Only a week later than promised - we have IRB approval, sanction from the Ministry of Health, and have officially begun data collection. Today I traveled to a health center in the middle of one of the largest compounds in Lusaka. THAT was the 'Africa' I was expecting, strangely. Kids with swollen bellies and no pants running around little concrete shacks. Smiling women behinds stalls of fruits and veggies - right next to the chickens and the goats. Women with precariously balanced watermelon slices on a platter on their heads - that somehow never falls amidst the bumpy roads.
I saw only two deliveries. Five delivered before our arrival (a research assistant and myself) and two were in active labor when our ride came. Tomorrow I will return and hopefully see many more. This week in Lusaka - and next week I'm (finally) on the road.
Initial impressions: 1. Although (or because) there were many less resources (no surgery, no pain meds, not even oxygen for the mom in case), the clinic is a much kinder environment in which to give birth than the big hospital. The windows were open. The midwives were kind and skilled. And women labored naturally, vocally, physically - without any yelling at all. Birth there felt as normal as grocery shopping. Something you do. Sometimes it's a pain. You get something yummy when you're done.
After delivering, one woman got up and WASHED her own chitenge in the sink (big piece of printed fabric... kanga, panya... etc) within 15 minutes.
God damn. Women are amazing.
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1 comment:
tears in my eyes... So glad you got the approval. Congrats on your first day- so exciting. I am packing as I write- leaving Sat night/Sun morning. Much love.
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