Kenya November 2021

With the generous help of our church and a team dedicated to the mission. We had an overwhelmingly successful mission to Kenya. It all started with collecting and sterilizing equipment that we would need.

Eileen Nemec and Sarah Sidler helped Ron and I sterilize donated equipment for the trip.

Screening for Rheumatic Heart Disease in Kapsowar Kenya

We were able to begin the training of screeners at Kapsowar Hospital, a small mission hospital in northwest Kenya. Once trained, they will be doing community screening at local schools.

Nurse Liz Koleski will be heading up the program

With the new trainees we were able to screen 154 young people. We identified 4 that will go on monthly penicillin to prevent progression of their disease and one young lady who we would see in Eldoret for a balloon valvuloplasty because of the severity of her disease. The Kapsowar screening program will take time and resources to be up and running. They are still in need of a fully functioning portable ECHO machine. In the mean time they are going through the ECHO course put together by Henry Zong Cardiac Ultrasound expert at Mbingo Hospital in Cameroon and administered by Eileen Nemec, Pediatric Echo Specialist at Children’s Hospital in Minneapolis.

This is Perpetua with her mother. We first met Perpetua in Kapsowar when we were doing RHD screening at her school.

Perpetua is 13 years old. She’s a smart girl doing well in school. her favorite subject is math. She is know around the school as the girl who walks slow. For those of you who understand, her valve area was .8 and her gradient was 19 at a heart rate of 76. It’s no wonder she walks slowly. She was a perfect candidate for the balloon procedure. We arranged to her come to the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Eldoret.

Our team outside of Moi Teaching and referral Hospital. Right to left, Ron Johannsen, Amit Sharma, Gautam Reddy, Eileen Nemec, Ahmad Younes, Colleen Johannsen, Stephanie El Hajj, Kelsey Sharma.

assessing patients for Balloon procedure.

Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital, MTRH is a public hospital in Eldoret Kenya which serves the poor. They have been interested in starting a Balloon Valvuloplasty (PTMC) program for some time. This will be the first in a series of trips to train the MTRH cardiologists to do the procedure independently.

Dry lab demonstration of the PTMC process.

Cath lab crowded with teaching and learning

Perpetua after her very successful procedure. She should now be able to live a full life. We are so blessed to participate in this work.

Meeting with Joy

We were so delighted to get together with Joy (formally known as Patience) while we were in Cameroon. You may remember her story from past blog pages. We met her in Cameroon 2018. She was a very sick young lady with severe mitral stenosis. We were able to fix her valve in Kenya. She did very well and returned to Cameroon.

Joy with her father and baby Michelle

Joy with her father and baby Michelle

She and several of her family came with her to Mbingo hospital . After her appointment we invited everyone over to the guesthouse for tea. We were able to meet her aunt, father brother, husband and her baby Michelle. They brought us several gifts including a couple live chickens When the chickens were removed from the basket one of them escaped and everyone had a good time hunting the doctors chicken.

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Joy’s aunt, father, husband and baby. I don’t think I mentioned that Joy met her husband on the plane flying back to Cameroon from Kenya after her procedure.

Joy’s aunt, father, husband and baby. I don’t think I mentioned that Joy met her husband on the plane flying back to Cameroon from Kenya after her procedure.

It is such an honor to be used by God to make a profound impact on this wonderful family.

Avisha

Meet Avisha, a 2 year old Cameroonian with pulmonary stenosis (a narrowing of her pulmonary valve restricting blood flow from her heart to her lungs).

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We met with her worried parents in Douala. She was doing fine but will need to go to Kenya to have a procedure done to fix her valve. Her father is a surgeon graduated from the PAACS (Pan African Association of Christian Surgeons) program. He is currently working at a mission hospital serving the poor. He could make six times the money if he worked in the private hospital system but feels led to serve where he is most desperately needed. If you would like to help you can do so through the foundation.