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Kiki Always is a
health assistant extraordinaire
.
Marcia Raymond went into labor at 4 a.m. one morning at her home on
Onoun Island. She was having serious
difficulties, and health assistant Kiki
Always soon realized that Marcia would need extra medical attention if
she and her baby were to survive.
The problem was that
Kiki had few medical supplies in his tiny dispensary, not even the
I.V. solution that this situation was sure
to require. Having no radio to contact nearby islands, Kiki instead
climbed into his small skiff and began the 40-mile trip northeast to
the nearest island, called Magur.
At 2 p.m., Kiki arrived at
Magur, only to learn that they had no I.V. solution either. So he got
back into his boat and continued on to the next island.
Several hours later, Kiki
at last obtained four bags of 5% dextrose solution from Onno Island.
By this time however Kiki did not have enough fuel for the return
trip. He considered giving up, but the thought that Marcia might die
without his help prompted him to get back in his boat once again.
Providentially, a few miles out he met a deacon from Onno going the
other way, and he gave Kiki enough fuel to get home.
Finally, around 9 p.m.,
Kiki hit the beach at Onoun. He had braved stormy weather, towering
waves and pounding rain, but he was home. Still wet from the trip,
Kiki went to check on his patient. Too late. Marcia had already given
birth. She was okay, but her baby had died. Or so he was told…
"I took my stethoscope and
listened to his heart," Kiki said. "I heard two weak heartbeats, so I
started mouth to mouth resuscitation and CPR." Kiki continued his
efforts to save the baby until early morning, when the baby's heart
began beating regularly.

That was in 1989. In 1995,
the Canvasback medical ship visited Onoun Island where they met Kiki
for the first time. He brought out to the ship a man who had cut his
hand with a machete. "Doc, doc, do you have any sutures?" he
asked. Dr. Mike Van Valkenberg got out some sutures and started to sew
up the wound, then stopped and asked Kiki if he would like to do the
job. Kiki did a perfect job of suturing that man's hand. Leaving the
boat he said, "If only I had sutures, I could do so much good!"
Kiki met the Canvasback team again when they came ashore. That’s when
they learned his story, and they met Tarsisia Raymond, the baby whose
life Kiki had saved. Only Tarsisia was now a healthy, happy
six-year-old boy.

Kiki with
Tarsisia Raymond, whose
life he saved on the day he was born.
"Doc,"
Kiki said to them, "I have many children with ear infections. Can
you look at them?" Kiki brought child after child and correctly
told the doctors his diagnosis. "Kiki, how do you know these
children have ear infections?" they asked him.
"I see them pulling their ears; I see pus flowing from
their ears; I smell the ears," he said. "Oh, if only I had an
otoscope, I could do so much good!"
Of course, the team gave
Kiki an otoscope and plenty of sutures. But those weren't the only
things that Kiki needed. The team also visited his dispensary and saw
the bare cupboards where medical supplies should have been to care for
his people.

". . . t he
cupboards were bare. . ." Kiki's medical
supply closet is practically empty.
Later that year,
Canvasback sent 17 pallets of donated medical supplies and
pharmaceuticals to the outer islands of Chuuk to help Kiki and other
island health assistants like him.
"Kiki Always is
remarkable--one of the best health assistants we've ever worked with,"
Canvasback co-founder Jamie Spence said at the time. "His skill and
dedication are matched only by his ingenuity in dealing with a
tremendous lack of resources."

We lost track of Kiki
until May of 2003, when a Canvasback eye team served in the Chuuk
Hospital. Mission co-founder Jacque Spence was working in the eye
clinic when the door opened and a nurse said, "Jacque, someone
would like to see you." It took her a few seconds to recognize
Kiki when he walked through the door.
Kiki had motored his
outboard canoe all the way from Namonuito Atoll through a big tropical
storm. He had passengers in the boat and a load to taro to bring to
relatives. They motored 80 miles through the storm before running out
of gasoline. Thankfully, another boat came along and gave them a can
of gas. But the waves were so huge that they threw the bags of taro
overboard to lighten the load.
Kiki came to the
hospital because he needed medicine. On his island, many people had
the flu and he didn't have antibiotics or even Tylenol to give them.
Kiki had heard that Canvasback was working at the hospital and he came
to see Jacque. He told her that he is still using some of the medical
supplies that Canvasback sent back in 1995. Then he said to her, "Oh,
if only I had antibiotics and Tylenol, I could do so much good!"
Jacque continues:
"Kiki told me that there is a new, unpaved coral airstrip on
Namonuito. So when he asked me ‘Can you
please send a team to help my people?’ you can guess what I told
him. ‘Kiki, I'm
sure that the Canvasback family of supporters will help us find a
way.’
"The Lord is definitely
calling us to these forgotten islands."

Jacque Spence
has a reunion with Kiki
during her May mission to Chuuk.
When the team departed
Chuuk, Jacque left a package of medical supplies at the hospital for
Kiki to take back to his island.
To her surprise and delight, a month after
she returned home, she received a handwritten letter from Kiki. It
said, in part:
"Thanks a lot for the pack
you gave to the chief nurse. As I came back home there were many
people suffered from pink eye. I was thinking of you and say to myself
that, ‘Oh Jacque knew that the people of Onoun will be suffered from
pink eye it is the reason she put [in] a lot of these ointment.’
Praise God, he always work in you.
"I had told the people on
Onoun that I met you at the hospital and those meds were from you, and
they said ‘Oh, lucky are we that she always remember us and help with
those med.’ They asked lots of question and thought you would not come
to Chuuk. They ask if you could come on the Canvasback boat. They
still remember the good work you had with us."
Note: Canvasback is now collecting medicines to
send to Kiki for his island.
See how you can help.
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