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Academic collaboration brings Haitian nurses to
Boston and skills to Zanmi Lasante
By Melissa King
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(Right to left) Zanmi Zante nurses Lydie Presnar, Jeanne
Myrléne Astrémond Taveús, Marie Myrléne St.
Vil Marius and Sanon Marie Mylande (in back) gather with Joyce Granara,
RN, director of surgical services, before a laboratory session at Lawrence
Memorial Hospital.
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Every since she was a child growing up in Haiti, Marie Myrléne St.
Vil Marius has wanted to dedicate her life “to people who have nothing
and are in need.”
That commitment carried Marie through nursing school, and later, motivated
her to leave the relative comfort of a hospital in the capital city to work
at PIH’s partner organization Zanmi Lasante (ZL) in Haiti’s isolated
and impoverished Central Plateau. Most recently, it brought Marie and three
colleagues to Boston to receive formal training for operating room nurses
that is not offered anywhere in Haiti.
In late June, she and Sanon Marie Mylande, Lydie Presnar and Jeanne Myrléne
Astrémind Taveús became the first international students to
complete the Introduction to Perioperative Nursing Course at Regis College
in Weston, Massachusetts.
Known in Haiti as instrumantistes, perioperative nurses are critical members
of the operating room team who prepare patients for surgery,
maintain a sterile operating room environment and to monitor patients carefully
during surgery.
Partners In Health and Regis College pooled resources to provide this formal
training to the nurses, who will use their new skills to enhance patient care,
to help review surgical equipment needs and to improve the flow of operating
procedures at two ZL sites in Haiti – Cange and Belladère.
"Our hope is that the nurses will work with operating room teams to
develop and implement updated standards of care,” said PIH Advocacy
and Policy Director Donna Barry.
The beginning of an academic collaboration
In a country that only spends about US$2 per person on health care each year, limited resources present a challenge for health professionals like Marie who are providing health care to the nation’s
poor.
This is compounded by the fact that their jobs are socially challenging.
Marie and the other nurses report to work for 14 consecutive days, followed
by a three-day weekend; they are home with their families only a few days
per month. It is this kind of dedication that defines PIH staff and their commitment to solidarity with those living in impoverished settings.
In the autumn of 2007, PIH staff—together with Regis College's Dean of Nursing Toni Hays and faculty member Nancy Street—met with leaders of nursing schools in Cap-Haïtien and Port-au-Prince to learn how they could help improve education for nurses in Haiti. This was the formal beginning of what
all institutions hope will be a long, fruitful partnership.
When Ophelia Dahl, PIH’s CEO, went to Haiti earlier this year, ZL’s
chief surgeon mentioned that it would be very helpful if some nurses had
specialized operating room training. Upon her return, she and Donna Barry
met with Dr. Hays and mentioned this priority need.
Regis College stepped up to help fill the gap, offering to provide free tuition
and housing if PIH could bring students from Haiti to Boston to take part
in the perioperative nursing program, find clinical placements and cover the
other costs. PIH took them up on the offer and found another willing collaborator
in Boston Medical Center, where the nurses were paired with preceptors to
take part in clinical observation.
The perioperative nursing program, which is now in its fifth year, provides
registered nurses with a solid understanding of the theories, principles,
skills and best practices of perioperative nursing. It is a collaboration
among Regis College Nursing Program, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Hallmark
Health’s Center for Professional Development and several Boston-area
hospitals.
From the classroom to the operating room
Marie eyed her “87.” An hour before class, she and the other
Haitian nurses had already convened to go over their tests from the previous
week.
While she had scored far above the mean, Marie reviewed each question carefully
to see how her answers could have been better. “The [Haitian] students
have been very motivated,” observed Laurie A. Hillson, RN, MSN, who
developed the course. “They are always asking for more resources and
information.”
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Zanmi Lasante nurse Sanon Marie Mylande lays out surgical
toolsas colleague Jeanne
Myrléne Astrémind Taveús and Joyce Granara, RN,
director of surgical services, look on.
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Hillson, who is the coordinator of continuing studies at Regis, said that
the nurses were motivating the rest of the class, as well. “They are
getting us to think more globally,” she said. “We are learning
more about how much waste we have, and how we can better conserve.” Colleagues
at Lawrence Memorial and its clinical affiliates are now collecting medical
supplies to send to Haiti—materials like suction tubing and gowns that
are unused and have not expired, but that they are required to dispose of
if a surgery is canceled.
When the nurses were not in class at Regis College, they were either taking
part in laboratory sessions at Lawrence Memorial
Hospital, or in clinical
observation at Boston Medical Center (BMC).
Unlike many of their fellow classmates, the nurses had seen some of the technologies
at BMC only in books. Sanon said they were impressed not only by the sheer
variety of tools, but by the fact that there are so many types of operating
room nurses in the United States. “It is interesting to see that in
nursing teams here, every person has a specific job and there are more people
to provide the same care,” she said.
The nurses say they were also pleasantly surprised that some of the hospital
staff they met in Boston are of Haitian decent. The irony is that Haitian
nurses have long been part of the fabric of New England hospitals. There are
currently more people from Haiti taking up residence in Boston than in Cap-Haïtien,
Haiti’s second largest city.
The Road Ahead
Now that the nurses have completed the program, they face the added
challenge of applying their skills and practices in a very different environment.
As Lydie Presnar, one of the four nurses, pointed out, “In order to
enable us to use all that we have learned here, we will need more materials
and more resources than we currently have in Haiti.”
The nurses from Cange should soon have these, as PIH and ZL will be renovating
a building that holds the two operating rooms at Hopital Bon Sauveur in Cange
in the coming year. ZL is also hoping to raise funds to build a larger operating
room, complete with more of the most modern equipment.
The success of Marie and her classmates is a good sign for the future of
an academic collaboration that is creating a means for health professionals
in Haiti to bring much-needed expertise and resources from Boston to patients
in the Central Plateau.
Jeanne said that the nurses plan to continue collaborating, wherever the
road ahead leads them. The prospect of helping those in need, she said, is
well worth the bumpy two-hour stretch between Belladère and Cange that they will travel to meet each other every couple weeks.
PIH Note: Enormous thanks to our partners at Regis College,
Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Boston Medical Center and all the individuals
who worked on translation, transportation and other logistics. This was
an amazing collaboration and shows how well institutions can work together
to improve patients’ lives
in far-away places.
[posted June 2008]
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