November 5, 2009
Again, we’ve had a week filled with little miracles. We have been working on DIC's Neonatal Resuscitation Training Project (NRT) which will bring doctors and equipment from the USA next year to teach birth attendants how to resuscitate newborn babies who are having breathing difficulties. As the time neared for Dr. Michael Preece to arrive here in UB to help us plan the project, however, we became more and more worried. We have really tried to make contacts and set up appointments so we would be ready to meet with him. We have talked to many government officials and doctors, but even though we have tried many times, we have been unsuccessful in setting up appointments with the Ministry of Health. We have worked at it from several angles and still no appointment.
Thanks to the wheelchairs DIC donated to Mongolia and the good media coverage DIC received, many doors to governors’ offices and hospital directors’ were opened to us. We have met with the directors of all of the main hospitals in Ulaanbaatar and had VIP tours of some of them. We have also met with the Governors or Assistant Governors and the Ministries of Health in Bayanzurk District, Darkhan, Bulgan, Zuun-Kharaa, and Erdenet who are all interested in being part of the Neonatal Project. We also met with the directors of the maternity hospitals in those cities/aimags and had tours of their hospitals.
Soyolmaa arranged for us to meet an influential woman in the Office of the President of Mongolia who came to Buyanzurkh to meet with us as a favor to Soyolmaa. Normally, meeting with the Ministry of Health should have been our first contact, but as of the day before Dr. Preece arrived, we still hadn’t been able to make an appointment with anyone from the Ministry of Health, and we still didn’t know who our champion was going to be.
However, the day before Dr. Preece arrived, Soyolmaa finally gave us the phone numbers she had received from her friend in the Office of the President. Chintuya called them and even though they were in the middle of the Swine Flu panic, Chintuya was able to get appointments for us to meet with them. She, also, set up appointments for us to meet with the head doctors of the Maternity and Child Care Research Hospital (MCH), Enkhee from the Swanson Family Foundation, and the head of the Association of Small Clinics.
Our first appointment was with the head of the Maternity and Child Care Research Hospital. When we arrived at our appointment to meet with him, he told us that he had to leave because he had to attend an emergency meeting about the Swine Flu. As he turned the meeting over to his able assistant, he told us that she would speak for him. Then he hurried out of the room. As we talked to her, we found out that in addition to her job at the MCH, she is also the secretary for the Association of Neonataologists and her boss was its director. She said they tried to have an annual meeting, but because of a lack of funds, hadn’t been able to meet this year. Dr. Preece was really excited. He said that it would be a dream come true to be able to have these doctors come to Ulaanbaatar and be able to train them to be trainers and then for them to go out into their Aimags and train other doctors and midwives on how to do neonatal resuscitation. She agreed. She said it has been her dream to have all of the doctors/midwives who assist in births to be trained to save babies who have asphyxia at birth. We found our champion!
Perhaps if we had met with the Ministry of Health first or if the head of the MCH hadn’t had an emergency meeting because of the Swine Flu, it wouldn’t have turned out like this, but Dr. Preece is excited because things are falling together very well. If they turn out the way it looks like they will, within two or three years, all of the doctors/midwives in Mongolia who assist in births will receive training in this procedure and the equipment they need to use it. Hopefully, the lives of many Mongolian babies will be saved.
We had more follow-up meetings and more talking and more planning, but it looks good. We are grateful for the guidance and inspiration of the Spirit and for the tender mercies we saw this week.
What a sucession of miracles to accomplish the work of the Lord! We understand the power and the wonder of "divine positoning," "small means," and tender mercies! But, they do not happen without faith, obedience, much prayer and work, and listening to the Spirit. You two are blessing the lives of so many here and now and will bless the lives of those still to come! Interesting... Dr. Preece was a physician in our clinic before he retired to be a Mission President. I knew his nurse well and him a little. He is a good friend of some of our good friends, as well... One of the Allergy/Pulmonary doctors that I work with has been in China twice (just got back) doing the same training in resuscitation. Small world!
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