We finally had the chance to do some community visits after many days of teaching and prep work. We had 3 patients planned, one specifically by the staff because this person was a nurse who was ill with GBS (query, maybe polio) and has not had rehab since discharge. The other 2 were out in the villages about 1.5 hours walk away and we were following up on their status since the September team had paid them a visit last time.
Amrita was the first client seen since she was very close to TMH, she lived in a very inaccessible place

even though she was maybe 5 minutes away. Her house was offroad and the only way to get there was a very narrow rocky ridge which would have been impossible in her case. She had been bedridden for about 6 months and exhibited a lot of muscle wasting (partly due to her disease), and learned non-use. We worked on basic bed mobility and compensatory strategies on moving her legs since her hands were very weak

and on sitting trunk balance. We also attempted standing for weightbearing and taught her and her husband on muscle strengthening and stretching. I will try to get back there after my trip into Pokhara to follow up.

After Amrita, we had to rush and took the jeep to visit the other patients. Saraswoti was a walk down the valley and when we arrived at her house, she was happily making baskets and small brooms that she was planning to sell later. She was sitting on the lovely cushions that September team had provided and showed us that she knew all about pressure relief and management.

She had good skin integrity and mobilized well in the space she was in. Her wish was to be able to mobilize a bit more independently on the porch and around her house and we brainstormed and thought maybe we could build a platform with wheels that she could push around with her hands or with sticks. We also left behind a Thermarest which she could use on her bed (she was sleeping on a hard plank) or when she wanted to lie out on the porch.

We then visited Tika, who was not feeling well and whose husband reported signs of a seizure previously. She also seemed slightly confused and with slurred speech. She had not been ambulating because she had not been feeling well over the last days. We saw her ambulation and decided that maybe a bandage wrap to stabilize the ankle would help her feel more stable with ambulation and it did seem to work. However, we were more concerned with her medical status and advised her husband

, who is 91 years old and the primary caregiver to Tika

, to send her to TMH as soon as possible for follow up. We were able to arrange for funding and hopefully transportation there and back as well since they are in a very inaccessible place. It's only when you do these visits do you realize how difficult it is to get proper and timely care in these hilly regions.
We went on a walk with Ganesh, the guesthouse owner today and we had hours at a time when we were not on a main road to get to a bus or car. Many of them would have to be carried to help and risk further injury.

Overall, the community visits were very enlightening and we all wished we could have had more time to see more patients.