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Continued from Page 1

Courtesy
of Melissa Gaskill
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visiting nurses from University Hospital in San
Antonio were presented with flowers by their hosts,
the staff of Hospital General Regional de Sahuayo
in Sahuayo, Mexico. From left to right: Nurses Ernest
Prince, Betsy Buch, Rosa Sanchez, Clarissa Valdez,
Barbara Barbre and Leticia Martinez. |
The bright blue building is clean and spartan, sunshine
streaming into open windows, bougainvillea blooming
in a courtyard. Pregnant women accompanied by their
mothers, women holding tiny babies wrapped in bright
blankets with their husbands and older children, and
clusters of old men crowd the lobby. Children run around
the patio outside.
Most people come in through the front door; doctors
decide if someone needs to go to the emergency room,
which has four adult and four pediatric beds, two nurses
morning and afternoon, one at night. There is no triage,
unless you count the security guard outside who directs
people to either the lobby or the ER. The hospital has
an ambulance to bring people in from the surrounding
area or to take critical cases to a 1,500-bed hospital
in Guadalajara, two hours away, which is often full.
The San Antonio nurses said they were impressed with
what the hospital and the Mexican health care system
do well. For example, a program provides free prenatal
care for mothers who agree to have five checkups and
inoculations for their babies and to attend classes
on breast-feeding and baby care. A diabetes support
club meets weekly over breakfast, the members checking
on each other, learning about nutrition and other issues.
A system is in place for tracking individuals with
HIV. Education programs run by the hospital have reduced
childhood deaths caused by diarrhea from 100 a year
to three or four. In rural villages, laypeople are trained
to provide basic services and refer people to the clinics.
Such simple things work dramatically.
But not everything works so well. At a rural public
clinic toured by the group, medicines are free, but
a doctor confessed that it often doesn't have what is
prescribed for patients. The medicine may be available
at pharmacies in town, if the individual can afford
it.
"We don't have the economic and political resources
in Mexico that you do in the U.S. There are fine doctors
here, but they don't have the infrastructure and resources
to fight diseases," said Pedro Garcia Figuaroa,
a doctor at the clinic. "The problem is poverty."
Rosa Sanchez, RN, a med/surg nurse at University, noticed
a nearly complete lack of universal precautions, which
could be explained by limited resources. "They
are doing a lot of good things," Sanchez said.
"But I was really surprised by the lack of universal
precautions. That is so basic."
AIDS is a problem in this area; posters in the clinic
and murals on rural buildings encourage condom use.
"If we don't have the resources to treat the AIDS
problem, it affects us all," Figuaroa said. "It
is a worldwide problem."
For Ernest Prince, RN, who works in the emergency department
at University, the most interesting differences were
the lack of triage and the approach to emergency treatment.
Prince watched an orthopedic doctor set a broken wrist
with no nurse support and little pain medication, using
screws and a cast. Patients were discharged from the
emergency department with no written instructions, little
beyond prescriptions for ibuprofen.
Several of the nurses noted differences in perception
and treatment of pain, and said they now have a better
understanding of the apparent tolerance to pain they
see in their Mexican patients.
"If your expectation is that you won't get pain
relief, then you just take it," Prince said. "That
could explain the culture, why the men are so stoic."
There is no nursing shortage in Mexico, but that statement
can be deceiving. About 70 percent of nurses come from
three-year technical programs that students finish at
about age 16. The other 30 percent complete five years
of training and are licensed. Most licensed nurses work
in the large cities. In Sahuayo, only Magdalena Sanchez
Urbina, the hospital's head of nursing, is licensed.
Before the trip, Ray predicted that nurses in the two
countries would have much in common. "We all hold
sacred patient safety, wanting to give the best service
and competency. I think we'll find that the patient
is at the center of what they do, which will emphasize
the universality of patient-centered care."
Ray spent the week with a second group that visited
hospitals and clinics in Zamora, an hour from Sahuayo.
Her prediction, she said, was right on target.
All the nurses who participated expect to have a better
understanding of their patients who come from Mexico.
"I think understanding their health care system
will really help when we treat someone here," Prince
said.
Contact Melissa Gaskill at gaskill@dbcity.com
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