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Nurse lends helping hand in Somaliland

ISSUE 266
Front Page
Index
Headlines

President Rayale To Pardon Haatuf Journalists If Found Guilty

Demonstration In Oslo For The Recognition Of The Republic Of Somaliland

US approach on Somalia is not one to emulate

Heavy Fighting Breaks Out In Mogadishu, 3 Dead

Somalia: An Oily Cliché

US Used Ethiopia Bases To Attack Al-Qaeda In Somalia

Top Ugandan Defense Officials In Somalia For Peacekeeping Deployment Talks

Amnesty International: Journalists Charged With Offending The Honor Or Prestige Of The Head Of State

A Warning to Africa: The New U.S. Imperial Grand Strategy

Somali president says reconciliation meeting soon as step towards peace, democracy

Regional Affairs

Clan Violence Kills 43 In Southern Ethiopia

Burundi To Send 1,700 Troops To Somalia

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Heavy U.S. collusion with Ethiopia in Somalia invasion

U.S. Congress Approves Record Support For The Global Fund

Black Editor In Detroit On Somalia And Sudan

THE FIGHT FOR MOGADISHU:
The Rise and Fall of the Islamic Courts

Somalia for Somalis - "Leave Us Alone"

"Theater Iran Near Term" (TIRANNT)

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Oil in Darfur? Special Ops in Somalia?

The man with the mysterious horn

We are asking the wrong questions of Iran

Are African peacekeepers in Somalia to serve Western Oil and Gas interests?

''Somalia Reverts to Political Fragmentation''

Putin and the Geopolitics of the New Cold War: Or, what happens when Cowboys don’t shoot straight like they used to…

Ethiopia: Starbucks' Effort to Silence the "Big Noise"

Food for thought

Opinions

The House Of Representatives Have Done it Right

Somaliland Journalists Urged To Unite Against Rayale Atrocious Acts

The Satanic Sentences

Somaliland Auditor General Stated That No Foreign Currency Was Missing In 2005

Why Are We Failing To Unite To Get Our Country Recognized

Can Female Circumcision Be The Solution Of AIDS?

LET US VENERATE OUR LITERARY LIBRARIES


By Yang Yi-chung

16 Feb, 2007 - While most people were getting ready to celebrate the Lunar New Year this week, Chen Tzu-fei, a lecturer at the Tzu Chi College of Technology's Department of Nursing, was packing medical supplies and getting ready to return to Somaliland, a little-known and unrecognized state that declared its independence from war-ravaged Somalia in 1991.

Chen, 38, holds a masters in nursing from Adelaide University in Australia and has worked as a volunteer in the Taiwan Root Medical Peace Corps' international aid program for the last five years.

Taiwan Root is an NGO that sends Taiwanese medical professionals to aboriginal communities domestically and to 15 countries around the world to provide health care to those in need.

But before Chen left for Somaliland, she faced another challenge -- her own failing health. Diagnosed with autoimmune disease in the middle of last year, she was forced to take a six month unpaid leave of absence from Tzu Chi to try to recover. But when Taiwan Root asked her to go to Somaliland, she couldn't turn down the opportunity to help build a modern system of nursing in the impoverished, unrecognized state.

On her first trip to Somaliland, Chen had to fly for two days, with stops in Hong Kong, Abu Dhabi and Ethiopia before finally reaching the capital Hargeisa. Chen said she originally planned to rebuild Somaliland's nursing education system from the bottom up, but while she was still evaluating the system, political instability forced the officials who had asked Taiwan Root for help to resign en masse.

Chen decided to stay on anyway.

"Root Taiwan promised the people of Somaliland, not the government that it would provide medical aid," she said.

Chen said she discovered that nursing care in Somaliland's hospitals was facing crippling short-term needs. She decided to begin by helping Hargeisa Group Hospital set up a nursing staff trained in the basics of modern hospital management.

Starting almost completely from scratch, she set up a filing system for patient records, she said.

She and the nursing staff had to build the filing cabinets themselves by hand. Other basic management practices she put in place included numbering patient beds, scheduling nursing rounds and tracking hospital equipment inventory, she said.

Chen also found time to teach at a local nursing school. Students took what they learned in her class straight back to the hospital.

After six months of intensive work, Chen's health was beginning to deteriorate and the political situation was becoming unstable.

She returned to Taiwan early last year to rest for a few weeks, but said she soon decided that she had to go back to finish the work she had begun.

After extending her leave of absence from the Tzu Chi College of Technology, Chen returned to Somaliland without any outside funding or support to continue her work.

Chen will not be home on the Lunar New Year this year, but said she had discovered a new way to celebrate the spirit of the holiday by helping others on the distant Horn of Africa.

Source: The Taipei Times


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