Since we returned from the weekend it has been non-stop excitement
around here for Grace and me in our respective departments. She is fighting a
constant battle to get tests done and medication administered properly. It is a
quixotic task to be sure and she’s giving it her very best. Today she and Robert discovered a man in the
far reaches of a medical ward who had been misdiagnosed and desperately needed
surgery for, you guessed it, an intestinal perforation. Their alertness enabled
me to get him operated early and he should do well. I’ve had some interesting
and less desperate cases to do which have worked out well and have left some
happy people in my wake.
The highlight of the week has been our teaching program. There is a
school here for assistant medical officers. Those are individuals who are third
down in the hierarchy. There are physicians, medical officers who are
equivalent to our PA’s (not really) and then the assistant medical officers or
AMO’s. They are the ones who are sent out to the dreadful little dispensaries
in remote villages and are all there is between life and death literally for
millions. They have 20 months of training over two years. We encounter them in
groups on hospital rounds and they are very attentive. Their English is spotty;
some better than others and the better ones will ask questions, often good
ones, and share the answers with their fellows in Swahili. I’m amazed at what
some of these kids know. They are putting together concepts in much the same
way, albeit much simpler, ways that our medical students do at home with
infinitely less resources. Their books are in English which makes it so hard
for them. I don’t know what language their regular lecturers use.
Last week we set up a schedule to go to their classrooms and give
formal presentations. We started yesterday spending two hours. Grace and Robert
covered basic neurological and chest evaluation and I spent time showing them
how to evaluate the abdomen to diagnose peritonitis and obstruction. The emphasis
was on making the diagnoses early and getting the patient to the right place.
We went
back today and I covered basics of wound closure and burn treatment. I
haven’t decided yet what I’m going to talk about tomorrow.
So that’s the news for now. There are just two more days of work here
for us before we leave on Saturday. We’ll be in Mbeya and then a decompression
day in Dar es Salaam before heading out of Africa. There will be time then to
sort all this out and try to make some sense of it. I’ll post some final
comments as I travel.