We started out at the police hospital. Probably the biggest problem that this hospital deals with is HIV. The hospital is for police officers as well as civilians. Dr. Sam (neither myself or Ben can remember his last name, and I definitely can't spell it) told us that about 4-5% of Ghanaian police officers has HIV. In this hospital, they started HAART (Highly Active Anti- Retroviral Therapy) about one year ago. And use of HAART only began in all of Ghana 5 years ago. The patients that we saw all looked great. They looked like normal people and you would never guess that they had HIV. After seeing a few patients Sam told us, "This is the new face of AIDS." Quite honestly I've seen much worse looking patients in Parkland.
The hospital has a policy of never refusing a patient for inability to pay. The HAART drugs are all bought, of all places, from India. In addition to raising your CD4 count, they also cause male pattern hair loss, uncontrollable flatulence, and fingers that smell like curry. No just kidding. Apparently in India generic versions of the HAART therapy are more readily available and are cheaper.
I had the opportunity in the morning to hang out in the Obstetrics ward where they did pre-natal and post natal screening and education. There were probably over 100 women crammed into this tiny room where they were being educated
The next day we got to go to a local community clinic run by a local nursing school. It was friggin fantastic. They did everything from birth control, pre-natal screenings, well-child checks, vaccinations, the works. It was like a smaller version of the AKU clinic I worked in 2 years ago. The nurses are all trained public health nurses and are all very good.
There were some shocking differences though in the ways that they did things. Last week my surgical sweetheart was examining a patient in the school clinic who came in with 1 hour of
As soon as we got to the clinic we were overwhelmed with patients. The first one we saw looked like a simple viral infection and we were about to send her home with a bottle of cough syrup, but when we remembered...low grade fever! Treat for malaria! So we did. In the few hours we were there we diagnosed all kinds of stuff, from eczema to gastroenteritis. One two year-old girl came to us having had 7 large volume, watery stools overnight. Looking at her past medical record she was underweight, had been treated for malaria four times and gastroenteritis 3 times in the past. When we saw her she was very lethargic, had no urine output since the day before, and at rest had a pulse of 190 beats/min! Ben and I were like holy crap! We think she probably had cholera and referred her immediately to the hospital for IV fluids.
A little boy with presumed malaria. He was actually quite sick so I wouldn't be surprised if he actually had it. When asked, his mother told us that he always sleeps with a bed net. I'm not sure I believe that. He has had malaria several times before.
A little baby, being weighed in the traditional Ghanaian fashion.
A kiddo in our school with an extremely large and extremely malformed skull. We think the result of craniosynostosis or increased intracranial pressure during his early years. One of the friendliest kids you would ever meet.
So, its been a very interesting and very educational week. Tomorrow we head to the orphanage. So be expecting an entry about that soon. In addition, Ben (a.k.a. white tiger) will soon be posting about our awesome weekend. Peace out.
5 comments:
You guys are getting into some neat stuff! Makes for great memories!
The baby scale sure looks familiar! It's the same kind we used in our Immunization/Well-baby Clinic in the "bush" near Kumasi.
Our male assistant, who did the weighing, got drunk on coconut wine and we had to send him home!! We didn't want it turned into a baby catapult. Talk about memories!!!
Grammy T.
I wouldn't get a divorce!!!
Farhan--I'm glad the white tiger's with you. We look forward to meeting you.
haha wow i agree with bhaijan lol
and love you...cant wait till u come back
Post a Comment