Archive for June, 2011

WINGS supports CNIS obstetrics work

June 21st, 2011

Dr. Tarek Razek, CNIS bard chair, speaks at the May WINGS meeting

The Montreal group Women Inspiring Next GenerationS (WINGS) held a meeting on May 12, raising funds for CNIS obstetrics work in Africa.

The evening was interesting and inspiring and featured addresses on fistula, a devastating complication of pregnancy and rape – too common in developing countries. Dr. Joyce Pickering spoke about the Addis Ababa fistula hospital and showed a video about the great work being done there. Next, CNIS’ board chair, Dr. Tarek Razek, spoke about the work CNIS does overseas and the challenges women in Africa face because there is such a dearth of qualified doctors, especially in the outlying regions. Drs. Razek and Pickering answered many interesting questions. The attendees were a mix of young science and medical students, as well as women in their 40s and 50s.

WINGS had decided to organize a meeting on fistulas and I searched high and low for a Canadian charity that was trustworthy and had good financial records. When they saw our ration of donations to administration costs on our financial statement and read that CNIS is supported by CIDA, WINGS contacted us for more information.

WINGS is an organization dedicated to empowering women by providing them with protection from exploitation, and helping them access health services,

Dr. Joyce Pickering speaks about the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital during the WINGS meeting

education and financial support.  Their intention is to achieve these goals by raising funds that will be used to target sex trafficking, fistula treatment, education and micro-finance in developing countries and women’s support services locally. They also promote awareness of these issues in order to recruit as many as possible to this global movement. The United Nations Development Programme (2006) reports that empowered women finance education of younger relatives, reduce infant mortality, improve health and nutrition and raise economic productivity. This is known as “The Girl Effect” and is the inspiration for WINGS.

WINGS accomplish their mission by organizing small meetings in people’s homes. Each meeting deals with one of the above subjects and hopefully raises both money and awareness. For each event, the group tries to find a worthy charitable organization that helps women in the developing world. For more information on some of WINGS’ past meetings, please visit wingsmontreal.blogspot.com

We would like to thank WINGS and the women of WINGS – Sherry Luger, Sara Ravel, Genevieve Charette, Corrine Guttman and Sara Heppner – for their generous support.

 

Report from nursing instructor course in Africa

June 21st, 2011

Vickie Grandinetti (far left) and Genelle Leifso (far right) with nursing students in Gondar, Ethiopia

By Vickie Grandinett, VCH Perioperative Program instructor in Richmond, BC and CNIS volunteer nursing instructor

I took part in a surgical mission to Ethiopia earlier this year teaching nurses and anesthetists how to use the Safe Surgery Saves Lives (SSSL) Checklist. It was a wonderful experience and a great opportunity to share my knowledge and skills with those who may not have otherwise received the training.

I had always wanted to join a surgical mission and decided to attend a train-the-trainer workshop last December to learn how to teach the SSSL Checklist. I thought the experience would provide an opportunity to learn about teaching something I had experience with, both as a nurse and an instructor. I also thought that learning how to educate nurses in a way that would benefit their patients would have more of an impact than if I had gone to a third world country to assist travelling surgeons with specialized surgical procedures on a selection of patients.. The instructor of the training course was Genelle Leifso, a BCIT Perioperative Specialty Nursing faculty member, who also works in the OR at VGH and is a member of the board of the Canadian Network for International Surgery (CNIS). Genelle was the main educator and organizer for the trip and also served as my mentor.

I was invited to go to Ethiopia with Genelle from February 18 to March 4, 2011 under the umbrella of CNIS. We taught 40 nurses and anesthetists in two 2-day courses at Gonder University Referral Hospital (in Gonder) and another 18 students in one 2-day course in Awassa at the Awassa University Referral Hospital.

Prior to each course we toured their OR and observed current practice so our teaching could be informed by the context of care that was provided. As we taught about each aspect of the SSSL Checklist and why it was important to provide safe patient care, we talked about the practice we observed and how it measured up to basic perioperative principles of asepsis and sterile technique. In suggesting practice improvements, we focused on low-cost or no-cost changes that were possible and necessary for the implementation of the checklist to be successful. For example, we taught the closed gloving technique, how to do a proper sponge and instrument count, how to properly sterilize instruments, and other areas of aseptic technique.

The students were receptive and appreciative of what we were teaching. By remaining in email contact with some of the nurse leaders and students, we have learned that some of the things we taught are being practiced and others are in the process of being implemented. In hindsight, it would have been ideal to remain a few days after the classes to assist with some of the changes in person. Hopefully, we can return in a year to assess the changes.

Since returning, Genelle and I have made plastic protective aprons for the nurses to wear under their sterile gowns and we collected protective eyewear that we hope to send soon. I will also be helping with another SSSL instructor’s course to be held June 18, 2011 in Vancouver. It is for any Perioperative nurse wishing to learn and teach this content in the third world. I would encourage anyone to come out and take the training since it provides you with the skills you need to participate in a surgical mission where you will be providing essential education to nurses who could really benefit from it.

CNIS has a 16-year history of providing essential surgical and obstetric education to surgeons in low-income regions of Africa. More recently they have recognized the need to provide comparable training for perioperative nurses.

The SSSL Checklist was developed by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2008 and has been shown to decrease mortality and morbidity by 50% in low income countries. A form of the checklist is used in Canada and has been in use since August 2010 in most VCH ORs.

Join the Canada/Ethiopia Twinning Project

June 14th, 2011

Lord Tennyson Elementary in Vancouver is twinned with Bazen Elementary in Axum, Ethiopia

CNIS is inviting Canadian elementary schools to participate in the Canada/Ethiopia Twinning Project by twinning with an elementary school in Axum, Northern Ethiopia starting in September 2011.

CNIS will help “twin” eight Canadian elementary schools with eight elementary schools in Axum. Once matched, the schools, and most importantly the children, can begin building a relationship with their new peers. Connections could be made through the arts, letter writing, geography projects, or other student-generated ideas. To encourage teachers to get involved, CNIS is developing a list of suggested classroom activities for the project that apply to the Ministry of Education’s prescribed learning outcomes by grade.

Through the Twinning Project, CNIS hopes to increase Canadian elementary school students’ knowledge and understanding of African cultures and people, and to further develop a sense of empathy and social responsibility. We believe that the new friendships created will equally enrich the learning experiences of the children in Canada and in Africa.

Invitation
Registration Form

For more information, please contact:
karethe@cnis.ca
Phone: 604.739.4708