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This report was prepared by Robin Lim,
the midwife who founded Bumi Sehat in Ubud, Bali. Lim and a team
of volunteers went to Aceh under an AAAI Rapid Relief project.
The team has established a walk-in clinic in Cot Seulamot near
Meulaboh on the west coast of Aceh.
The Indian Ocean off the West Coast
of Sama Tiga Aceh is the exact temperature of tears.
The Bumi Sehat free walk in clinic in
Cot Seulamat, Sama Tiga, Aceh, serves an average of 70 patients
per day. It rains endlessly.
There are earthquakes. And there are tears, lots of tears.
The rolling staff consists of volunteers
from all over the world, based out of Bali. The Aceh staff is growing
and will give
solidity to our dream of sustainability. This clinic is a
neutral place
where tsunami victims, host families, military personnel
and the most marginalized peoples feel comfortable coming for
help.
Some
of them are very sick or have infected injuries. There is
an increasing number of malaria victims. Most of the people
we
saw were malnourished,
and 100% were traumatized.
Informal counseling was part
of our work. There are many faces of anguish. A mother
wears sleepless guilt lines
because she
lacked the physical strength to prevent her baby being
torn from her arms
by the violent tsunami. A man comes to cry for his daughter.
His wife is also missing, and he has no photos of them.
His skin is
covered with festering wounds, now two months old, from
the debris-choked waters he swam in on December 26th. Most
of
the schools we saw
were either destroyed or filled with mud and debris.
A school teacher in his early forties came to the clinic
to ask
for
help sleeping. "I
had 116 students before the tsunami, only nine survive," Pak
Abdul said before he broke down. He cried for a long
time, then softly began to say the names of his beautiful
students. We gave
him homeopathy remedies to take before bedtime, and we
listened. Two days later he returned, looking much better. "Thank
you," he
said, "for hearing their names. I am now sleeping
a little."
Kelly and I taught a day-long
workshop for midwives in Meulaboh. We were amazed when
41 Bidans
(midwives) attended.
Most of
these women had lost families and homes. One midwife
walked for three
days to attend. She had lost her husband, child and
home, and was 30 weeks pregnant. This workshop was an opportunity
to
get back
on her feet, so she could continue to help people.
All of the midwives attending the workshop had lost
their equipment and birth kits. We invited Scott
Whoolery, the medical director
of UNICEF Indonesia, to attend our meeting. He was
thrilled
to meet so many of the women who are delivering primary
healthcare to the citizens of Aceh, and arranged
that each midwife would
receive a UNICEF midwife kit.
Sadly we found a high
rate of infant demise due to tetanus in Aceh. Vaccination
will not solve the problem;
the
Tetanus Toxoid
vaccine
requires refrigeration which is rare in rural Aceh.
The traditional birth attendants of Aceh lack dependable
water resources
and the means to keep instruments sterile. Many midwives’ cord-cutting
instruments were swept away by the tsunami. We taught
these birth attendants how to safely burn the umbilical
cord.
This method eliminates
the danger of tetanus or other bacterial transmission
from non-sterile instruments. The midwives were thrilled.
They
came away from the
workshop feeling like they had learned a desperately-needed
skill. We were also able to encourage them to get free
medicines from
Ober Berkat Foundation, as well as seeking help from
Medecines Sans Frontiers and Global Relief.
We shared
a camp in Cot Seulamat with the WALHI/ IDEP clean water
and sanitation crew. About 70 patients
a day appeared
at our
free, walk-in clinic made of bamboo draped with tarps
for rain protection.
We found that nearly every mother had lost children
within 2 to 3 days after birth, long before the tsunami
washed
over their
lives.
Chronic malnutrition adds to the maternal and infant
mortality rate.
Early one morning, we were rushed
to the home of a mother who had just given birth. The traditional
midwife
had
already cut
the baby’s
umbilical cord with old, blunt school scissors and
pulled the cord off the placenta. The baby appeared
fine but the mother was hemorrhaging
and her placenta was retained. I gloved up quickly,
and manually peeled the placenta off the wall of
the uterus centimeter by centimeter.
Roswita and her baby survived but I learned that
just 8 months earlier her sister in law had not been
as
lucky. She’d also
retained her placenta, and died on the way to Meulaboh
hospital, 45 minutes to an hour away by swamp road.
This near fatal complication
turned out to be one of the many blessings along
our way in Aceh. The midwife’s trust was essential
if we were to serve these communities of hard-hit
tsunami victims. She later
did a birth
with the Bumi Sehat midwives of team II, Jenny and
Indah. They burned the cord and the traditional midwife
is now
sold on
this much safer protocol. No doubt this alone will
save countless neonatal
lives.
While we operated the clinic,
our support team worked with the WALHI Bali crew to help
the
surviving villagers
of
Pucuk Leung
and Lhok Bubon to resettle. We gave them generators
and strung electric street lamps. Though the homes
were completely
destroyed,
Oded and Christine networked with Mercy Corps to
obtain tents and kerosene cooking stoves for the
families.
Oded organized
the people
into work crews to fix the Mosque roof, and make
a rain catch system for wash water. Oxfam brought
in
a 10,000
liter bladder
for drinking
water, which they deliver every day or two.
The
survivors of this village are mostly men, who were far
out to sea fishing when the tsunami hit.
When they
returned
home
that evening, they found their wives, children,
parents, friends and
homes had disappeared. The only building left
standing was the Mosque, with 70 people marooned on top.
Catholic Relief
services
paid for a new roof for the Mosque of Lhok Bubon.
Mentor donated malaria rapid
test kits and medication for both children and adults
with P. falciparum
malaria. Team
II from
Bumi Sehat, now in the field, recently used
this technology to diagnose
and treat a small girl in time to save her
life.
We left Meulaboh on the International Red Cross
Red Crescent plane, flying low and slow all
along the
West Coast of
Sumatra. From high
above, it looks hopeless. Busy cities have
been leveled. Huge barges rest five kilometers
inland.
The beaches
are strewn
with broken
toys and broken dreams. But the wounds of
December 26 are scarring over. I felt no ghosts in the
night at Aceh.
There
is a peace,
a sweetness between people, and a prayer
for healing.
http://www.idepfoundation.org/bumi_sehat.html
or http://www.gentlebirthsbali.org |