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In 2006, Nursing Students Return to South
America
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Auburn Nursing Students Sing a Song of Service in Quito,
Ecuador
Amanda Smith, Ashley Walhaug, Amber Thomas, Amy Luzader
Amanda Sheehy, Kathy Ellison, Regina Bentley, Jenny Benson
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| It seems as though life is somewhat like a song. There are songs
that bring laughter and songs that bring tears, there are songs that
make us feel cold and lonely inside, and then there are songs that
make us feel like we could conquer the world in one day. The music
is affected by the environment around us and the people that come
in and out of our life. During spring semester, some of us at Miller
Hall chose to sing a song of service for people the best we knew how.
We traveled to Quito, Ecuador to run a week long health clinic for
women. We learned that nursing is a career that is much needed in
this world, but something that is even more needed is for people to
love and to be loved. Each of us chose nursing for a different reason,
but we all have some desire to help people who are sick and hurting,
to be an encouragement, a support system, and be a constant beacon
to our patients and their families. |
| Our experience in nursing school has taught us about diseases,
illnesses, medications, and the importance of treating a patient
holistically. We have had many opportunities in different clinical
settings to learn about these different aspects of nursing,
but we received the best lesson in holistic care through our
trip to Ecuador. Six students and two faculty members journeyed
to the green luscious mountains of Ecuador to help the poorest
people in that country in an area called Atacucho, which is
also known as the “Belt of Misery.” |
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What we did not know at the time was that we would
be the ones helped and we would be the ones blessed. We ventured
with an organization called SIFAT and were accompanied by seven
other team members who we had not met yet but by the end of
the week we felt as if we were one family working for the same
purpose. As one family, we were able to see over 250 women in
a clinic we had set up in an open building with a tin roof above
our heads. In this small building we had three areas where the
nurse practitioners and doctors could exam and treat the women.
About five feet away was the area in which we educated the women
on health topics varying from diabetes to STDs with a translator
speaking to the women in Spanish. Another area a few feet away
was a room that looked like a small narrow closet which became
our pharmacy that housed as many medications that we could possibly
bring for these people who could not even afford to buy a bottle
of Advil. Our jobs as nursing students differed each day. We
each had the opportunity to help count medications in the pharmacy,
sometimes 120 pills at a time! We assisted the nurse practitioners
by taking blood pressures and working with a translator to obtain
medical histories, and also helped them with examinations. We
also presented lessons that we had worked on in our cultural
class to classes of Ecuadorian women. They eagerly thanked us
and told us that some of the things we taught them they had
never even heard of before! We quickly realized that all of
these were important jobs. The basis to everything we did was
education. |
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The information we provided these women could stop them from suffering
from some of the diseases that they were there to see the doctor about.
After laying the foundation that helped these women help themselves,
it was important to provide health care to treat existing problems
and provide simple medications like Advil and vitamins to improve
the women’s’ health and quality of life.
Each of us returned to America with a different story. One story goes
like this: A woman named Carmen was diagnosed with uterine cancer
a year ago but could not afford treatment and could not even afford
pain medication. We saw several women throughout the week who had
limited resources for medical care but were able to find what they
needed at our small clinic. This lady unfortunately needed care far
beyond what we could do for her at the clinic. She needed surgery,
chemotherapy, radiation, medications to relieve her pain and remove
her cancer but without money and no insurance she could do nothing.
The most we could do was give her Motrin for her pain, and listen
as she told us about the hard time she was having. As she left into
the cold dreary day, several of us struggled with the question, “What’s
the purpose of being here as a nurse if we can’t heal these
people?” We learned that as a nurse we do as much as we can
for a patient physically, but what means more to our patients than
giving medicine and dressing wounds is to give love, support, an ear
to listen to, and arms to wrap around them when they cry.
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