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CU students spend break in Nicaragua

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CEDARVILLE — While many college students were spending spring break on a beach or relaxing vacation, three nursing students from Cedarville University spent their break seeing more than 2,500 patients in Nicaragua on a medical missions trip with Global Health Outreach (GHO).

After landing in Nicaragua March 3, the team attended meetings and orientation before running a weeklong medical and dental clinic at churches in the small village of Los Gutierrez Norte. They worked alongside OB/GYNs, surgeons, dentists, medical students, a physical therapist, an RN and other nursing students.

Between the medical and dental clinic, the team saw more than 2,500 patients and were able to share the gospel or pray with each one. The Cedarville nursing students were able to work in the triage area with patients taking their vital signs and praying with them before they saw a doctor. The team also ran a children’s program and pastor’s conference for four days of the trip.

Senior nursing student Hannah Cloyd has worked with GHO twice before in El Salvador and jumped at the opportunity to work with the organization in Nicaragua.

“It was a blessing to see how God worked in the lives of the members in the community we were serving,” Cloyd, from Greenville, said. “In the United States, we see people who have health care readily available yet tend to be spiritually sick. In Nicaragua, they were physically lacking so much including food, health care and fresh water, yet were relying on God. It was a blessing to encourage them. They were so thankful to us for being there, but we were the ones so encouraged by them.”

Hayley Venman, sophomore nursing student from Mentor, chose Nicaragua as her first missions trip to experience ministry outside the United States. Her cousin, a medical student at Grace College in Indiana, chose this trip and invited Venman along.

“The Lord used my teammates to show me to be unashamedly brave in sharing the gospel even in everyday life here in the U.S.,” Venman said. “I got to talk to a few doctors about different ways that they incorporate faith into their practices. These conversations have encouraged me to be bold in my daily gospel sharing opportunities. I also saw how powerful prayer is. A few of the people I got to pray with were very moved by my simple prayers. Despite the clunkiness of my prayer that had to go through a translator, God used it to touch the hearts of the people.”

Lauren Ries, a sophomore nursing student from Indiana, took the trip as a precursor to a life of missions she hopes to lead after graduation. Her family had served in Nicaragua in the past and she felt blessed to return to a place that held such good memories.

Ries told the story of one woman who had previously gone to a Nicaraguan doctor and been diagnosed with a simple infection and sent home with antibiotics and instructions to rest. The second day of the clinic, she came to seek help and passed out in the front yard of the church. She had extremely elevated blood glucose levels and was septic. The team was able to treat her just in time with medical resources that had arrived that morning.

“I got to give her medication and pray with her several times,” said Ries. “Slowly, she regained her strength and her fever broke.

Submitted photo Three Cedarville University nursing students spent spring break in Nicaragua on a medical missions trip and returned with a better understanding of the global church. Pictured, Hannah Cloyd prays with a patient during this missions trip.
http://www.xeniagazette.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/32/2018/04/web1_hannah-Cloyd201842217434616.jpgSubmitted photo Three Cedarville University nursing students spent spring break in Nicaragua on a medical missions trip and returned with a better understanding of the global church. Pictured, Hannah Cloyd prays with a patient during this missions trip.