Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children

by Yayasan Rumah Rachel ('Rachel House')
Play Video
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children
Help bring Palliative Care to Indonesia's children

Project Report | May 10, 2018
ABC TV Australia spends a day with Rachel House's nurse Ana

By Barry Dunning | Communications

The Australian Broadcasting Corporation's news team in Indonesia recently spent a day with nurse Ana to see first hand the work of Rachel House - providing palliative care to children living with serious and terminal illnesses in some of the most marginalised communities in Jakarta.

It's a beautifully told story, which gets to the heart of the work of palliative care nurses, providing not just medical but emotional and social support to seriously-ill children and their families. You can watch the TV news clip here - Helping to ease the pain of Jakarta's terminally ill children - or read the full story below.

It's thanks to support from donors like you that Ana and the rest of our nursing team are able to continue helping seriously-ill children in need. Children living with serious illnesses like cancer and HIV AIDS from some of the poorest communities in Jakarta. So thank you for your support.

Thanks,

Barry

 

 

Australian-trained nurse helping to ease the pain of Jakarta’s terminally ill children

Jakarta nurse Ana walks beside the black water of one of the city’s many canals and navigates through a labyrinth of narrow lanes.

She stops outside a small white-walled home with laundry hanging above the door, and is met warmly by the young mother who lives there who welcomes her into the dark interior.

She’s there to help a terminally ill two-year-old girl.

Raihana has cancer of the retina. She’s tiny — and seems even smaller with her left eye masked by a large white bandage.

Raihana has just had chemotherapy but the cancer has spread to her brain and there’s nothing more surgeons can do.

This is when Ana’s work begins.

She’s an Australian-trained palliative care nurse whose job is to make this awful time easier for Raihana and her family.

PHOTO: Ana says she copes with her “heartbreaking” job by talking to friends. (ABC News: Phil Hemingway )

Ana plays and sings with the little girl, who knows the nurse from three previous visits.

Raihana smiles and laughs and lets Ana examine her.

It’s an easy medical check-up for the toddler — a painless moment that could have otherwise been so difficult.

Normally Raihana’s medical visits would involve an uncomfortable trip through Jakarta traffic to a medical clinic and a long wait to see a health worker for a few short minutes.

“By visiting the house I could spend one hour talking to the family, apart from doing the physical assessment,” Ana says.

PHOTO: Raihana’s cancer has spread to her brain. (ABC News: Phil Hemingway)

“They can share everything they would like to share. Their feelings, their hopes and also about the child’s condition. If they go to hospital [they] probably won’t get that opportunity.”

Today Raihana’s doing well. There’s no infection and the last round of chemotherapy has not given her diarrhoea.

This kind of home visit is extremely rare in Indonesia.

Ana works for a Jakarta-based charity, Rachel House, that says there are about 700,000 children in Indonesian who need palliative care — but less than 1 per cent receive it.

“Our patients can feel more comfortable in their family home,” Rachel House’s Barry Dunning, who is in Indonesia as part of an Australian government volunteering program, says.

“It’s a huge challenge getting to hospitals. Indonesia does have a form of universal health care but accessing those services can be very difficult, particularly if [a family] come from a very low-income background.”

Raihana’s mother, Fatma, says Ana’s visit is valuable to the family.

“It’s very helpful and I know more now that I didn’t understand before,” she said.

PHOTO: Ana treats Raihana, who has cancer in her retina. (ABC News: Phil Hemingway)

This work takes a toll on Ana, who spends every day working with dying children.

“You know that at some point the child might die, so you have to prepare the family for that time, and you have to ensure their wishes, their hopes can be fulfilled before the child dies,” she says.

“To be honest this is a heartbreaking job actually.

“So very often I would be very sad every time I come home from a patient’s house. But this time because Raihana’s condition is very good, it’s not really sad.

Ana says she talks to friends and people close to her to manage stress.

“Whenever I feel so frustrated about the child’s condition, I will do self care, like listening to music. I do everything that makes me feel better,” she said.

Links:

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook

Mar 22, 2018
Seeing life through the eyes of CNPC volunteers

By Alfiano Sutianto | Volunteer

Jan 4, 2018
A Year of Many Blessings

By Kartika Kurniasari | Chief Executive Officer

About Project Reports

Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.

If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can receive an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.

Sign up for updates

Organization Information

Yayasan Rumah Rachel ('Rachel House')

Location: Jakarta, DKI Jakarta - Indonesia
Website:
Project Leader:
Lynna Chandra
West Jakarta , Indonesia
$190,127 raised of $250,000 goal
 
1,172 donations
$59,873 to go
Donate Now
lock
Donating through GlobalGiving is safe, secure, and easy with many payment options to choose from. View other ways to donate

Yayasan Rumah Rachel ('Rachel House') has earned this recognition on GlobalGiving:

Help raise money!

Support this important cause by creating a personalized fundraising page.

Start a Fundraiser

Learn more about GlobalGiving

Teenage Science Students
Vetting +
Due Diligence

Snorkeler
Our
Impact

Woman Holding a Gift Card
Give
Gift Cards

Young Girl with a Bicycle
GlobalGiving
Guarantee

Get incredible stories, promotions, and matching offers in your inbox

WARNING: Javascript is currently disabled or is not available in your browser. GlobalGiving makes extensive use of Javascript and will not function properly with Javascript disabled. Please enable Javascript and refresh this page.