Monday, December 27, 2010

Merry Christmas!!

After 11pm mass on Christmas Eve, Christmas Day had arrived.



I was very excited about another holiday feast in the galley but first we had to say goodbye to a good friend from NIACT. 
Here I am with Anna, Senior Chief Eusebio and LCDR Reinke.

Dinnertime!!!



After the meal, we went to try our hand again at BINGO.
It was super crowded this time.  And I didn't win again!!!!!  The only thing to get excited about was when they said O-69.  And the crowd says Oooooohhh!  If you don't get it, you are a good person;)

Friday, December 24, 2010

A Day in the Life

Here are some pictures of the EMF so you all can see where I go and who I work with on a daily basis.

Here are two of our corpsmen manning the front desk.

Here is the OIC of the clinic

Here is our medical admin officer and our chief, AKA the hardest working people in the clinic

Here is one of the corpsman presenting a patient to LCDR Miller

Here is our lab

Here are two of our nurses on the ward, which is usually empty unless we have post-op patients, or those who need iv fluids or prolonged observation

Here is the ER/physical therapy unit and here is our PT tech and radiology tech, AKA the busiest people in the clinic

Here I am in the OR.  We average about 1-2 cases/month.  Most of the work for the surgeon and myself takes place at the local Djiboutian hospital where we go three times a week

But here is where you will usually find me, the second OR, AKA the office for the surgeon and myself

And here are my anesthesia toys.  I know the machine is not the Mercedes-Benz of anesthesia machines.  But it gets the job done just the same.

But then, lo and behold, I got an early Christmas present.  Brand-new anesthesia machines!!  I didn't even know they were ordered.  So once the bio-med tech finishes the assembly, I have two new anesthesia machines to play with.  Yea!!!

And here is a pic of the whole fantastic Djibouti EMF 17 crew.  (I'm in the second row all the way to your right).

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Lac Assal

Today some of us officers from the EMF took a field trip to Lac Assal.  It's the lowest point in Africa with a salt lake that lies 156 meters below sea level.  It is said that the lake has a salt content of 35%. 

But first off, we stopped to buy some souvenirs along the way.  I bought a hand-crafted helicopter from this man, Abdullah.  Even though we questioned what the souvenirs were made out of, they couldn't tell us.  No, literally, they did not know the correct English word.  We bought them anyway.

And after a two hour drive, we made it to Lac Assal.  It was so peaceful, serene, and absolutely beautiful!

We're here!!!!

The shore was made of huge salt clumps, no sand.  And it sounded like popcorn as you stepped on it.

Here's a salt crystal that I collected

And this is what the salt floor looked like for miles and miles

Here's a pic of me floating.  As soon as you lay in, you float.  I don't think there are any drowning stories at this lake.

And here's a better pic of the internal medicine doc, LT Harrell

Here's a pic of how I looked after a dip.  All salt, no sand.  It took four bottled waters to rinse off with to look halfway presentable.

After that, we went to the hot springs.  Here we found boiling hot water, which is heated by geothermal activity.  It was REALLY hot!

I found some fish that can survive the heat

And of course, while trying to get the perfect shot, LT Harrell lost his shoe in the boiling water

Luckily, the OIC (officer-in-charge) of our clinic, CDR Brenner, "manned up" and walked into the water to retrieve his shoe...He then requested anesthesia from me for his burned foot.  All in all a great trip!