Planning my Return
Trip to the Democratic Republic of the Congo
As I sit in
front of my computer, I am keenly aware of the fact that we have eight orphans
assigned to anxiously awaiting families who desperately want to bring their children
home from the Congo.
Three of
these children are in Kinshasa with Pastor Didier and Mama Angelique jumping
through their final hurdles with the American Embassy. They will soon be ready
to travel to the U. S. and will be with their forever families.
Families in
the U. S. are buying plane tickets and awaiting their visas from the DRC
Embassy in Washington, DC. For those of
you who are in this process the information I want to share is probably too
late. You are too far advanced in your
travel plans. You have already made some
of the decision that I was making when I planned my trip to the DRC.
It seems
like it was such a short time ago, that I was praying and planning my trip to
Africa. Now I am beginning to work on my
next trip and dealing with some of the same issues but from a different
perspective.
If you are a
future adoptive parent and are weighed down with a home study and paper work,
you may not be prepared to think with me about some other issues which are
important such as passports, visas, plane tickets and vaccinations.
Vaccinations
(Disclaimer)
I want to
share my history with you in hopes that it might be helpful. I will give my
past history and my present approach after having done much research and asked
many questions.
First,
recognize the fact that you will not get out of the country without a CDC 731
which is an official International Certificate of Vaccination. You will not get into the DRC unless it shows
that you have had a Yellow Fever Vaccination.
This is the minimum requirement to get into the Democratic Republic of
the Congo. According to the Center for Disease Control.
Historical Study
Being a
student of history and valuing the opinions of others who have had a recent
history, I needed to make contact with someone who had been to the Congo.
Some way or
another I was put into contact with a retired policeman—Ray Hill-- who had just
returned from the Congo. He had gone to
our Mission: Compassion for Congo (compassionforcongo.org) with the plans of
spending forty days there. He was going
to update the electrical wiring on the missions’ building. A local doctor ordered him out of the country
ten days later lest he die in Africa.
Ray was so sick that as he described it, “that I could hardly hold my
head up.” He flew home to recuperate and
still has/had some residual problems which his HMO has not been able to resolve. He has not had a reoccurrence for several
weeks so maybe this is now in his past.
Center for Disease Control
I love to
get free information from experts so I visited their website to find that you
can get information about travel to two hundred different countries from the
website. Also they have a 1-800-232-4636
number which put me in contact with a live female voice in Atlanta. After I explained my plans to travel to the
DRC, I was told that I would have to have Yellow Fever vaccine. It was also recommended that I have Hepatitis
A and Hepatitis B; the latter being based on the fact that I might have sexual
activity in the Congo. I decided to not
have the Hep. B shot. The voice also
told me that I would need to have some sort of Malaria prevention. That I listened to heartily since I had read
many missionary stories of suffering and death as people labored in tropical
areas. Plus having studied the history of WWII and how soldiers suffered from
Malaria and had to take quinine. They
said the taste was so terrible that they learned to throw it in a curve to
bypass their taste buds.
Research as to Where
I wanted to
limit my vaccinations as I learned they were terribly expensive, but also did
not want to bring back some lingering disease.
I found that many drug stores and even some grocery stores will
vaccinate travelers. Also those of you
who have an HMO may be able to get free shots.
I am covered by the Veterans Administration so I made an appointment
with my primary care doctor—a delightful lady who is my friend. She strongly advised me to not go and when
she found that I was going anyway, she almost wept. I was rescued from her tears by a ringing
phone.
I ended up
at a travel medicine purveyor in Folsom, CA where I received my meds and much
good advice. I learned that if I did not
have the Hepatitis B vaccination then I should never allow a medical practioner in Africa to break my skin due to the possibility
of a dirty needle. At that time, my
thought were that if I became seriously ill, I would just leave the country as
did Ray Hill. I did not think about the
fact that all planes might be filled up for some time or that I might get
dropped off in Ethiopia for twenty seven hours as I did on the way home. I cannot imagine what it would have been like
to be so sick that I could not hold my head up and then to have had to go
through the process of getting an Ethiopian visa, being taken to a hotel and spending more
than a day in a foreign country. It was
difficult enough for me when I was feeling well. I say all of this to tell you
that I am in the process of reconsidering issues as I plan another trip to the
DRC.
This Time—Good News
I have made
two recent trips to the Veterans Administration Hospital and have learned that
the VA now considers it to be less expensive to prevent travel diseases than to
treat them after the fact. I have gotten
my flu shot and a typhoid shot. I have
had lab work done to determine if I need Hep. B. My lovely lady doctor has told me that I may
have immunity to it. If I need the shots
then they will come in a series of three over a four month time period. All of the shots are at no cost to me.
The VA has a
travel medicine specialist. She warned
me very sharply about the possibility of Malaria in an approximate five minute
lecture. Rattling off information which
I cannot remember she said, If you do not follow instruction and take your
pills and a certain common mosquito bites you with a common form of Malaria “I
guarantee that you will die within 24 hours.”
My Malaria pills have been ordered for me. A thirty day prescription will have only a
very minimal cost.
Before you
leave for the DRC, please see a travel specialist.
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