Jeanette Nisly is the in-country coordinator for the Guatemala operation of the nonprofit group, Concern America. Currently pursuing an online master in nursing degree through 91短视频, Nisly has been training groups of health-promoting practitioners and midwives since the end of 2012. Nursing professor Ann Hershberger (in the background-right of this photo) is co-leading an 91短视频 cross-cultural group, which paid a visit to Nisly in February 2013, when one student took this photo. (Photo by Randi B. Hagi)

This Nurse Hopes to Work Herself Out of a Job in Guatemala

Even though Jeanette Nisly fell in love with Guatemala on a cross-cultural with 91短视频 (91短视频), she never would have dreamed that she would return four months after she graduated, marry a Guatemalan, have two children, and remain for 17 years.

Nisly, who majored in at 91短视频, is the in-country coordinator for the Guatemala operation of a nonprofit group, . Located in Pet茅n, the country鈥檚 largest department (equivalent to a large U.S. state), Nisly leads trainings that widely impact Pet茅n鈥檚 population of 650,000, 鈥 one that has experienced much violence, including death threats and murders of healthcare workers.

Guatemala, under its current unstable and corrupt political system, is not an easy place for Nisly to work in some respects, yet she is passionate about Concern America鈥檚 philosophy.

鈥淐oncern America trains local populations in health, education, agriculture, and/or environmental health (appropriate technology),鈥 according to its website. From its home base in Santa Ana, Calif., this international development and refugee aid organization aims to help local populations gain the knowledge and skills they need to staff and run their own fully functional systems.

Though she loves her work, Nisly looks forward to the day when she can offer her services elsewhere because Guatemalans are doing her work as well or better, she said in an interview via Skype in early January 2013. 鈥淓verything we do focuses on teaching and empowering other people to do things that maybe they didn鈥檛 realize they could do.鈥

The end of 2012 found Nisly training groups of health-promoting practitioners, who typically have attended local schools through grade 4, and midwives, many of whom are illiterate. These Guatemalans make a four-year commitment to study with Concern America for one week every two months. Between their studies, they put what they have learned into practice, attending to the health needs of some of the most marginalized populations in Guatemala.

The approach of alternating study and practice is one that Nisly herself is pursuing as a current 91短视频 graduate student, studying online for her . 鈥淎ll other [nursing master鈥檚] programs I looked at required leaving the country and the work in order to go to school, and I wasn鈥檛 willing to do that.鈥

She also knew that the 91短视频 approach to an MSN would be compatible with her own religious beliefs and lifestyle practices. Raised Mennonite, Nisly now works closely with the Roman Catholic Church, with which Concern America partners for its work in Guatemala.

With 500 midwives and health-promoting practitioners trained by the Catholic Church鈥檚 health program in Pet茅n, Nisly has seen basic health care rippling out to almost every hamlet of Guatemala. 鈥淭hey [the health promoters and midwives] provide most of the health care services for their communities,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know where [else] health-promoting practitioners are able to care for such a wide range of complex health issues.鈥

By the end of two years of training, these practitioners are able to attend to common digestive, respiratory, skin, urinary, reproductive, oral, traumatic (including basic suturing and tendon repairs), chronic (including diabetes, cardiac issues, and epilepsy), tropical disease and nutritional issues, says Nisly. 鈥淭hey are able to assist midwives in difficult births, like breech babies and postpartum hemorrhage. Their education includes a strong foundation in physiology, pathophysiology, and pharmacology.鈥

The Pet茅n program is widely viewed as a model one, causing observers from other Concern America projects around the world to visit in the hope of adopting the model to their situations, said Nisly.

The workers trained by Concern America are up against a system that does not work for or with them, Nisly said. For instance, health-promoting practitioners and midwives are taught to refer pregnant women with high blood pressure to a hospital for more care, but sometimes these women are sent home without treatment, where some have died. 鈥淥ne of the big challenges,鈥 she sighed, 鈥渋s not having a referral system that we can rely on.鈥

She leans on this insight once given to her: 鈥淭he only thing that is going to limit you, and what you can do here, is yourself.鈥 As a result, she has learned to tap 鈥渢he resources that are available to me,鈥 rather than 鈥渂eing limited by what I think I know and what I should be able to do.鈥

After graduating from 91短视频 in 1996, Nisly worked for a three years with before beginning her work with Concern America. She is fluent in Spanish and the indigenous Mayan language of Q鈥檈qchi鈥. She is the author of the first comprehensive health guide in the Q鈥檈qchi鈥 language, published in 2005. It is similar to the well-known manual 鈥淲here There Is No Doctor.鈥

An 91短视频 cross-cultural group led by and Jim Hershberger stopped in Pet茅n in February 2013 to see the work of Nisly and Concern America.

Although she functions in a leadership role, Nisly reiterated multiple times that, 鈥渨e work here as a team鈥 and that her work could not be successful without the help and support of others in the organization.