Hello all. Well, it is definitely time I sat down and committed some time to writing a little bit more about my experience here in Sierra Leone (or Salon, as it is also called in Krio, one of the most common native languages that are spoken here). I have experienced a monumental amount in the roughly 7 weeks I have been here. I have had a very busy schedule and hectic workload, but I am still committed to writing a blog post every month. I have posted a few things regarding my time here on Facebook so this is just a little more detail for those who may be curious. Thus, here is a short summary for those who are wondering about the type of work I am doing here. And now that I have a sort of “routine” down, hopefully I can find time to post more consistently. So, here goes:
EMERGENCY hospital is an NGO that provides free healthcare to victims of war in different areas of the world. Here in Sierra Leone, I work at a surgical hospital. Mostly, we treat serious traumatic, orthopedic injuries (like open femur fractures, i.e. bones sticking out) and surgical emergencies related to the abdomen (ruptured appendixes, perforated abdomens related to typhoid fever, and obstructed hernias). Stabbings, blunt traumas, horrible car accidents and head injuries are very common for the hospital too. We also treat burns (unfortunately, much too common for children here) and we have the only program in the country that treats esophageal injuries. Basically, this is a poor country. To make extra money, many families make soap to sell. One ingredient used in soap-making is a clear, odorless and tasteless caustic chemical substance. If it is left laying around in bottles or jars, it looks like water, thus many kids mistakenly drink it and their esophagus is burned and damaged, usually for life. I help manage this “caustic soda” program as these are very ill patients with chronic health problems. They need continued esophagus dilations (every month or every few months), gastrostomy tube placements and specialized, highly nutritious foods for the tube feedings, since many of them cannot eat by mouth after ingesting the caustic soda.
We treat adults and children. I work in the Emergency Department, doing patient care right alongside the Sierra Leone nurses and doctors. I have many duties in the ER, but the ultimate goal and task is to teach and learn from each other as we work alongside one another. Along with my other international colleagues (they are from U.S., U.K., Serbia, Italy, etc.), I am responsible for managing the bed situation in the hospital (i.e. who needs admission & what ward they should go to; really, this is a very big juggling act as the hospital is usually either completely full or very near full capacity). I am on call every 3rd night and 3rd Sunday, which often means either staying at the hospital very late and/or going into the hospital multiple times in the night to manage new admissions. Days off are very few and far between. As you can imagine, the Emergency Department for a hospital that provides free high-quality care and literally everything else for free (including food, prescription medicines, and either months or years of follow-up care), is very busy. The days are long but full and interesting.

I also oversee the hospital’s dressing room (i.e. the wound care department), plaster room (i.e. where all the casts are applied and all the follow-up for fractures is done). The hospital also has 2 “Guest Houses” (male and female), a dorm-like area for patients who are discharged but still need follow-up care and live much too far away (in the “Provinces” which are rural, isolated villages) to return consistently. I am responsible for the Guest Houses as well.

So that’s my job in a nutshell. My days are framed by a very early morning call to prayer that is broadcast over speakers from the Muslim mosque (before sunrise when I am already awake getting ready for work). And the end of the day is marked by a sunset and hundreds and hundreds of bats flying back to wherever it is that they go. Really, both things are quite beautiful and so unique compared to anything I’ve experienced back home. I don’t know why I like the silly bats so much. I think it’s because it’s such a dichotomy: the mysterious, clandestine “creatures of the night” making a very dramatic & brilliant showing against the remaining sunlight and still-bright cloud filled sky. I never saw bats in the U.S. and if I did I certainly never saw them like this. Friends and family, I think for now, that is how I will summarize the last few weeks here lol.
I never saw X in the U.S. and if I did, I never saw X like this.



You are my hero, Ashia, for doing this work. I want to visit every household there and put a skull and crossbones sticker on bottles of lye! The pictures are beautiful. What a spirit you possess. I’m in awe.
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Those babies are truly radiant through your lens…love this. Please keep sharing!
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