In terms of numbers of patients seen, we had 503 come
through the door of the church for treatment.
It was busy all day long, we were only able to take short breaks before
we had to work on bottlenecks in one area of the clinic or another. Triage was full all day. Around 10:30, a teacher named Immanuel
brought about 40 students over from a nearby school. This could have really turned the clinic
upside down, but we had seen something like this before at Kibera a few years
earlier. We had the children wait while
we setup their own “exam room”. We put an eyechart up on the wall of the
parsonage and a lot of chairs on the lawn for them. While they waited to be examined, William taught
them a few songs and kept them occupied.
I got some great pictures of the whole thing and will post them when we
get back. Dr. Lilian quickly was able to screen out
those kids that needed distance glasses.
Then, she diagnosed which ones had allergies and other eye conditions we
could treat. We used the autorefractors on
the kids that needed glasses and Dr. Lilian worked with the other eye issues.
I was in the triage station a lot today, with Laura and
Ralph and other team members helped as they could. There were many moving stories and many
tearful prayers. I even had one Muslim
man that had seen me and been treated by our clinic there in 2011 end up seeing
me again. Wow! We got him some new reading glasses to
replace the old ones that had grown too weak.
He was still a Muslim when he left, but I gave him more information on
Jesus to think about and we parted friends.
Witnessing can take years, but it has eternal rewards for those that finally
listen and believe the simple message we carry.
Maybe I’ll see him again in a couple of years.
We were supposed to have dinner here at Rosa Mystica with
Catherine, her mother and Eugene, but Catherine’s day got too busy. Laura, Ralph and I ate at Rosa Mystica and
the rest of the group went to eat in the Junction Mall. It’s about time for bed, more to follow after
our last day of the clinic tomorrow.
No comments:
Post a Comment