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Thursday, 03 April 2008

Sunday, 02 December 2007

  • Pray for Uganda and the Ebola outbreak

    The following is copied from Jennifer Myhre's blog about the Ebola outbreak in Uganda. They are in desperate need of prayer! Please pray.

    From the blog paradoxuganda.blogspot.com :
    The mysterious disease that has infected people in Bundibugyo was this morning revealed to be Ebola virus (verified by the CDC-Atlanta laboratories). 79 cases have been identified since August, with a 43% death rate. So far all cases have come from a village area called Kikyo, which is 25 km from our mission, or through direct prolonged contact with patients from that area. Ebola is a panic-inducing word. We are treating this news with sober respect, but thought we’d put out a few facts proactively.

    1. Ebola is a filovirus. There are four subtypes: Ebola-Zaire, Ebola-Sudan, Ebola-Ivory Coast, and Ebola-Reston. Yes, Reston, the latter is from monkeys who were imported through Dulles airport, but did not cause any human infection. Our epidemic does not seem to fit any of these four strains and so may represent a new form of the virus. The good news is that it seems to be slightly less virulent.
    2. This is the 17th documented outbreak of Ebola since 1976. Almost all the cases have come from Africa. The most recent Ugandan outbreak was in the north of the country in 2000; the most recent outbreak at all was in DRC Congo from April to October this year.
    3. The patients we are seeing look ill, but not that different from most patients. The Hollywood version is not what we’re seeing. Most people just have fever, vomiting and diarrhea, some with a rash and some with conjunctivitis (eyes red). A few have bleeding.
    4. More than half of people are recovering, with very basic care. We have met with two nurses who took almost a month to pull through but are OK now. The clinical officer Julius who has managed the majority of the patients is OK.
    5. We consider our non-medical team members to be at low risk. The virus has never been documented to spread through the air to infect humans. The mode of transmission is direct contact, touching body fluids or soiled linens or blood, or by contaminated instruments such as needles. Unless this strain is very different from other Ebola strains, people who are not sick do not spread the disease. We won’t contact it in our homes, or in normal daily life.
    6. The health care workers of Bundibugyo are the ones at risk. We want to support them in every way possible, with gloves, masks, bleach, bandages, IV fluids, etc. Thankfully the World Health Organization, the CDC and MSF (Doctors without Borders), organizations with great experience in this kind of epidemic, are aware and will arrive by air tomorrow to help. We as doctors are taking every possible precaution when we see patients to avoid becoming ill.
    7. Our Overseas Director Paul Leary is ready to field any questions about our team (info@whm.org); more medical information can be seen on the Ebola Information page on CDC web site.
    8. I’ll update the blog regularly with more information too.


    Please pray for our doctors and other health workers. Dr. Jonah is in Kampala now, but he saw quite a few cases before he left, as did Dr. Sessanga. Scott has attended to many of these patients already. Pray for us to wisely support the health system in our district, to graciously care for the ill, to be alert to any danger to our team and children, and to advocate for the best possible response that Bundibugyo can receive from international aid workers.

Thursday, 18 October 2007

  • Be Encouraged!

    "I write this with all reverance: God himself cannot deliver a person who is not in trouble. Therefore, it is to some advantage to be in distress, because God can then deliver you. Even Jesus Christ, the Healer of me, cannot heal a person who is not sick. Therefore, sickness in not an adversity for us, but rather an advantageous opportunity for Christ to heal us. The point is, my reader, you adversity may prove to your advantage by offering occasion for the display of divine grace." Charles Spurgeon

Thursday, 11 October 2007

  • Walking for the Children of Northern Uganda

    On Saturday, October 20th, I am walking for the children of northern
    Uganda - - and I need your help.

    In the midst of this 21-year conflict in northern Uganda, over 1.4
    million people have been displaced, and this has been hardest on the
    children. These displaced children have been forced into abhorrent conditions
    in camps where hundreds of people are dying every week because of a
    lack of clean water, food and medical care.

    GuluWalk is focused on providing a future for the abandoned children of
    northern Uganda. That's why I am walking and I need your help.

    I am walking to tell this story and to fundraise in support of
    children's programs that focus on education, rehabilitation and youth outreach.

    Visit www.guluwalk.com for more information or click on the link below
    to sponsor me now.

    https://secure.e2rm.com/registrant/StartUp.aspx?SID=1620894

    I would love your support for the children in northern Uganda!

Sunday, 16 September 2007

  • SKYDIVING!!

    One thing I have always wanted to do is go skydiving, so this weekend I went for it! It was absolutely crazy and surreal. Did I really jump out of a plane at 14,500 feet? 2.7 miles from the ground? The adrenaline was crazy and I was so nervous, but I did it. I got Gabe to come along too, and my friends Mara and Amy. Gabe was more scared than I was before it happened and then after we did it he wanted to go again. I am a little more like I went once that's enough for me:) It was scary, but I am so glad I did it. So if anyone is insane enough to fall out of the sky you should do it!! So worth it. My memory doesn't do me much good, cause everything happened so fast, so I have a video... http://youtube.com/watch?v=NyPTVMZTm_Y

     

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lyds03

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    • Country: United States
    • State: Georgia
    • Metro: Atlanta
    • Gender: Female
    • Member Since: 10/6/2005

About Me

  • Getting my career started as a Labor and Delivery nurse in Atlanta. Trying to find how my small story fits into God's big story of redeeming the world.