Saturday, February 21, 2009

Government Hospital:Things are Up and Walking

Dr. Stephen Chmil has been waiting for two hours to operate on a bypass patient. There is an undercurrent of frustration in the operating room. WSF medical staff is eager to be of service and is disoriented by the slow pace. Doctors who are accustomed to well-oiled machines back home are not used to delaying surgery because there aren't enough gowns and sterile drapes to go around. The "deficiencies" of the Black Lion Hospital that were foreshadowed by the Dean of the Medical School are now materializing.

Public hospitals in Ethiopia are in desperate need of more support, more training, and more missions. Although there are some very competent physicians at these hospitals, there appears to be a very real disconnect between the needs of patients and the administration of available services. Even if there are services available they are not being provided in an efficient and timely manner. Tanya, an engineer from the United States, has had the job of being in charge of biotech equipment for the Black Lion for the last six months. "There are no systems in place for maintenance of equipment. Equipment that breaks down just sits in a closet with no hope of being used again." Looking around one can quickly see that systems for patient follow-up, organization of meds and supplies, and many other necessary components to the daily operations of a hospital are not in place here. The challenges posed by an under-sourced public health system are a reality
here in the largest city in one of the poorest countries in the world.

An X-ray film hangs in the light. From looking at the luminescent photograph one can easily see that something is off from center. A hip joint hangs a little too low, dangling just beneath the pelvis. The film next to it shows a clavicle in two pieces. Could this be the same patient? This man was in a car accident eleven days ago. On the day of the accident he was rushed into emergency surgery to repair a lacerated liver and ruptured bowel. He has waited a week to get his bones back in place.

Dr. Maxime Coles discusses a plan of attack with a visiting orthopedic surgeon from Scotland. "Let's get him in a lateral position." They discuss the possibility of completing a closed reduction of the right hip. Why cut if you don't need to?

A couple of rooms down, Dr. Bucs preps a patient who exhibits multiple symptoms that indicate tuberculosis of the spine. HIV and tuberculosis are reaching epidemic proportion in Addis Ababa. A doctor sitting in the lounge spouts off some statistics he has heard. "A person who gets pricked with a hollow needle from an HIV infected patient stands a three in a thousand chance of contracting the disease." Contracting HIV seems unlikely, but no one appears eager to test their odds.

Dr. George Faries gently slides the scope down through the esophagus and into the stomach. Eager Ethiopian surgical residents wait for their chance to try it out. Rules are that the "attending physician goes first" and they will have to wait their turn. Dr. Faries narrates the scope's journey into the stomach and through the opening into the duodenum. Suddenly, the end of the scope opens up like a tiny crocodile's mouth and little metal teeth plunge into the wall of the stomach, swallowing a tiny biopsy. "Got it!" exclaims Dr. Faries. It may not be the biggest catch of the day but it's a keeper.

Meanwhile, Dr. Coles has decided against a closed reduction of the hip. There may be some stray bone fragments in the leg. It looks like they'll have to cut after all.

In the storeroom, an anesthesiologist holds an essential component to an anesthesia machine. "These are disposable? You need to be able to take this out," he says while pointing at a small blue cap on the device. "I suppose we could drill a hole and tape it up later. I can't see any other way of doing it." In the meantime, we've learned that our crate full of equipment and supplies is finally in Addis Ababa. Now it just needs to clear customs. The hope is that it can be cracked open and sorted this weekend. Perhaps by Monday Taritku won't have his surgery delayed for a few gowns and drapes.

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How to Use this Blog

Dear Students,

Please accept my “virtual invitation” to join me on this profound mission, this exciting adventure!

Blog posts will include a chronicle of daily events, interviews with patients and volunteers, and photographs.

Some brief advice on reading blog posts.
1. Go to the top of the page to find the most recent post.
2. Read the date at the top of the latest entry.
3. Read the entries from the bottom up for each date. Each entry posted on that date will be time stamped. This will help you read the posts in order (this may be relevant if we are following a particular story of a patient or event).
4. To find a list of all blog posts, go to the bottom right hand side of the blog. The entries are listed by date and title.

Sincerely,

Mr. Bucs

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

The Mission

On February 13, 2009 I will be traveling to Addis Adaba, Ethiopia with the World Surgical Foundation as a volunteer. I will be assisting the videographer, collecting and recording daily surgical data, maintaining the Foundation’s daily blog, and acting as a liaison for the press. For two weeks the volunteer doctors and nurses of WSF will be providing much needed surgical procedures to people who do not have adequate access to health care.

Addis Ababa: "The Capital of Africa"

Addis Ababa is the largest city in Ethiopia (about 3,000,000 people). Ethiopia has the unique distinction of being considered the origin of modern humans due to several very important hominid fossils which were discovered there, the most famous of which is the Australopithecine “Lucy.” Furthermore, a recent study suggests that Addis Ababa is the exact location of the origin of modern humans. After analyzing the DNA of 985 people around the world, geneticists and other scientists claim that they have found a pattern which shows that homo sapiens left Addis Ababa 100,000 years ago and migrated throughout the world. The DNA evidence indicates that genetic diversity declines steadily the farther one's ancestors traveled from Addis Ababa, which suggests that all homo sapiens throughout the world are descendents of small populations of individuals who branched off from a larger group of individuals in Ethiopia.