Friday, March 14, 2014

Objects of yore

Over the last few days, we had been cleaning up a room in our administrative area. The search was for some old files which we needed to put in order. 

In addition to the said papers, we also good some interesting objects. 

I thought that there could be people who will be interested to see these . . . 

Evidence that work on agriculture had been attempted earlier.
Our carpenter, Sukhi with the model of a plough which he claims to have made many years back for one of the officers. He told that he still wonders why he made such a small plough . . . 
Quite a help in the olden days . . . before the 'use and throw' era
A quite expensive tool kit for diesel engines. Dinesh was quite thrilled to get this . . .
Post cards . .. ... Communicating before blogs and e-mails
Quite a antique looking time piece . . . 
There used to be inter-unit badminton championships . . .
NJH had many runner up trophies.
I could not spot a winner medal
A Remington typewriter . . .

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Precious Gift

Today was special day for NJH. 

One of our well-wishers had donated an amount which was almost exactly that which was needed for the purchase of an adult+pediatric ventilator. 

The Medivent Gold ventilator arrived today and was installed in the Acute Care Unit today. 

Snaps . . . 

The well packed box . . . there were 3 such boxes

All of us were like kids waiting to open their gifts . . . 

The acute care team look really delighted . . . 

Sr. Puneet, the ACU in-charge got a cake ready for the occasion . . . 

A prayer of thanksgiving . . . 
Watch out for more blogs on how we use it . . .

Monday, March 10, 2014

Praise and Prayer Bulletin, March 2014

It's been quite a long time since I've put out a Praise and Prayer Bulletin. Do pass this around and encourage friends and relatives to be part of our work. 

The praise and prayer points . . . 

1. We had a blessed time of retreat couple of weeks back with Rev. Maxwell David and his wife, Mrs. Snehalatha David. We thank the Lord for all those who have dedicated/rededicate their lives to the Lord. Please pray for the ministry of Rev. Maxwell and his wife. We pray that they will continue to be a blessing to many.


2. There have been quite a lot of sick patients who got well over the last 2 months. We thank the Lord for each of them. Special praises for Munia Kumari and the umpteen high risk obstetric patients.

3. The CH team has been working overtime over the last 2 weeks. There has been couple of mass awareness programs for finger millet cultivation and usage in diet. We received invitation to be part of Agrotech, the state level agriculture fair organised by the State University for Agriculture and Veterinary Sciences. In addition, we’ve been acknowledged for our work in the field of care for the disabled.

4. We’ve received some generous gifts from our friends and well-wishers for upgrading the acute care unit. Plans have been made for the purchase of a full-fledged ventilator, few multipara monitors and syringe pumps. Please pray that we would make the right choices. We thank all those who helped. We need much more funds (only 25% of our plans can be met by the funds we have now) to make changes that we dream of.

5. The water tank construction is complete. The pipes are been now laid for the supply of water to the residences now. Supply to the hospital is partially complete. We thank the Lord and the Indian wing of Living Waters, Sampoorn Development India who were instrumental in constructing this tank in the campus. We had the dedication of the tank last week. Mr. Howard Searle, the first director of EHA visited us last month and it was such a joy to know about how Living Waters came to be associated with EHA. 


6. We thank the Lord for Dr Titus who served as Medical Officer with us for the last 2 years. Dr Titus has got selected for Diploma in ENT in the Christian Medical College, Vellore. We request prayer for Dr. Titus and his wife, Dr. Grace that they would stay in the will of God and the Lordship of Christ would be the priority in their lives. Titus' parents and brother visited us as Titus and Grace left NJH. 

In the foreground, from left to right - Dr. Grace, Dr. Titus, Titus' parents - Dr. Raju Jacob (Professor and Head of the Department of Anatomy, Medical College, Kottayam), Dr. Jaimol Zachariah (Professor, Department of Physiology, Medical College, Kottayam), Titus' brother - John Raju (Engineer with Bharat Gas, Mumbai). Also in the snap - Mr. Tapeswar (driver) on the left and Annoos, daughter of Sr. Dipti (staff nurse) and Mr. Benoy Jose. 
7. We thank the Lord for Sr. Wendy and Mr. Gerry of the Grace Babies Foundation who has visited us again this year. I'm sure that the number of babies who're going to live well because of their contribution to our hospital is quite a good number. Kindly pray for this wonderful couple as the Lord leads them for greater things. Please also pray that we would be able to get a Paediatrician who will be able to do much more. Especially training for the government, for which UNICEF has been asking us for some time. 


8. There are quite a few staff who have gone on training. Few of them are away on long periods of training. We thank the Lord that their travel and stay went off fine. Kindly pray for staff who are away on long term training. Especially, pray for their families.

9. We request specific prayers for Sr. Sushma Kujur who has a very bad Inter-Vertebral Disc Prolapse. She has been on bed rest for the last 6 weeks. Please pray for complete cure.

10. We’ve a new trainee Human Resources Manager who has joined us. Mr. Amit William. Kindly pray as he adjusts to life at NJH.

11. We thank the Lord for Sr. Bharati (Nursing Services), Mr. Sapan (Maintanence Department) and Mr. Alex (Administration - Billing Department) who has moved on after serving NJH. We request prayers for their further professional work.

12. There is quite a lot of money pending to be given from RNTCP and also from RSBY. The total amount is so high (about 1,200,000 – your read it right – more than a million Indian Rupees) that the financial situation of the hospital has taken a major hit. Please pray that the officials who are responsible would make arrangements to disburse the amounts at the earliest.


13. We had a break down of the X-Ray machine. The x-ray tube has run off steam - it had served us for almost 30 years. We need to purchase a new one. The total costs would be around 160,000. We request prayers as well as generous gifts from well-wishers to get the X-Ray back on track. 

14. General elections have been declared for the country. In Jharkhand we already had a political murder. Please pray for peace in the region and for peaceful elections. 

15. Please remember the Sarai construction in your prayers. We've almost completed it using our own funds. However, it would be extremely helpful if we could have someone to bear the costs of construction. 

Cont'd - Dangerous Obstetrics


Yesterday, we had quite a crowd in our Labour Room. Over the last 5-6 months, we've had a fall in our Labour Room statistics. We presume that the fall has been due to the opening of multiple nursing homes and hospitals in the small towns from where patients usually came to NJH. Most of these hospitals are manned by nurses or junior doctors, but has names of consultants from the nearby cities on their rolls. 

Of course, we still continue to have our share of eclampsia and rupture uteri. Yes, I've sort of stopping writing about them for some time. You can read the following posts which I had put up some time back about our high risk obstetric patients. 


We continue to have such patients regularly, although I've not written about them of late.

However, I was quite surprised by yesterday's rush. We had 6 labour patients coming in of which we ended up managing 5 of them. 

The first to arrive was SabD, a 32 year old G6P5L3D2 who had a Cesarian section to deliver her last child. She was in labour and had been trying to deliver at home. By God's grace, she had progressed to quite an extent. But her hemoglobin was only 8 gm%. Considering the prolonged labour, I offered to do an emergency Cesarian section if blood was arranged. The family went to arrive blood. However, the lady progressed well and delivered vaginally by late morning. 

We were glad, but the family was downcast. The reason - - the baby was a girl and the family already had 3 girls, and no boy. They were expecting a male baby. I counselled them to do off a tubectomy, but the family nor the patient would have nothing of it. 

The second patient was PrD, a 20 year old who was pregnant the third time. She had lost one baby earlier due to premature delivery and one was spontaneously aborted in the 2nd trimester. 

To our horror, PrD was leaking for more than 2 days. She was being managed elsewhere, was told that everything is fine and was discharged. Soon after discharge, she started to have fever. The family thought of a second opinion. PrD had a hemoglobin of 9 gm% and she was in full blown sepsis - -  a total count of 40,000/cu mm. She was only 136 cms tall and on per vaginal examination, there was hardly any space along the pelvic outlet. We had to do a Cesarian. 

Per operatively, on opening the uterus, the entire endometrium and the baby was stinking. It was hard to believe that the baby was still alive. So far, the mother and the baby have done well. 

The third patient was SanD, a 23 year old primi who had an uneventful labour and delivered normally. 

The fourth patient was AnwD, a 20 year old G2P1D1, who had a previous LSCS, but no live issues. She had been trying to deliver at home since evening and had ended up with a rupture uterus. The rupture was quite a bad one and very uncharacteristic of previous Cesarian ruptures which usually occur only along the suture line. 

Below is the snap of the rupture after the suturing was done. Since she has no issues, we have not done tubectomy. We pray that she will conceive and deliver a healthy baby later. 

The fifth patient was RekD, a 25 year old, G2P1L1 with previous Cesarian section who came in with labour pains as we were doing surgery on PrD. According to her dates, she was only of 32 weeks gestation. The baby looked quite small and I thought of suppressing her labour. However, the pains just increased. We had told the relatives of the non-availability of specialist facilities should she deliver. 

She did not respond to any of our treatment, but, almost after 6 hours of good pains, she was not progressing. There was a danger of going into rupture uterus. The doctor on duty thought of screening her by ultrasound and found that the baby was in fact term. Yes, the baby appeared to have low birth weight. 

Off went RekD for Cesarian and she delivered a Low Birth Weight baby. RekD had a hemoglobin of only 7.8 gm%. She is yet to receive a blood transfusion.

There was one more patient - the sixth one who did not stay on with us. IikD, a 26 year old wife of a army jawan. The poor lady was leaking since the last 2 days. They were trying for a normal delivery at home. She was G3P2L2 with the first delivery done by Cesarian and the second one a home delivery !!!. Her husband wanted an assurance that we would ensure that she has a normal vaginal delivery. 

I told him that that assurance cannot be given. The family went off in a huff with the jawan shouting all obscenities about the staff and the hospital. It was sad to see that an army jawan just not understand my reasoning and wanted to rather have his way without looking at the possible adverse outcomes. 

Now, all except one patient were very very high risk obstetric patients. 

In fact the 5 of the ladies who delivered yesterday, had lost a total of 4 babies earlier (5 if you include the present rupture uterus too).

5 families . . . 14 pregnancies . . . 5 dead babies . . . one more could have died if we had not intervened on time (PrD).

As I mentioned in one of my previous posts, the status of obstetric care in the region is so bad that we've not still got into the process of looking at neonatal outcomes


I'm proud that we've been entrusted by the UNICEF with the responsibility of supervising obstetric care in the district. 

However, to do justice to this responsibility, I need more help. One of the major challenges we have is the unavailability of an obstetrician and pediatrician. And there is always the dangling sword of the Clinical Establishment Act and non-understanding officers who could stop us managing such patients in the near future. 

Please spread word about the urgent need for consultants in the specialities of Obstetrics, Pediatrics and Anesthesia without which quite a number of hospitals such as ours would not be able to be the sort of blessing we are now to many a families. 


The Unwelcomed Baby


It was quite a busy outpatient day few days back, when the duty doctor got a call from Labour Room about a pregnant lady who had come in with a hand prolapse. The history of the hand prolapse was quite short and we found out that the baby was alive and kicking. 

The patient was from one of the nearby villages. This was her fourth pregnancy and her previous three children were girls. The family had expected this one to be a boy. Couple of relatives of the family worked as servant maids in the homes of our staff and they had ensured that the lady was rushed to us. 

We ensured that the baby was delivered within 20 minutes of YD's arrival to the hospital. Unfortunately, the baby turned out to be very sick. 

And the fact that this baby turned out to be a girl ensured that the relatives were hardly interested to keep the baby alive. When we got her intubated and taught one of the relatives to mechanically bag her (we don't have a neonatal ventilator), this lady kept on asking if this was really necessary. We did everything that was possible. 

The baby died on International Woman's Day . . .

All around the world, quite a lot of us were celebrating emancipation of women. But, the sad fact remains that in many a family, the girl child is seen as a burden. And I can only imagine the plight of the first 3 girls in this family if the next child is a boy.

The family did not agree for a tubectomy although we had advised it. They wait for a boy . . .