Showing posts with label diarrhea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diarrhea. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Oral Rehydration Solution

So, for lunch last Tuesday I went down to the street to a food vendor lady and ate a bowl of kay kay (kind of like couscous made from manioc) and all was well for a couple hours. Then I started to get a stomachache, and felt pretty bad that night, and felt even worse the next day. It wasn't as bad as whatever I had a few weeks ago, but it was exhausting and unpleasant nonetheless, and I wasn't able to get much work done.

As luck would have it, there wasn't much work to do, as most of the office is either out in the field or off on vacation, and I was able to spend most of the rest of the week lying down and sipping ORS and reading over things.

Salt + Sugar + Potassium = Magic

ORS (also known as ORT, Oral Rehydration Therapy) replaces the electrolytes that you lose when you can't keep anything in your stomach for very long. This helps your body to actually absorb water so you don't get dangerously (or just uncomfortably) dehydrated over the course of an illness. It  is quite literally a lifesaver for little kids and babies and other people who are particularly vulnerable to diarrheal diseases. People can be trained to make ORS themselves (since it's pretty much just salt and sugar) and health-focused NGOs like PSI market affordable, appealingly packaged ORS here in Guinea and work to spread the message that treating diarrhea is quite do-able and can prevent a minor case of "running stomach" from progressing to something more lethal.

Happily, when Peace Corps gave me my med kit it was stocked with a generous supply of ORS. Even so, I'm not going to take any chances with street food for awhile. I have my kitchen all set up now (I even started to decorate the walls!) and, having finally read In Defense of Food* over the weekend, am determined to use it.

*I liked In Defense of Food. Though nothing in it was particularly surprising - most Americans have an extremely unfortunate relationship with eating, highly processed foods are terrible for everything, industrial agriculture and meat production are upsetting - the stuff Pollan writes about was good for me to think about. His suggestions for eating inspired me to resolve to trek over to the market at least a couple times a week to get fresh vegetables, and also left me slightly dismayed at how impossible some of his recommendations - Don't eat alone, Enjoy a glass of wine with dinner, Eat whole grains, Buy a freezer - are for me here. On a related note I really, really liked Pollan's recent piece in the New York Times Magazine, all about our microbiomes and why the bacteria in our gut is important. 

Friday, June 21, 2013

Landscapes and Stomachaches

I just got back to Conakry after a few days at the Peace Corps training center, located about an hour (without traffic, so two hours) from the capital. Despite the smoke-belching trucks, ridiculous traffic, and gaping potholes, it was a nice drive out to the training center. The countryside is beautiful - verdantly dense foliage, lots of houses roofed with red sheet metal, little kids everywhere, very tall hills jutting up into the sky, the waterways on the edge of the mangroves reflecting the sky. Just like you picture it when you think of visiting Africa.

Batik wall hanging in the office

I roomed with some (extremely cool & welcoming) Education PCVs who are there preparing for the upcoming arrival of a new group of trainees. I got a few sessions of French practice, a crash course in Maninka, and a session on the history of Guinea and its regions, which was interesting.

All was well until last night, right around midnight, I got sick. Suddenly and intensely sick. Just like you picture it when you think of visiting Africa… Thankfully, whatever it was seems to have passed, and today I’m much better, a little exhausted but no worse for wear, and am very much looking forward to taking a hot shower and sleeping in a cool room.