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Print magazine

ER Navigators Bring God's Love to Slavic Community

By Laurel Rogers, August 10, 2019

The Portland, Ore., metropolitan area is home to one of the largest Slavic communities in the country, yet this community has been underserved by health care in the area. Thanks to Adventist Health Portland, that’s changing.

Russian-speaking staff are available in several Adventist Health clinics. Recently, the emergency room added Russian-speaking navigators to ensure Slavic patients get understandable and culturally sensitive care and information. This program recently saved the life and limb of two Russian-speaking patients who were initially very reluctant to accept treatment.

These two patients arrived in the ER only minutes apart. One had a severe headache and needed a blood transfusion. He refused treatment because he did not want “another person’s blood” in his system, which he did not believe would help. As the patient was fading away, he shared about his life with the Russian navigator, Irina Klimenko.

Sara Larry, a doctor on duty at the time, gave Klimenko a quick primer on blood transfusions. Then Klimenko got on the phone with the patient’s wife, explained the critical need for a blood transfusion and gave the couple privacy to discuss their options.

When the patient and his wife finished talking, there was no more resistance. The man accepted the needed treatment and was able to be transferred to Oregon Health and Science University hospital for advanced care.

Meanwhile another Russian-speaking patient was refusing treatment for a seriously infected leg wound. She hadn’t taken the antibiotics her doctor had prescribed, and her infection had gotten much worse. Now in the ER, the patient was refusing a needed X-ray and rejecting IV pain-relieving medication because she believed they were bad for her health.

Phlebotomist Emmanuel Giamani, who speaks Russian, prayed with the patient and listened about how the patient didn’t trust hospitals. Giamani used the opportunity to help the patient trust Irina by explaining how the navigator’s key role was to advocate what’s best for the patient — not the doctor or the hospital.

By the time Klimenko was free to speak with the woman, the patient was ready to engage and agreed to both the X-ray and hospital admission. She still wanted to avoid the pain-relief medication, and her medical team respected her wishes.

The combined efforts of the ER team to provide care that uniquely met the needs of these Russian-speaking patients is just another example of how committed Adventist Health Portland is to living God’s love by inspiring health, wholeness and hope throughout a diverse community.

Image

Irina Klimenko helps Russian speaking patients and English speaking healthcare providers understand each others’ words, and cultures, to achieve the best possible experience and health outcomes at Adventist Health Portland.

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Featured in: September/October 2019

Author

Laurel Rogers

Adventist Health Portland writer and content strategist
Section
Adventist Health
Tags
Health, Adventist Health, Slavic

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The Gleaner is a gathering place with news and inspiration for Seventh-day Adventist members and friends throughout the northwestern United States. It is an important communication channel for the North Pacific Union Conference — the regional church support headquarters for Adventist ministry throughout Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington. The original printed Gleaner was first published in 1906, and has since expanded to a full magazine with a monthly circulation of more than 40,000. Through its extended online and social media presence, the Gleaner also provides valuable content and connections for interested individuals around the world.

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