Don Stephens and wife Deyon
Global Mercy at dock
Mercy Ships
Don pioneered The Mercy Minute, a daily radio broadcast on 840+ stations for decades. He handed over the programme to Mercy Ships spokeswoman Raeanne Newquist while Stephens wrote 3 books: Trial by Trial (1985), Mandate for Mercy (1995) and Ships of Mercy (2005). Then he won an International Humanitarian of the Year Award.
Surgical staff
Mercy Ships focused public attention on providing surgery, and strengthening the healthcare infrastructure in the nations served. Thanks to family support, children and adults suffering from painful, disfiguring and ?preventable diseases were able to find the healing they so desperately needed.
Screening day used to be the biggest day of the year for Mercy Ships. Sometimes 4,000 children and adults were waiting, hoping to be accepted onboard as patients. Recent steps in the building process included 16 months of detailed design work, construction of new machinery systems, installation of new medical equipment, and outfitting the hospital and recovery units. The vision to transform lives by bringing healing has guided Mercy Ships for decades. But the need is ongoing and growing.
Potential patients waiting on screening day in Guinea, 2012
Tertius - jpg
This newest ship is the world’s largest purpose-built hospital ship, capable of more than doubling its surgical and training capacity. Over the 50 year expected lifespan, 150,000+ lives should be saved through surgery alone. Recent steps in the building process included 16 months of detailed design work, construction of new machinery systems, installation of new medical equipment, and outfitting the hospital and recovery units. The vision to transform lives by bringing healing has guided Mercy Ships since 1978. But the need is growing.
Previously Global Mercy spent Feb-July 2023 in Dakar, helping patients from both Senegal and The Gambia from the one port. In 2023, the Africa Mercy underwent an extensive refit in Durban Sth Africa, to prepare her for years of future service. Its hospital deck will carry out a wide range of surgeries eg cataract removal, plastic surgery to address tumour removal and debilitating burn contractures, cleft lip-palate repair, orthopaedics and obstetric fistula repair . This expansion and growth will allow surgeries for those in need; more health professionals trained and mentored; more local lives changed.
Africa Mercy’s hospital on 2 decks contains: supply services; 6 operating theatres; 102 acute care beds; 7 ICU beds; and 90 self-care beds. All pre-operative and post-operative work can be done aboard rather than ashore on busy ports. The new ship will more than double the annual medical capacity and is designed to carry out a wide range of surgeries.
Africa Mercy’s hospital on 2 decks contains: supply services; 6 operating theatres; 102 acute care beds; 7 ICU beds; and 90 self-care beds. All pre-operative and post-operative work can be done aboard rather than ashore on busy ports. The new ship will more than double the annual medical capacity and is designed to carry out a wide range of surgeries.
recovery ward
In addition to the surgeries performed on board, ship-based teams serve in local villages providing a wide array of health facilities which include: dental and medical clinics, community health education and agricultural training. Plus there are conference rooms aboard for lectures and training.
It is estimated that 70% of the global population lacks access to safe surgical care, a 1/3 of them children. This burden is most heavily felt in sub-Saharan Africa, where nearly half are under 18. A 2021 study in four sub-Saharan African nations found that 60-90% of patients in need of surgery would face awful outcomes if there was no operation. Eg Senegalese parents who could not afford surgery to correct their children’s bowed legs. In any case, those parents could not be able find a surgeon near home to operate.
But in 2023, those parents received free surgery aboard the Global Mercy. The operation that finally straightened the children’s legs was the result of a partnership between Mercy Ships and Senegal, powered by the passion of African leaders, healthcare professionals from 71 countries, and 1,382 very skilled volunteers.
She is waiting for the surgeons to deal with a muscle contracture,
especially when her knee hyperextended backwards.
Two Mercy Ships and the host nations made an even greater effort in 2024 when double the number of volunteers joined. Global Mercy is now serving in Sierra Leone until 2025, and the newly renovated Africa Mercy is in Madagascar.
Enjoy reading the book Ships of Mercy, written by Mercy founder Don Stephens. It tells about the remarkable hospital ships that dramatically changes the lives of millions of people in the most impoverished and diseased corners of the world. Or see the excellent Surgery Ship tv series (2017)
I have heard of Mercy Ships having watched the show Surgery Ship, they do an amazing job helping those in need. I haven't heard of Don Stephens though this was another great post
ReplyDeleteJo-Anne
DeleteI too had seen the entire TV series Surgery Ship, but had never read or heard any history of the enormous project. Don Stephens and his wife Deyon must have been rich of course, but also totally dedicated to their view of international Christian charity. What a stunning and long lasting mission!
This is such a good story about hospital ship. Humanity can have a good side.
ReplyDeleteroentare
DeleteI have become more and more depressed about humanity in this decade... every day brings new wars, famines, execution of women, deaths by floods, fascism and fires :( But occasionally we hear a truly stunning contribution to human health and happiness. Thank you Mercy Ships for restoring at least a little faith in humanity.
Have heard of the Mercy Ship.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful ship to have, a floating hospital and used in areas most needed. Great experience for the Doctors and RN's as well, most rewarding.
Margaret
DeleteThe ships are certainly used in areas where the care is most desperately needed.
My main concern is what happens to the patients who have to be turned away by the screening process. Are they referred somewhere else in the same city? or do they just go home?
What a marvellous story and I had not heard of it the charity. The street artist Banksy funds a ship in the Mediterranean to rescue potential immigrants in trouble as they try to get from Africa to Europe.
ReplyDeleteAfter I was fascinated by Floating University and by Mercy Ships, it will be very interesting to read what you write about Banksy's ship to rescue drowning refugees.
DeleteI know Don Stephens called his mission a Christian charity, but I think it is much more significant than our normal idea of charity eg giving money to the RSPCA to save hungry dogs.
These Mercy Ships are a wonderful thing and I hope they manage to get enough funding. One of my daughters donates to Doctors Without Borders and I used to donate too when I was working, but can't afford to now.
ReplyDeleteRiver
DeleteDoctors Without Borders is another essential service, absolutely. When my husband was doing his residency in a Tel Aviv hospital, they send a few of the young men to El Arish hospital in Egypt because the locals had little medical care. He surprised himself by learning a great deal about medicine during his semester there!
I hope there are Australian volunteer doctors, nurses, dentists and others on the ships. Lots of nurses would like to work for a year or two overseas.
ReplyDeleteSharon,
Deleteit is a great idea. Volunteers do critically important work for the patients AND learn and mature themselves.
But note that volunteers with Mercy Ships are responsible for paying all costs associated with their service: travel expenses, passports, immunisations and insurance. Only room and board are provided for free while serving.
These hospital ships are bringing relief to people suffering from conditions which would be dealt with almost as a matter of course in the affluent western world. It's not glamorous work, but essential.
ReplyDeletejabblog
DeleteI agree with you re many of the conditions that would have been treated in the western world earlier and more effectively. Or we don't/rarely see those conditions at all eg TB, starvation.
But I still worry about facial tumours, cleft lip, cleft palate, club feet, bowed legs etc.
Dear Helen! Thank you, dear, for your lovely stories! Mercy Ships are amazing!
ReplyDeleteIrina
DeleteI hope you can find "Ships of Mercy" written very well by Don Stephens.
I limit each blog post to 1,000 words, while real authors write their stories in great detail.
This is such a valuable and worthwhile thing. Health is so important and is really one thing that does give quality of life to people. I'm going to keep my eye out for this book and add it to my want to read list. Thanks Hels.
ReplyDeleteErika
DeleteCan any of us imagine how it must feel to see our children with a serious disease or a horrid injury, and not be able to help them? We don't think about health when there is no issue, but we would be acutely aware of missing health care when we were desperate.
Thank goodness for Mercy Ships now, and hopefully more fully staffed ships in the future.
What an uplifting account of the wonderful work carried out by these ships.
ReplyDeleteFun60
ReplyDeleteThe entire project has been heroic.. and successful for those patients who were welcomed on board. And I am utterly impressed by the volunteer staff from other countries.
But I wish more local doctors and nurses were being trained as specialists.
Boa tarde de segunda-feira e uma excelente semana. Obrigado pela visita e comentário. Parece um trabalho, maravilhoso e importante, minha querida amiga.
ReplyDeleteLuiz,
DeleteCan you imagine the amount of work it takes? Not just organising the volunteer doctors, nurses, pharmacists, dentists and therapists. But equipment people and sterilisers, cooks, sailors, cleaners, lecturers, financial supervisors etc etc. One of the greatest projects I know of.