Wednesday, March 1, 2023

Update on Annika

Hello all,

A quick update on Annika. After being admitted to the hospital last night Annika was very relieved to not be put on a heparin drip (blood thinner) but rather was able to continue on the anticoagulant medicine that her regular doctor had prescribed to her earlier in the day. Her care team decided that she would not need surgery to remove any of the clots - they seemed to be in positions that were not so dangerous and with the medication would dissolve on their own over the next 3-6 months. She will be discharged this afternoon and will see a haemotologist as soon as she can to see if they can figure out what provoked these clots. It seems that she must have had clots for quite awhile as in the bottom of both lungs there is tissue that has died due to lack of blood flow. The pulmonologist assured Annika that the pain in both those spots would go away as the tissue regrows.

Lydia arrived safely from Minneapolis last night and has joined Rudi, Annika's boyfriend, in making sure Annika is getting lots of loving care. She is in much better spirits today and very relieved that she will not need surgery.

Thanks for the many many messages and prayers for Annika. She is really feeling loved and held up by all of you around the world.

Christine

Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Personal (Annika) and professional pain mixed

Today we got the news that our daughter, Annika, has blood clots both in one calf and in her lungs. As we speak, she is being admitted to hospital for these conditions. 

Annika was healed miraculously while we were ministering in South Africa. And we know that the God who healed her at that time has not changed an iota. As you can imagine, this is a difficult time for us, as parents, to be far from her. Lydia and Nathan are looking at how to surround Annika with the love of our family at this time. And Annika's boyfriend, Rudi, is with her. We are looking at the possibility of whether Christine can return to the States. But this is complicated both by the flights disturbances I have mentioned below, and visa considerations. 

It has been over a month since we last wrote. We wish we could say that things have gotten better for people in Eastern Congo, but that is simply not the case. One of our goals has always been to work ourselves out of a job. Unfortunately Medair's business is booming right now. We are adding new emergency responses every week in order to respond to the movement of people. We have health centers which we were supporting (as we have written about) which have been overtaken by the fighting, looted and everyone has fled. And so we are trying to support health facilities in the new areas to which the health staff have also fled, along with the displaced persons. 

It is disheartening to see the suffering. 

Along with the ongoing displacement of people due to fighting, in the last 2 weeks a UN helicopter was shot at, the pilot died immediately, and the co-pilot had to crash land the helicopter. We are thankful that there was not more loss of life, but the family of the pilot is is grieving this loss. On Sunday another helicopter was shot at, prompting the UN to cancel all flights. No one was hurt. Flights (at least of planes) have restarted again. But this helicopter on Sunday is one that our staff would use to return from a field location where there is currently no road access. So Medair is having to evaluate what to do about these staff at this time. 

We really appreciate your prayers at this time. The One who hears the groaning of our hearts when we don't have words to pray, hears your prayers. And we are thankful. 

Phil & Christine

Sunday, January 22, 2023

A new emergency response in Bushagara

 As the fighting rages on, Medair has been asked by the health sector to provide health care in a newly set up camp, outside of Goma, for displaced persons (IDPs) from Rutshuru territory. These are families who have been living in more informal housing (like we have talked about in previous blogs) right along the main highway into town. Some are being moved into this camp, which has been set up with better shelters, more space and a safer environment. 

Needless to say, there was a lot that needed to be done in order for Medair to begin providing health care to these IDPs. Tents were provided by the World Health Organization. The ground had to be leveled in order to put them up. Drainage


had to be dug so that water didn't run through the two tents (it is raining every day here). Supplies (like chairs, desks, cabinets, office supplies and health supplies) had to be procured and delivered to the site. Staff needed to be allocated to this new site. Medicines from our stock, as well as from the medicines which just came into Congo from Nairobi (which you prayed for) are being used to stock this new health center. Oral Rehydration Solution (ORS) stations need to be set up here. And there needs to be awareness raising among the families being moved here so that they know the health facility exists, what services it will be offering and how they can benefit from those services. 

One of the prelimary tasks, which one might not think, about is the digging of a latrine. This is important for any health facility. But it is even more important for a facility which is targeting cholera prevention and treatment. The challenge in this location is that it was covered by lava from the Niyragongo volcano eruption in May 2021. So the digging of a latrine is really a challenge! On Friday this digging through lava rock was ongoing!

In our last blog we talked about the training of community health workers (CHWs) in Kibati for the cholera response. The training targetted 2 important pieces: cholera symptons, prevention and treatment at the cholera treatment center and how to run the SRO points.  Rutshuru is one of the agricultural centers for Eastern Congo. Residents had herds of cattle (which they had to leave). This is the territory from which Goma received much of its vegetable supply. The people are enterpreneurs, and very industrious. This article talks about the refugees making charcoal to sell in order to provide for their families - and the long term effect that could have on the area. 

During the training of the CHWs in Kibati, it suprised Christine to hear that they were serving a glass of milk during what we would generally call "tea break." Because these people had cows, they really prefer milk over tea and coffee. This is their preferred drink. So Medair provided milk for their, err,

A Medair ORS (SRO in French) station in Kibati 

"milk break"  (ask us sometime about production of gouda-like cheese in this area). IDPs are people like you and I, with their drink preferences, livelihoods that supported their families until they had to flee their homes (and those livelihoods) and hopes for the future - the difference is that many of these things have been put on hold by the fighting from which they now flee. 

For Christine, one of the tasks that occupied a lot of her time this past week was assuring the supplies needed for the ORS stations in Kibati for which the CHWs were trained to run. These stations will not only provide life-saving ORS to persons dehydrated by cholera, they serve as referral points to identify people needing to go to our Cholera Treatment Center (CTC). And CHWs continue with raising awareness of how people can prevent cholera. 

All these things are keeping us both busy! Thanks for walking alongside us as Medair walks alongside these people not only having to flee fighting, but also facing a cholera epidemic caused by the conditions in which they are living. We had hoped that the epidemic was subsiding earlier last week. But it is stubbornly persisting. 

Praise:

  • For staff at all levels (at the bases and in the field) who largely gave up time off during the holidays and continue to work 6-7 days/week in order to care for IDPs
  • Phil seems to have finally had healing from the sinus infection - and the asthma that it provoked is much better. We both walked to or from work a couple of times this past week - a good sign for him.
  • Medicines and medical supplies were flown by helicopter this week to a health center in the IDP camp in Rhoo. Because of the fighting there is no way of reaching this area by road. This was a significant logistical challenge greatly aided by advocacy from the funder, ECHO. And these supplies will bring much needed relief to the IDPs there. 
  • For the safety of staff working in the field, where security is uncertain and monitored constantly by Medair. 

Prayer:
  • For the staff in Kibati treating cholera in the CTC and the team which will work in the community preventing cholera - for efficacy in their work and protection
  • For ongoing wisdom for Christine as she provides leadership to the community engagement teams in all 3 locations - connecting well in communities is key to acceptance of Medair's presence as well as long term sustainability and ownership of this work
  • Medair had a new project approved in the last couple of weeks which will see nutrition work extended to all health facilities in a couple of health zones. We will need to procure nutrition supplies urgently for this project - and the global supply chain for these supplies has been extremely contracted for the last year. We need a miracle!
  • For a peace based on justice in Eastern Congo, and with its neighbors.
  • For Medair to be able to respond safely to care for people who are suffering - particularly safety for our national staff who work in areas where the security situation can change rapidly

Sunday, January 8, 2023

Straddling two different worlds - and trying to make sense of it

Happy New Year and Best Wishes - this greeting has been common as we returned to our work here in Goma on January 2.

Singing carols around the family puzzle

In thinking about the last couple of months it feels like we are straddling two very different worlds.  We spent the month of December in the very different world of the US where together with extended family and friends we celebrated my dad's eternal homecoming, where various members of the family picked up COVID19, where we adjusted travel plans to Ohio to beat the snowstorm to enjoy immensely time with our kids and their significant others over Christmas and where generally we were able to 'let go' of the realities of life and work here in the DRC for a full month. It was healing despite Phil catching COVID19 as well.

IDPs chased from their homes by the fighting

When we left the DRC the 1st of December to fly to the US, Medair's team in Goma was gearing up to support the health centre of Kibati on the outskirts of Goma, an area which had received a massive influx of IDPs (internally displaced people) fleeing fighting from an armed group.Upon returning we learned that an outbreak of cholera was officially declared mid-December in the IDP camps around Kibati. Medair worked hard to set up a CTC (cholera treatment center) which has been operational since the end of December.  Integral to any cholera treatment response is prevention. As the person managing community engagement efforts, my teams' efforts are critical to prevention at the community level. In wanting to prevent any disease it's important to to look at motivations and barriers to doing things like handwashing with soap - which is key to preventing cholera transmission. This meant doing a quick evaluation, so on my first day back on Jan 3 I made a trip out to Kibati, to meet with leaders to set up the evaluation. I would have loved to have taken photos to document and share what I was seeing, but did not feel comfortable doing so. All along the road, from the outskirts of Goma to where we reached the health centre in Kibati, IDP informal shelters lined the road. This was a distance of several miles.

The CTC being constructed. 

Last Thursday I conducted a 1 day training for the team using a rapid assessement tool used to orient hygiene strategies in humanitarian emergencies. Friday the team went out and spent several hours listening to people's stories, video recording how people wash their hands and leading focus group discussions looking at people's perception of their risk to getting cholera, their motivations behind prevention and to understand who they listen to in their community and how they hear information. 

All this data was then inputed into a software program which gave recommendations for our prevention strategy. We know already that most people do not have easy access to a handwashing point (let alone water for other purposes), that "site chiefs" are important community leaders, that people really want to be good parents and make sure their children stay healthy, and that they had 'normal' lives back home in the communities from which they fled (had work of some sort of work, had homes, had roles in their community, had friends and family, had hopes for the future). 

The CTC during Christine's visit the day after our arrival

By midweek we hope to have started implementing our prevention strategy throughout the different IDP camps which will include working with community health workers to raise awareness about cholera, holding community meetings, setting up ORS points (oral rehydration solution which treats the dehydration from cholera which can kill people within 24 hours left untreated) and implementing the recommendations from our quick evaluation. 

Upon returning we also learned that the shipment of medicines that Phil has been working to get from Kenya finally arrived in Bunia - 3 containers of much needed medicines. 

And back in the US, snow continues to fall, at least in Minnesota. It is a bit discombobulating to straddle two such different worlds. Yet we know that wherever we are, people face challenges and have hopes for good lives. In this new year of 2023 - may the Lord grant you meaning and all good things. 

Praise:

  • Most of the last prayer concerns have been answered! Medicines arrived, guidance on interventions to respond to, customs convention signed the day before medicines arrived at the border from Kenya.
  • For wonderful family time in the US and a really special Memorial service for my dad

Prayer:
  • For Phil, who is recovering from a sinus infection
  • For the staff in Kibati treating cholera in the CTC and the team which will work in the community preventing cholera - for efficacy in their work and protection
  • For wisdom for Christine as she provides leadership to the community engagement teams in all 3 locations - connecting well in communities is key to acceptance of Medair's presence as well as longterm sustainability and ownership
  • For quick resolution to the last hurdle for the 3 containers of medicine - negotiations with the equivalent of the FDA over how many samples they need to take
  • For a peace based on justice in Eastern Congo, and with its neighbors.
  • For Medair to be able to respond safely to care for people who are suffering - particularly safety for our national staff who work in areas where the security situation can change rapidly

Tuesday, November 8, 2022

Update on the situation described in our last blog

 We wanted to give you a quick update. 

Last night, when our international team met for devotions,

Medair support to the Health Facility Gloria visited
©Gloria Vegara

the country director shared that the current estimate of persons displaced by the fighting is around 180,000. At the time when we wrote the original post, I think that the amount was around 20,000. So that gives you an idea of how this is developing for the people of Eastern Congo. 

Congolese are incredibly resilient people. This resilience seems to sometimes be constructed on a foundation of resignation - as this has been going on for so very long in Eastern Congo. But it is heartbreaking to see the reality of people on the ground. 

A colleague, Gloria Vergara, recently went to do an assessment in a site where internally displaced persons (IDPs) are gathering. The assessment was to determine if Medair could do an emergency response there, assisting the health center there to better be able to respond to this influx of IDPs. This would be material help (especially in terms of an emergency stock of medicines) as well as supervisory assistance to assure that IDPs are getting the best service

IDPs taking up residence within the Health Center compound
©Gloria Vegara

possible. 

One of Gloria's overarching impressions from her visit was simply that peoples' lives are on hold. They have been forced to flee their homes, and they have no idea what is coming next. They are creating a life for themselves as best they can, but what will come next in their lives is very difficult for them to predict. 

There was an escalation in the fighting today as the government sent fighter jets to bomb rebel held positions. As you can imagine this is a disquieting ramping up of the violence as well as the risk of signficant humanitarian consequences. 

We appreciate your prayers for these people whose lives have been put on hold. Yesterday and today senior management are doing security assessments. These assessment determine if we can carry out programming in these areas, and what our staffing should look like. Last night we prayed for wisdom while making security assessments. Medair wants to be able to respond to relieve the suffering of these people. But Medair wants to do that without putting at risk the lives of our national staff (who do the vast majority of the work on the ground) or international staff. As you can imagine, this is a delicate balance to keep. 

Makeshift shelters for IDPs
©Benjamin Songolo
One of the impulses that lead to the founding of Medair was a belief that Christians should be present in responding to such disasters. That will remain one of the guiding principles as these decisions are taken. 

Praise: 

  • For the resilience of Congolese - a resilience often undergirded by faith in Jesus. 
  • For Christine feeling significantly better and sleeping better!

Prayer:
  • For us to be able to cobble together the medicines needed for emergency responses from 2 of our 3 bases, out of existing stocks, emergency purchases and gift in kind from other organizations.
  • Guidance for senior management as they assess security risks and what they mean both for Medair programming and staffing.
  • For the custons convention to be signed once and for all. 
  • For our medical supplies to arrive from Nairobi.
  • For a peace based on justice in Eastern Congo, and with its neighbors.
  • For Medair to be able to respond safely to care for people who are suffering - particularly safety for our national staff
  • For peace that passes understanding for people in Goma, who remain free from the problems, but concerned about what may come.

Saturday, October 29, 2022

It's been quite a week....

 Greetings on the cusp of the arrival of November, 

Families fleeing the fighting
It has been quite a week. Christine was feeling the effects of the loss of her father when she was hit with COVID on the 24th! We are really grateful now that we were vaccinated and boosted (because of living in Bangladesh at the time, this wasn't easy - we do feel privileged!). She has had some pretty miserable days, but she is feeling much better today. We hope that the worst is behind her. But we do welcome your prayers for her complete healing!

There has also been significant fighting to the north of Goma (where we live). A few days ago we learned that one of the rebel groups had successfully taken the main highway (the one that the truck taking medicines to our northern base used a couple of months ago). And this morning we learned the group has consolidated its position north of Goma, with some reports saying that they have overrun the largest military base about 50 kilometres from Goma. 

10 years ago, this same group used that same military base to the north of Goma as their staging point from which they took Goma. That takeover of Goma was relatively peaceful. But people here are understandably concerned that there could be a replay of 10 years ago. 

Because of these developments Medair has implemented its contingency plans. It looks like  international staff will be working from our residence until things are clarified. Medair takes very seriously the safety of all staff - international and national. We don't have any national staff in the exact areas that are currently affected by the fighting. We do have national staff in areas that will be receiving internally displaced persons (IDPs), chased from their homes because of this fighting. The loss of life and property of the civilian population is heartbreaking. And this fighting creates more work of the type that Medair has been doing here for 25 years! So those calculation are also being made now - how can we serve these populations who are fleeing? 

Medair has evacuation plans in place, if it would come to that. So we are quite safe (in contrast to the populations suffering where the fighting is taking place). We could evacuate by boat across Lake Kivu, by land routes or by air.

We simply wanted to inform you of this reality, and invite you to join us in prayer! Thanking you for walking alongside us in this way - and alongside the people of Eastern Congo!

Praise: 

  • For an organization that takes security seriously.
  • For advances in getting Medair's customs convention signed - not yet signed, but it appears it will be in the weeks to come. 
  • For medical supplies that should be coming from Nairobi in the next couple of weeks - we need them badly!

Prayer:
  • For populations suffering because of this renewed fighting.
  • For a peace based on justice in Eastern Congo, and with its neighbors.
  • For Medair to be able to respond safely to care for people who are suffering.
  • For complete healing for Christine from COVID19

Sunday, October 23, 2022

Homecoming of Christine's dad - Carl Lindell

Dear friends and family, 

Many of you have probably already heard the news that my dad passed away on October 15. This was quite a shock to all of us as it happened so suddenly. However we are so grateful for the 'completion of a life well lived,' as was commented by an extended family member-in-law. We fully expected that dad would not live long, after his dear wife Faith (my mom), passed away in May 2021. And now we can imagine the beautiful welcome he received into his heavenly home. 

We were able to participate in a small immediate family gathering, at the chapel where he attended church over the last couple of years while residing in a Memory care unit, yesterday over zoom. Despite the distance it was really special to be together as family for this service of remembrance. We will return to the US the beginning of December and on Dec 10th look forward to a Celebration of Life service at Lake Nokomis Lutheran Church in Minneapolis with the extended community of friends and family. We invite any of you interested to attend in person or virtually. Below I've added a link to 'Celebrating Carl' page with more information including where to find a link for the service on Dec 10th.

 
Recent photo of dad and sister Luann


The link to learn more -

Thankful for a dad who was an amazing father, grandfather, uncle, husband, pastor, mentor and friend to many. 

Christine