Thursday, March 8, 2012

Backyard

North side of the yard, facing west (above). The red lava rock will be leaving.


North side of the yard, facing east (below). No more steppers to trip on. No more prickly bushes to poke me when I take the trash out.




That ugly cement slab will go. The yellow and purple house in the background will be screened with bamboo.



Nice, but boring. Bring on the hostas and other greenery!



Friday, October 29, 2010

Going Home

I'm writing this from the airport as I wait for my flight. Tuesday and Wednesday were long days but yesterday was a bit shorter. We finished all the surgeries that we scheduled so that was a good thing. We had our farewell dinner last night with the staff from Obras Sociales de Hermano Pedro. Dr. Jack of course regaled us with a song he had written accompanied by his guitar. Dr. Charlie then read some poetry to us, but we could not convince Lila to sing for us. Maybe next year?

The nurses, scrubs, surgeons, anesthesiologists and the other nurse anesthetist made this a very memorable trip. Until next time everybody!!!


The four surgeons: Jack Graber, Charlie Haislet, Omer Sanan, Alisa Wright

Old equipment but it still (mostly) works!


Suction......from 1945??? Yes, the plastic canister got cleaned and reused. And we shared it with the surgeons.


Marilyn, Mark and I---the three main anesthesia providers


Cool fireplace in the restaurant last night.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Pix from day 2

In the OR with a hysterectomy




What I see from the head of the bed: one resident from Spain, one surgical tech, and two surgeons.

Surgery: Day Two

Wow, what a busy busy day today! Not only did we complete all of our scheduled cases, but we had to clean up a mess of a patient left over by a Spanish team from four weeks ago. She had gone home but returned today due to her infection. The Spanish docs performed a hernia repair with mesh and then extended their procedure by also performing a panniculectomy (removal of the pannus, all the skin and fat from the abdomen). The panniculectomy became infected and since she has mesh, the mesh is also a source of infection. We took her on and two of the surgeons opened her up and cleaned out all kinds of smelly nonsense. It's a wonder she's alive. I felt like I was at home doing an add-on case at 4:00 in the afternoon on a sick patient who was infected! The Spanish doc who originally performed her surgery will probably not be allowed to return to Hermano Pedro. Teams are supposed to only perform simple surgeries. Many of these patients do not have clean homes to return to so a major surgery never should have been performed. I'll get off my soapbox now!

I'll upload a few pix here in a minute, then I'm off to dinner and bed!

Monday, October 25, 2010

Surgery: Day One

We had a fantastic, busy day today in the OR at Hermano Pedro! We ran three ORs and were able to complete 16 cases by 4 pm. Our anesthesia staffing is a bit tight this week so each anesthesia provider is running their own room; we have a retired anesthesiologist available to give breaks and to give us a hand as needed for pediatric cases, etc. Usually we have four anesthesia providers and we juggle all the cases and rooms so each provider gets significant chunks of time to lollygag. I prefer it the way we did it today as I get into a routine with the circulator, scrub, hospital staff and surgeon.

I worked with Omar Sanan today, a general surgeon from Minneapolis. He is a very low-key guy who is also a skilled surgeon. He regaled all the ladies in the room with funny stories in English and all the muchachos (the hired guys who work full-time at the hospital) with different funny stories in Spanish. At one point he nicked a vein on a laparoscopic case and tried to put a staple on the vein to stop the bleeding. Only he quickly found out we were out of staples! He calmly removed the stapler from the tiny trocar hole and placed a grasper into the same hole, pinched off the vessel, and waited until more staples could be located. Ah, the world of anesthesia in a third world country!

This evening I had dinner with five other women in our group at a great French restaurant about a block from our hotel. We were done by 7 and all looking forward to coming back to our hotel and reading good books and going to sleep!

We have 16 more cases on the schedule for tomorrow--gallbladders, hernias, and hysterectomies. I'll try to remember to take some pictures while we're in the OR so I can upload them tomorrow.

Sunday, October 24, 2010


The hospital/social work organization, Hermano Pedro



Chilling between seeing patients in the "Anestesia" room



Marilyn (another CRNA) and I




Happy hour at the Sky Bar--love the view!