Images from top down - the church, houses occupied by doctors/hospital staff, a typical mango tree. More houses.
Friday, November 30, 2007
TGIF
Images from top down - the church, houses occupied by doctors/hospital staff, a typical mango tree. More houses.
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Hospital
I was on call Monday night. Soon after my shift started our triplets ruptured membranes. I delivered the triplets (33+ weeks) by c-section and the three babies did well. All delivered breech (2.6kg, 2.0kg, and 1.6 kg). Mother and babies doing well. I asked the mother if I could take a picture of her and the babies but she declined. Sorry no evidence!
I am looking forward to my "annual volunteer conference (AVC)" coming up next month. All of the volunteers in Tanzania (about 65) are meeting in Dar Es Salaam for meetings and to share experiences. I'll be in Dar Es Salaam from December 17-20th for the conference.
Sunday, November 25, 2007
Shangani Beach
This is definitely true. The highlight of the weekend was by far the snorkeling. Shangani Beach has a magnificent, beautiful coral reef that is perfect for snorkeling. During low tide you can snorkel for a couple of hours.... The reef has an amazing variety of fish, and aquatic life. I couldn't name a quarter of the fish we saw but the bright fluorescent colors are awesome. Among the fish were a lot of jellyfish! Scary at first but they are really harmless. The sea urchins are amazing with sharp shiny blacks spikes and bright orange eye. In one picture we are heading back from snorkeling (Mr. Piet, Francijn, Sheena and I).
http://www.flickr.com/photos/21232655@N07/ If this link works I'll try to put up more pics!
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
City Slickers
Last night I was on call again, and it was almost the best call night I've ever had......until about 3am.
At 3 am labor and delivery called to say that twins were in labor. Excellent I thought! But the presenting twin was breech. When twins are in labor and the presenting twin is breech, that means one thing - warm up the OR and get ready for a c-section.
By the time all the necessary people arrived (nurses, scrub techs, anesthestist, ect) it was around 4). The c-section went well and both babies had apgars of 9 and 10. I was back home by about a quarter past 5 and then slept for another hour, with many fond memories of residency calls doing c-sections at odd hours of the night.
I was walking home from the market the other day and passed this herd of cows and goats as they were passing by my house. I happened to have my camera with me, so a good time for a photo op. The herd reminded me of one of the scenes from the movie "City Slickers".....
Well, I hope everyone is well back home. In case you don't have my new email, neil@ndanda.net or we can talk with Skype (Skype is free to download and lets you talk online anytime). Please keep me in the loop of all of the news/events/rumors/gossip that is going on!
Monday, November 19, 2007
Good news, bad news, and.....peanuts?
Sunday, November 18, 2007
Surgical call
Friday, November 16, 2007
Kanga
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
The priests and the quadruplets
The black shirt is used to hide any evidence of weight loss/gain on my new diet of carbohydrates and more carbohydrates:) This is my "pre-blog" pose and if you look closely you might see a smile :)
Yesterday afternoon I went for a swim in "Chemchemi" (sp?) the man-made natural pond in Ndanda, aka our swimming pool. From my house its about a 45 minute walk along a dirt path through some bush.
The pond is roughly the size of a football field, maybe a little larger and is surprising always very clean and Very refreshing during these hot humid afternoons. Almost every afternoon at four o'clock a group of four or five priests from the Abbey go for a swim; and unless the other couple of volunteers come with me, I'm swimming alone with the priests......
Last night I visited with two of the other "vols" who have been here now about a year. They have acccumulated quite a DVD collection......there is not a lot to do here at night. So after so many days of reading and studying Kiswahili, I took a break and watched A Beautiful Mind (again). The girl living next door to me is a Dutch doctor from the Netherlands. She arrived about a year ago and is focusing on improving the HIV program at the hospital. Next to her is another girl who is a "vol" from Colorado, also here since about Oct. last year. She is a lab tech, here to strengthen the lab. The two of them must have a love for cats, because they share four cats that stay in the houses. One of the cats gave birth to quadruplets the other day. One of the kittens died yesterday but the others look healthy. We are not expecting any more kittens because the girls performed a vasectomy or something similar on all of the males. (Not sure who the father of the kittens is:)
I think I'm starting to get into a routine. In the mornings after conference, I round on maternity patients. There are usually about forty to fifty patients to see. Usually three or four patients in labor and delivery and twenty-somethinng patients on both post partum and antepartum. I round with one of the assistant medical officers who has been covering maternity. And between the two of us, we split the patients.
Rounding takes us until about ten o'clock and then its time for the mandatory "tea break" which I believe all Tanzanian's believe is a necessary part of their day. I usually skip tea and go to the theatre.
In the theatre today, we had a laparotomy, oophorectomy for a large ovarian mass in a sixteen year old girl. She had a fifteen or sixteen centimeter mass that occupied almost her entire pelvis. Fortunately it was obviously benign in appearance, so it was easily drained and removed.
After operating we see the outpatient surgical patients. Outside the theatre are benches filled with patients. Usually there are thirty or forty patients waiting to be seen, referred from an outpatient clinic, or sent from the ward. There are four or five exam rooms, one gyn room and ultrasound. We document all of the findings/exam on a little card, that the patient keeps with them. Seems to be a very efficient system.
The short rainy season has started. We had a sprinkle yesterday afternoon while I was walking back from the pond, and a downpour this afternoon for about an hour. The short rainy season is supposed to last from about November through January. It is definitely nice to get a little bit of rain to cool things off in the evenings.
Hope everyone is doing well. And let me know when you plan on visiting!!
Friday, November 9, 2007
Theatre
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Jumatano
Monday, November 5, 2007
Wodi 4
Wodi 4 is the pediatric ward and was managed by Victor today. Victor is one of the local "clinical officers" working in the hospital. St. Benedict's has a number of Assistant medical officers = 4 years of training, Clinical officers = 3 years of training and medical officers (4 years of school + training). So I believe that I am one of 6 medical officers. There is one visiting orthopedic surgeon, one general surgeon, two medical doctors, and one HIV/tropical medicine doctor (also a VSO volunteer) and myself. (The maternity ward is run primarily by two assistant medical officers who I have not met yet).
Victor and I rounded on about twenty -two peds patients this morning. Like most of the wards in the hospital, Wodi 4 has roughly about 30 beds, arranged almost side by side in one open room, which is "relatively clean" but does have a lot of flies swarming around.
Most, if not almost all of the children are admitted with malaria, which is by far the most common illness children get admitted for. Most children present with fevers, malaise, body aches, and GI or respiratory symptoms.
As an aside, what becomes obvious very quickly when working in this hospital or in countries of "tropical medicine" is that so much of the day to day care/treatment of patients relies on the clinical judgement of the doctor, i.e. the routine labs and imaging are not being performed. Sometimes its hard to imagine what limited resources this hospital is faced with, but it is a reality!
At around 11:30 after we finished rounding, one of the nurses came in to tell us that there has been a change in the status of one of the patients. A young girl who had severe malaria and hydrocephalus was brought into the "intensive room". Her eyes were closed and she did not move. It was obvious that she had passed. Victor confirmed that she died and we told the father, who was appropriately sad.
According to the St. Benedict's Ndanda Annual report, last year 87 children died. I will never know how my impressions/feelings about death compare to those of the people of Tanzania who are faced with this reality each day. When there is a death of a patient, the nurses end their notations in the log book the same way each time, let us pray for him, amen.
On a little lighter note, I had the afternoon free so I went for a walk around the town. Its definitely getting hotter here (i'm sure you feel sorry for me:) and I wished I had some sunscreen on; I feel a little bit awkward walking around because people I meet or have not yet met, seem to already know me. I went to buy some milk and eggs from the kitchen and when I asked the sister if I could have milk without cream, she said "why don't you like cream? you are a doctor, you should know its ok". I was surprised to hear this from someone I had met only once before!
On a different note, I expect to have some new pictures up next time. I've been spending a lot of the down-time studying Kiswahili because its becoming very apparent that to gain the respect of my colleagues and patients means speaking without an interpreter. I will try to take a break from studying/working and re-enter tourist mode with my camera tomorrow!
Saturday, November 3, 2007
Nyangao
This morning I started in the medical outpatient department.
I introduced myself to Lillian, the medical assistant covering the MOPD (medical outpatient department) and sat in her office while she saw a few of the patients. By the third or fourth patient, she handed me the chart and wanted to me to start seeing the patients. There was some misunderstanding because in my Swahili I tried to explain that I would just be observing her. But she insisted that I see the patients and I didn't mind so I prepared. Luckily all of the charting is in English but of course none of the patients speak English. I tried hard to take a history in Kiswahili, and for the most part, patients understand me, but I still have difficulties understanding the spoken language. I had two interpreters with me......A few of the first patients had multiple problems, diabetes, hypertension and just came for medication refills. The next patient was a four year old boy who was carried into the room by his mother. His eyes were closed, he looked very weak and sick. His mother gave the history - fevers, abdominal pain, sore throat, nausea and vomiting for two days. The nurses took vital signs and I did a physical exam.....I spoke briefly to the medical assistant to discuss my differential diagnosis and possible work up, but she didn't hesitate to say that he has Malaria. I asked if we would get blood tests or do any other type of work up. She said no.... so I admitted him to the peds ward with medication to treat presumptive Malaria.
By ten am, I had to leave to accompany other hospital employees to drive to Nyangao, a sister hospital in the village of Nyangao about an hour east of Ndanda. Nyangao Hospital was host to today's monthly medical conference so about 50 health care workers from 4 regional hospitals met to hear lectures by 3 doctors. Coincidently the lectures today were OB related. A general surgeon gave a talk on wound healing, a gynecologist at Lindi hospital talked on management of normal and abnormal labor, as well as complications in C-sections, finally one of the medical assistants gave a lecture on post op c-section wound infections at Nyangao hospital. Very interesting to hear the perspective and management. There are many differences b/w practices in US hospitals compared to Africa (obviously). Some very basic medications are not available, and as a result there are higher numbers of c-sections and complications. Even pitocin, one of the most commonly used medications on a L&D ward to augment labor is sometimes not used, because it is not available!
By the time I returned to Ndanda it was late afternoon. The hospital administrator and other volunteers living next to me had already left for Mtwara for the weekend. I spent the afternoon walking around the town. The butcher was closed so I went to the monastery kitchen and bought some milk, eggs, bread and some sausage - enough for dinner tonight! Hint - please send recipes and/or the Idiots Guide to Cooking! I don't know how long I will last on scrambled eggs and sausage!
Friday, November 2, 2007
Thursday, November 1, 2007
Nyumba wangu
Ndanda
I'm in Ndanda, Tanzania now! After a month of training and language classes, I'm so happy to have settled into my house in Ndanda and to begin to start work!
Yesterday I flew from Dar Es Salaam to Mtwara, the largest city in the south eastern portion of Tanzania. The flight was about an hour and a half. We made one stop in Lindi, a smaller town. I wish I had a picture of the airport - on the roof of a small house in big letters reads Welcome to Lindi Airport. It was the first time I've landed at an airport without a runway. The runway at Lindi is barely a dirt road with patches of grass and weeds scattered about. It made for a little bit of a bumpy landing! The flight from Lindi to Mtwara was only about a half an hour but with beautiful views of the Indian Ocean along the way. In Mtwara I met my "line-manager" who is the in charge hospital doctor and we drove about 2 hours to Ndanda. We stopped once along the way to buy some coconuts.
In Ndanda, I was greeted by the hospital administrator, a very friendly dutch man and the three other volunteers working here, a medical doctor from the netherlands, an american lab tech, and a community HIV counselor. I took a little driving tour of the town of Ndanda with the hospital administrator and volunteer doctor. This small town is amazing - both beautiful and very self sufficient! It is more than 100 years since a German mission post, when the town and soon after the hospital was established. There is a large German influence and presence of german monks and nuns that live in the Abbey here. Also an increasingly large African diosese is growing in the community. For a very small town, Ndanda has impressive self-sustaining sites - a hydroelectric power supply, large water filtering system, vegetable farm, stone carving and masonry shop, a nursing school,bakery, butcher, natural pond for swimming, and of course St. Benedict's Hospital.
After a tour through the town, I had dinner with the hospital administrator and the three other volunteers who prepared dinner in their house.
My day started at 8 this morning with morning report. After a quick prayer, a nurse reads a list of the census of patients in the hospital including all recent admissions, discharges, diagnoses, and pt's scheduled for surgery. I wish I had arrived one day prior, because I was told that yesterday a woman delivered twins and she had "two uteruses" or possibly an extrauterine pregnancy. I don't have the story right - what was described in board report was that a laparotomy was performed, and on inspecting the abdomen, two uteruses were seen. Both babies were delivered without complication and are doing well. I wish I was there to see!
Today's surgery schedule included one total abomdinal hysterectomy for fibroids, as well as a couple of orthopedic cases. I met the general surgeon who performed the c-section yesterday, and who was doing the hysterectomy today. She is a german nun who has been working as the sole general surgeon at the hospital for some time. I was told that the last ob/gyn to work at the hospital did so more than 5 years ago and worked for some time until he passed away.
After morning report, I was given a tour of the hospital. For a mission hospital I was very impressed. The 300 bed hospital has a separate medical and surgical ward for men and women, an antepartum unit, post partum unit, Labor and delivery. There is a main operation theatre, where general surgery, gynecologic, orthopedic, urologic, and ent procedures are performed. There is a lab, with blood bank, radiology department, an ultrasound (I didn't see today), a TB unit and an HIV/AIDS treatment care unit. After the tour I picked up some hospital attire and then had lunch in the abbey. I didn't see my line manager this afternoon, so I spent more time getting settled.
I'm going to meet the others for dinner and have an early night to make the most of tomorrow....