Last weekend, I was sitting in a restaurant in Petionville, having a late dinner. We were too lazy to cook, and hadn't been grocery shopping recently anyway.
Despite the fact that, while we were moving, patients were not arriving on our doorstep and the other maternities in the city were able to absorb the increased patient numbers which included transf
Here in the mountains, it is cool and quiet. All the ambient noise stress of Port-au-Prince is absent. No generators, no traffic. You can hear voices from below in the valley.
We — as in the gynecologists and midwife-supervisors — had mortality rounds this morning, late because all of our regular reports and meetings were delayed for the move.
It's our last day of running two hospitals. Activity at Solidarité has now surpassed activity at Jude Anne. We rounded on eleven inpatients at Solidarité this morning.
The patient who had a ruptured ectopic pregnancy is doing fine. We rounded on her this morning at Jude Anne. She is having some pain, and is still a bit tachycardic, but stable.