourselves at the dentist/optician/GP etc and for the car for MOT etc plus helping sort out final drafts for the application to THET for a grant for Kisiizi, it was time to head to London to help Ruth move from one location to another.  She has a room in a house about 25 minutes walk from the school in Islington where she works as a Primary School Teacher.  In addition to this she has also been working on her Masters' Thesis with Homerton College, Cambridge and we have shared in this joyful process by reading proofs etc rather than wasting our time on secondary activities like sleeping!  But its pretty well ready to hand in as we write this and its looking to be an interesting and engaging thesis.

so, after the move, we headed up the A10 to retrace our historical footsteps as we attended a CMS conference held at All Nations where we had studied decades ago just before we were married.

It was a good few days of interaction with some inspiring people and some good sessions, not least the masterful session led by Martin Goldsmith who remains as stimulating and provactive as ever!

We enjoyed a walk in the countryside and will take back photos of the fields to amaze friends in Kisiizi!

Then on to stay with Jonathan Jones and his family... his daughter Georgie came for a couple of months in her Gap Year and Jonathan, an orthopaedic surgeon, came for the first couple of weeks and left with a desire to help us develop orthopaedic services in Kisiizi... so we really enjoyed meeting the rest of the family and, as a wonderful bonus, Peter and Rebecca Winfrey with daughter Lizzy also came up to see us so a good time of catch up was enjoyed by all.

We do thank God for the amazing family of Kisiizi that extends to many parts of the world and allows Kisiizi to continue its extraordinary ministries...

a trip to the Netherlands...

We spent a week in Holland based at the home of Leonoor, one of Hanna's sisters.  The main reason for our journey was that, following the death of Hanna's dad, the siblings needed to sort through the house ready for it to go on the market. 

We were pleased to meet up with all the family including our nephew Justin and family back from Turkey and, of course, to be impressed at how the children are all growing and developing!

Noor and Hanna in the wind!


We had a trip to the Dutch seaside which was quite windy but pleasant.

We visited a charity that recycles medical equipment run by about 80 keen volunteers and this will be a useful resource for Kisiizi in the future we think...


Fine regalia!

We were delighted to be basking in reflected glory as we attended Mark's PhD graduation ceremony at the University of Reading.  We were blessed with a lovely sunny afternoon and Mark looked very distinguished in his historical garments and seemed a natural in the role! 







We also enjoyed meeting some of his colleagues and supervisors and then we went out with Mark and Ruth and their respective friends Sammie and Jacob for a lovely celebration meal together.

Time travel!

There MUST be a time warp somewhere on the way back from Kisiizi to Europe as time seems to have rushed by in a whirlwind... and so much has happened so apologies to those regular readers of this blog who thought we had hibernated!  Fortunately we didn't forget to remember our 30th Wedding Anniversary!

As soon as we arrived back in UK Ian was off to London to the Royal Society of Medicine / Royal College of Paediatrics & Child Health conference on international child health.  Ian had in the past shared an office with the professor who introduced the conference so it was good to catch up and also to chat with Peter Nash who has co-ordinated the RCPCH Global Links programme that has sent Kisiizi a number of excellent registrars in the past couple of years.  Unfortunately the DfiD grant via THET (Tropical Health & Education Trust) which has allowed RCPCH to run the scheme is being discontinued which is a great shame as the programme has proved very successful with both registrars and Kisiizi.  Peter Nash had visited Kisiizi only a few months ago and remains very positive about our work so will endorse future paediatric trainees who come to Kisiizi even if there is no college funding.
At the end of the conference Ian met with a colleague from the London School of Hygiene &Tropical Medicine as they are proposing to send a group of doctors participating in the Diploma of Tropical Medicine & Hygiene to Kisiizi for a week of practical work.

A couple of days later we were back down to London to attend the Friends of Kagando day as we would like to strengthen Kisiizi's links with other church hospitals, something we had done 25 years or so ago when first in Kisiizi and which proved mutually beneficial.

Then on to the annual Christian Medical Fellowship Developing Health course which runs for two weeks and is a brilliant mix covering all the medical specialties for those wishing to work in resource-poor countries.  We are "hosts" so try to look after the participants (we had about 79 in total of whom 39 were there for the full two weeks).  Ian co-ordinates the Paediatrics Day and is one of the course directors.  As always we met inspiring people both participants and lecturers.  The course included much practical work varying from plaster of paris applications to breech deliveries to spinal anaesthesia to dental extractions from pigs' heads!
(see http://www.cmf.org.uk/international/developinghealth/developing-health/)

During the course Ian went into London to meet Anna Bishop of All Souls Church, Langham Place, who have kindly helped Kisiizi with support towards renovating an old clinic building to be a Maternal & Child Health clinic.  Kisiizi's links with All Souls actually go back to the founding of the hospital as the first doctor, John Sharp, and his wife Doreen had lived in the flat in the All Souls Rectory above John Stott who later visited them in Kisiizi!


Just for added interest this year we also had the spectacle of Venus and Jupiter being close together in the evening sky and could see their relative positions move daily.

Following the Developing Health course we went down to Battle to see the Carers & Sharers group who have faithfully supported Kisiizi for decades.  We enjoyed tea at the garden party and gave a talk about the work in Kisiizi which generated quite a few questions and a good discussion.

One unexpected result was that for the first time we came across a PORTABLE oxygen concentrator.  We do, of course, have quite a few standard concentrators in Kisiizi as our main oxygen sources but didn't realise that they are now available in a portable format which is very attractive for us as it offers the chance to move oxygen-dependent patients to x-ray or to the wards after surgery etc as the devices work on batteries.  They also have a connector to a vehicle socket so offer the potential to transport patients to other units which we rarely have to do but when it does occur it is usually with very sick cases who need oxygen and until now we had to rely on cylinders which all too quickly run out.


Subsequently we visited medical equipment charities in Holland and UK and have been able to access with the help of the Battle group a compact device that will help us achieve the above goals.