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"I've seen four newborn babies die from neonatal tetanus because their umbilical cords were cut with dirty tools and because their mothers had no access to the tetanus vaccine. I have seen babies whose ears, noses or toes have been nibbled off by rats. I have cared for severely burned children who scream in agony as their dressings are changed without the luxury of any pain medication whatsoever," she recalled. ypjzdqr0811 Pediatric burn injuries are prevalent on the island - with a lack of electricity, dangerous open fires and hot cauldrons for food preparation, as well as kerosene lanterns and candles inside the small homes are the norm. Canadian Kyra Abbott, BScN, RN, grew up in the small town of Perth, Ontario, and now makes her home in the city of Ottawa. And while this Magna CumLaude graduate of the University of Ottawa could have opted for any number of relatively comfortable nursing opportunities, she chose to spend more than 4 years living and working in Haiti. Kyra Abbott, BSN, RN, with coworkers at Saint Damien Pediatric Hospital, Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
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heat nor the overcrowding," she recounted. shanghai escort girls "It is not for the infections that come along with the work - I have had scabies twice, malaria once, giardia countless times, and ciguatera poisoning..." Upon further reflection, Kyra said, "I think what keeps me going back is the mere fact that I've seen the misery of these people... the struggle they must fight to merely stay alive, the practical problems of existence and the hardships they go through each and every day without exception. I see their pain. I feel their pain. I am compelled to react," she said, personally summarizing her call to nursing.
"I've seen four newborn babies die from neonatal tetanus because their umbilical cords were cut with dirty tools and because their mothers had no access to the tetanus vaccine. I have seen babies whose ears, noses or toes have been nibbled off by rats. I have cared for severely burned children who scream in agony as their dressings are changed without the luxury of any pain medication whatsoever," she recalled. ypjzdqr0811 Pediatric burn injuries are prevalent on the island - with a lack of electricity, dangerous open fires and hot cauldrons for food preparation, as well as kerosene lanterns and candles inside the small homes are the norm. Canadian Kyra Abbott, BScN, RN, grew up in the small town of Perth, Ontario, and now makes her home in the city of Ottawa. And while this Magna CumLaude graduate of the University of Ottawa could have opted for any number of relatively comfortable nursing opportunities, she chose to spend more than 4 years living and working in Haiti. Kyra Abbott, BSN, RN, with coworkers at Saint Damien Pediatric Hospital, Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
That's where her nursing education - the non-degreed, eye-opening variety - expanded into that realm of compassion that cannot be taught in textbooks. Why would an RN go to an under-resourced shanghai escort girls country like Haiti to practice a profession already rife with physical and mental challenges? "Well, it certainly wasn't for the cold showers and lack of escort water in general," explained Kyra speaking before a church congregation. "It wasn't for the large cockroaches or spiders in my bedroom and sometimes in my bed... or for the enormous rats that come out at night. It wasn't for the staple diet of rice and beans or for the stench and filthiness of the streets. It was not for the toxic air pollution from old diesel vehicles, nor for the lack of electricity or the insecurity and corruption.
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