trplr




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Help make others aware of the latest MOMS (Midwives on Missions of Service) project (read all 2 entries…)
Almost time to go 2 years ago

We’re leaving this Sunday, the 3rd. We are excited and nervous. This is BIG! We’re tentatively set to go back in mid-June to pilot the programs. Then we’ll implement next December. So we’ll have to schedule program managers and midwives/teachers for full coverage, year-round. We’ll need to send over the course materials, supplies, and equipment (like a life-sized model of a pelvis, placenta, and baby!). And all that stuff.

Thanks so much for the support, conversation, good thoughts, gifts. I’ll let you know what happens. We’ll get back in country on the 19th, but then have to go to LA till Christmas, then back to SFO. My daughter, the one with a brain tumor, will be visiting with her kids. This is her first trip since the surgery and radiation therapy.

Anyway, please keep us in your thoughts and hearts.

Trish



Help make others aware of the latest MOMS (Midwives on Missions of Service) project (read all 2 entries…)
Getting Ready to Go 2 years ago

Thanks, Stacey, for getting this started. Savant, indeed!

People are very generous, crocheting hats and giving money to help us work in Sierra Leone to create a midwifery and health educator training program. Sierra Leone has the world’s worst maternal mortality rate: about 2% of women die in childbirth. As most women have about 6 pregnancies, their odds of death are bad. Women’s life expectency is about 42 years – can you imagine? By the age of 30, their health is beginning to fail. So we want to improve maternal and neonatal health, to keep these folks alive and healthy.

Because some of the things we need, like needles, sutures, and medications, are restricted, gifts of money help a lot. Also, we can get instruments like hemostats and umbilical scissors cheaper through some of our contacts.

The wheels are turning. We are creating our lists of questions for people like the local political and religious leaders, the traditional birth attendants, and the women themselves. We want to create programs to train midwives and community health educators that are tightly knit to the needs of the community. This includes cultural needs as well as skills and knowledge.

We’re thinking that we can go back in early summer 2007 to pilot parts of the program, then again in December 2007 to begin implementation. Implementation will require at least two people on site full time. So we’re gathering names of folks to work 3-12 month tours as either teacher/preceptor or administrator/program manager. Over the next few years, we’ll prepare local women to take over the teaching and management of the program, then MOMS will go onto other areas.

We are so excited about this, we tend to blather on. Then we’ll be struck by some idea – ohmigosh, I need some coolmax undies – and panic! Preparing for an undertaking like this is amazing. I’ve done dozens of training needs assessments on all kinds of subjects in my professional career, but never have I cared so much about the people who will ultimately benefit – the women and babies.

Let me know if you have ideas for helping!

Thanks so much

Trish



become a midwife and help women find their strength to give birth masterfully
Women are strong... 3 years ago

...and well built for giving birth. That doctors commit surgery on 30 % of birthing women in this country is ludicrous. The species would have died out millenia ago if that many women failed at birthing. I don’t believe that woman have somehow suddenly lost their capacity over the last 50 years to give birth. Something else is going on!

Women can run marathons, fight in wars, earn black belts in martial arts, survive torture and all kinds of violence – and they can manage the discomfort and effort of birthing their children.




 

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