August 11, 2015
I think the sky felt terrible about letting the sun scorch us yesterday so it decided to make it up to us… We woke up to the beautiful sound of rain this morning (I make it seem like it was a light shower, but no. it was a downnnnnpouuuur)! After eating some aloo paratha and drinking some “real” mango juice, the 6 of us squeezed into a tuk-tuk. Stacked high and wide, with the rain not letting up and the roads severely potholed, it was a long 5-minute drive to the Seti Zonal Hospital compound.
I think the sky felt terrible about letting the sun scorch us yesterday so it decided to make it up to us… We woke up to the beautiful sound of rain this morning (I make it seem like it was a light shower, but no. it was a downnnnnpouuuur)! After eating some aloo paratha and drinking some “real” mango juice, the 6 of us squeezed into a tuk-tuk. Stacked high and wide, with the rain not letting up and the roads severely potholed, it was a long 5-minute drive to the Seti Zonal Hospital compound.
When we arrived, the room where the training was held was dreary and dark as the lights had gone out from the rainstorm. The trainers in the
room chatted it up as the rest of the participants trickled in for the next
hour. The lights flickered back on and that triggered the start of the day -- the
trainers spent the morning going over yesterdays pre-training test that they
received. The feedback and discussions were in Nepali so we spent most of that
time drinking chai and eating the pakoras that were served :P
The first half of the day was spent watching the master
trainers explain how to properly perform each of the training modules using the
new national guidelines. Since our team didn’t have first-hand knowledge of the
standard of care practiced, it was really enlightening for us to see how each
skill was supposed to be performed.
Seeing this session helped us better follow each of the steps and really
focus on where the trainers struggles, as opposed to wrapping our heads around
what the procedure was. The latter half of the day was spent watching the
trainers practice - the room had multiple stations (normal delivery, manual
placenta removal, caesarian tear and so and so forth). We watched and took
pictures and asked questions whenever we could, and it was a really productive
and data-juicy day. Unlike yesterday,
the rain and Teja’s mints kept us cool and awake.
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