Friday, 21 December 2012

Cuttim Skin Blo Het Blo Kok



Women and children greeting myself and Ding (top right)
 after we visited a boma.
Christmas is upon us and that means two things at Holy Cross: stabbings and circumcisions. To be fair, both happen all year round, but there is a particular abundance of cases over the festive season. Why so many circumcisions? In the Eastern Cape, getting a traditional snip is a big deal; it is a coming of age thing, a boy becomes man affair, a rite of passage etc. I am not too sure on the history of it all as I have been told several different stories, but I am sure Google will give those interested a good answer.

Two khwethas from the illegal
boma - we took them home to their
parents.
For all this coming of age stuff, these young men risk a lot. Last season (we call them seasons, there are two per year and both coincide with the school holidays) we had one death and three auto-amputations – that’s when a man loses his penis secondary to infection: a particularly grim affair. Someone could go from attempting to become a man to losing probably one of the biggest symbols of their man-hood. However, when done right, the ritual is an impressive affair: Day one the foreskin gets chopped (traditional style) and put on the initiate’s, a khwetha’s, forehead – this is called the torch (something about shining the light forward and no looking back – well, they’ll never get their foreskin back); day 1-8 the khwethas stay inside a boma (a small hut built for the occasion), aren’t allowed to go outside, get little food and water and have to chant all night to scare off the witches; Day 8 they come out, eat a freshly slaughtered goat and do man stuff (singing, collecting firewood, putting clay on their face – that’s for witch protection – and so forth); for the rest of their time, about a month, they live in the boma, do a lot of chanting and get the occasional beating, possibly to show others how masculine they are; at the end of it all, the boma is burnt, they wash in the river and hey presto: MAN!
The kids were very excited after our trip to a boma.
My colleague Ding teamed up with some local healthcare workers, including a guy named Patrick who has done wonders for men’s livelihoods, to improve the public health campaign on safe circumcisions. They really have done a sterling effort and this season has seen only three admissions (that’s rather low) at Holy Cross. I stepped in for Ding last week and visited four camps, including one illegal site where I had my own police escort. I felt exceptionally privileged to get a glimpse of this local tradition, as without the guise of being a doctor on a special mission, no regular person would be let in. To be honest, all of the penises looked pretty nasty and it took some time to work out what was acceptable and what not. In the end, only one boy got taken back to hospital for admission. Fingers crossed he will make it back for his crossing the river ceremony, penis intact, and leave Holy Cross a man.
****
The young man - chest drain in, eviscerated bowels, about to
be wheeled to theatre.
Circumcisions going wrong are one thing, stabbing and the occasional gun shot is another. Matters have not been helped by our recent shortage of intravenous fluids, which has made resuscitation rather difficult. Last week a young guy was wheeled into casualty with his intestines out for all to see. His friends were obviously concerned, as all five left straight away – maybe they weren’t his friends at all. As I assessed him I noticed these findings: he was heavily intoxicated with alcohol, in a fair amount of pain, had blood and air in his right lung (a haemopneumothorax) from a very small stab wound on his back and  had eviscerated his bowels. So, I popped a tube in his chest to drain the blood and air, gave him our last bag of IV fluid and asked my boss to come help repair the small bowel lacerations before sending him to our referral unit. All went pretty smoothly, I was working with my favourite selection of nurses, which is always a bonus, and the man was relatively stable. Unfortunately, he was bleeding into his abdomen and needed major surgery – something we cannot do. I hear he made it to our referral unit and I am led to believe he got to theatre, but he died later the evening as a result of his injuries.
Why do I mention this case? It is not a particularly uncommon occurrence. However, I just wanted to highlight the difficulties we have with stabilising our critical patients (a lack of fluid and blood) and getting them transferred for definitive care. A surgeon and anaesthetist would be nice, better administration and management would be the dream.
The man made it to the referral unit,
but died later of his injuries. In the red
is Mr Beja - one heck of a nurse.
****
Working at Holy Cross constantly stretches my abilities, and nerves for that matter. There is uncertainty every day and staying sane can be tough at times, however I do seem to thrive off it. Saying this, there are occasions when I wish I was in the comfort of a big NHS hospital with lots of support around. I have just come off working 18 days straight, which included two 72 hour weekends on call. During the first weekend I was called to assess a mother in labour at about 2 am on Friday night as the baby’s hand was coming out of the cervix (for those that don’t know, head first is the usual way and occasionally feet first, but hand first just doesn’t work). The midwife wasn’t wrong: as I felt inside the mother’s vagina I was greeted by a tiny little handshake. I tried to push the arm back, but the baby really didn’t want to let go, so we went for a C-section. I performed the procedure and delivered a very healthy boy. However, getting the new born out was probably the easiest part (normally, it’s the hardest).
To start with, the uterus was rather vascular and bled quite a lot. Bleeding is normal, but sometimes there is too much of it. Secondly, the placenta was stuck (placenta accreta), so I had to manually remove it, which took a few moments. Thirdly, well initially I thought there wouldn’t be any thirdly – the procedure was almost over. I closed the uterus, tied the tubes (she had requested a tubal ligation as she already had four other children) and stopped all the bleeding. Or, so I thought. As I assessed the wound I saw a very unpleasant pulsatile ooze coming from one corner. Turns out I severed the right uterine artery, something you really do not want to do. This may have happened during the all too easy delivery of the baby. I couldn’t clamp it, so instead I tied a catheter (a tube usually reserved to help people pee) at the base of her uterus to tamponade the bleeding. As I, or my boss, were unable to ligate the artery, I left the catheter in situ (a salvage procedure) to stop the bleeding, closed her up and referred her to our obstetric unit 4 hours away for a hysterectomy.
This was a particularly good learning point for me – all procedures carry risks and having a decent idea of how to prevent and manage these outcomes helps. Tying the catheter at the base of the uterus is something I have only read about, but at least I knew about it and I knew what to do: DON’T PANIC. As a result, the lady made a good recovery.
****
By the way, “Cuttim Skin Blo Het Blo Kok” is Tok Pisin (national language of Papua New Guinea) for circumcision. I did part of my medical elective there as a student and have fond memories of assisting circumcisions, mainly because as we would near the end of the procedure we would say “clos to pinis now,” which means almost done.



This young boy has disseminated varicella zoster virus (chicken pox) all over his body - inside and out. He is HIV positive and was neglected for quite some time, but now he is doing very well.



This is a reminder card that I designed for HIV treatment initiation - there are still some changes to be made, as this is the pilot scheme, however, I was very excited to see it being used by one of our local clinics.

A 10 year old boy weighing 10kg - this is something nobody should ever see. He is severely malnourished due to HIV and a probable underlying TB infection. Fortunately, he is improving and now weighs a spritely 14kg.

Dancing in Durban at The Rainbow Restaurant - possibly one of my favourite haunts. I'm the guy in the black on the right - I'm now beardless.

Thursday, 6 December 2012

Part 2 - Battery acid and buttocks.

We've had students from Cape Town. As you can see, it's all smiling faces in rural health care. On the far right is Dr Veldman and Dr Jimoh.

Happy students

As I mentioned, work has been busy. Each day has been filled with exc itement and a fair amount of head banging. The strikes are coming to a close and business is starting to resume as usual. However, with Christmas just around the corner everyone is going on  holiday – this includes the pharmaceutical depot and the outpatient department at our referral unit. Hence, we are still low on essential drugs and equipment. At the moment we are scrubbing for theatre with regular soap. To add to matters, our radiographer says the X-ray machine has broken down. It all seems a little too convenient – the machine stopped working last December. He took four weeks of “sick” leave due to his asthma, but refused to let us see him or get a referral to another hospital. In some ways I don’t blame him – he is on his own and has quite a heavy workload, but then so do we all. Unfortunately, Christmas is when an X-ray is vital – it’s the stabbing season.

This poor baby was born with a large vascular
 lesion where her bottom would usually be.
 It could possibly be a teratoma or dermoid
 cyst (remnant of an incomplete twin).
We referred her, but she didn't survive.

With all the excitement and goings on, I’ve written a list of some of the memorable moments from the past month:
-          I walked into the surgical unit one weekend to review someone. On my way through the ward I encountered one patient cutting the nails of another who was too sick to do it himself. I’ve noticed that patients look after one another on the wards – the ones that can walk fetch water for the ones that can’t and, from what it seems, even help out with a bit of podiatry.

-          I was reminded of the lady I saw last year who had used so many rectal enemas that her anus had almost closed up secondary to scarring. She came back to see me with similar problems. After receiving treatment (anal dilatation) at our referral unit, she continued to use the enemas again.  I’m pretty sure I told her last time that putting battery acid in ones rectum is probably a bad idea.

-          I called a colleague to assist me with a difficult delivery. With a bit of persuasion and some good pushing from the mother the baby started to come. We did a suction delivery, but the little one got its shoulders stuck – the head was outside the vagina and his body still in the womb: a shoulder dystocia. A few simple manoeuvres and out popped a very flat bubba. We successfully resuscitated him and then the nurse called me back to the Mum. She had a 3rd degree tear – that’s when the laceration goes nearly all the way into the rectum. I’ve never dealt with one of these before, but knew the theory. So, there I was – head torch on, forceps and suture in hand and my trusty step by step obstetric book on my lap. I think I did a pretty good job. In hindsight, we should have done an episiotomy, which would have avoided the tear – but it slipped our minds in the heat of the moment.

-          It’s circumcision season. If you want a traditional one you need to be over 18, have parental permission and a nod from the local chief. A guy came in last Saturday night who was denied this opportunity by the chief. He was so desperate to lose his foreskin that he took a pair of scissors to his member and gave himself the snip. Might I add that he was stone cold sober. Good thing that, for he may have cut off more than intended. He did a rather good job and all I had to do was stop a bit of bleeding.

-          “Doctor, a cow fell on my leg.” Quite how this happened, I don’t know. The herder said he was giving the cow some treatment and then it toppled over – it must’ve been some pretty strong stuff. Turns out the guy is also made of tough material as his bones seemed fine.
 

One shouldn't really see this X-ray - this big mass in the pelvis is a gentleman's bladder. Unfortunately the admitting doctor missed the elephant in the room. The old chap drained almost 3 litres of urine once I catheterised him.

This gentleman presented with severe shortness of breath. The X-ray shows a gigantic, or "globular", heart. He had a massive pericardial effusion secondary to TB (TB pericarditis) that we drained, much to his relief.



Some seriously arthritic hands - guttering, ulna deviation
 and swan neck deformities.
I have chosen an exceptionally bad choice of facial hair after removing the beard. Sorry Mum.


Wednesday, 5 December 2012

Part 1 - Toi Toi Nation

A rather large piece of corn that I removed from this child's nose (parental consent obtained).

Hello: I am still alive. It has been a few weeks since I last updated the blog. There are two good reasons for this:
1.       Work has been insanely busy.
2.       I have been filling out my UK Emergency Medicine job application .
As I have been kept on my toes at work, there is a lot to write about. Hence, I may break down the past few weeks into two parts.
Another case of ophthalmic shingles in an HIV positive lady.
The rash spares the nasal ridge, which means there is a reduced
chance of the eye being involved
.

The Eastern Cape Department of Health (the body that governs Holy Cross) has been in a bit of a crisis recently.  Strikes, or “Toi Toi’s,” have been rife throughout. It started with the nurses at our referral centre, then our pharmaceutical depot and finally the ambulance service. Unfortunately, rather than all go to the picket at the same time, it was spread out. So, once the referral unit opened back up, the pharmacy went on strike. Then, when the ambulance went on strike, we were really stuck. We had to keep unwell patients who required surgery, dialysis or higher care at Holy Cross and often just watch them die. To improve matters, we ran out of nearly all our essential drugs. A doctor is nothing without his or her tools of the trade.
There are many things that we all could have done better. There is a tendency here to put the blame on failing services to someone else; in this case, the pharmaceutical depot and ambulance. However, we managed to acquire essential magnesium sulphate (life saving for mothers with eclampsia), intravenous fluids and antibiotics from neighbouring hospitals after a few phone calls. Unfortunately, myself and colleagues always seem oblivious to medical shortages until we get told we have just used the last bag of saline or penicillin injection. We are now having talks with our pharmacist and nursing staff to find out ways that this can be prevented in the future.
****

He was beaten by the local community - a strong image. I liken it to how the health service here is currently being hounded.

This guy got stabbed in the back twice. I inserted a chest drain on
each side as he had developed bilateral pneumothoraces (air
around the lung)

The strikes have been terrible; however, a few weeks ago the hospital encountered a self made crisis – a result of poor planning from us, the doctors. Currently there are seven of us, but one Thursday this month we were three – one was on leave, two were at a course and the fourth had to take his car for a service (probably not the best choice of days). We can manage with three, as the hospital has done in the past, but patient care is grossly compromised. Unfortunately, that day we had three emergency c-sections, hence taking two doctors away from the outpatient department and leaving one in casualty. By the time I got to OPD in the evening, there were about 30 patients waiting even though we advised everyone to go home and return the following week. I felt terrible as I sent all, but one, home; to be seen the following week. I knew that some probably could not afford to return.
An impressive case of Malassezia furfur - a
benign yeast infection of the skin. The
gentleman is also HIV positive.
During the ambulance strike I had an unwell HIV positive young male on my ward. He had developed confusion secondary to gross renal failure and was falling into a coma. I tried to kick start his kidneys back into action by giving him enough intravenous fluid, although this became difficult when I realised I had used our last bag of saline in the hospital (except for a few that we keep for c-sections). I discussed the case with colleagues and the specialists at our referral unit. He required emergency peritoneal dialysis (PD) – this is when you insert a tube into the abdominal cavity, pour in some salty-sugary fluid, rinse it about for an hour or so, then drain it with all the bad bits inside that the body doesn’t want anymore. We don’t do PD at Holy Cross. However, without any means of transport I was faced with a dilemma. Do I let this patient die, or do I try something a little heroic. PD isn’t complicated, I know the theory and the procedure (it is very similar to something called a diagnostic peritoneal lavage) and with the prospect of strikes ending imminently, maybe it would tie him over before getting definitive care. I went ahead with the procedure after discussing it with the family and colleagues. All went smoothly, but unfortunately it wasn’t enough. He died four days later; the ambulance service resumed the next day.
****
A septic child (burns) who developed necrotic finger tips, probably from a combination of dehydration and infection. He will probably lose his fingers.

I attended a course a few weekends ago on HIV and TB management. There were some very interesting discussions around the HIV burden. South Africa is now the leader with this respect: it has the highest number of HIV and TB cases worldwide. Why is HIV still growing? There is plenty of health promotion, hoards of condoms and free HIV drugs. Do people still not understand how it is transmitted? I heard an amusing, if slightly worrying story, of a gentleman who kept developing sexually transmitted diseases despite being adamant that he used a condom religiously. It turned out he used to tie it around the base of his penis as, he told the doctor: “I remember from first aid that if you tie a limb after a snake bites you can stop the venom creeping up; the same applies here.”
One slightly controversial comment raised was that we should de-stigmatise HIV. At the moment it is still a very segregated service: patients go to a special HIV clinic, get tested in a special HIV room, get special counselling – basically, they get told they’re special. But what if we adopted the view: you have HIV, so what? It’s now a chronic disease if treated correctly. It’s not even that infectious; nothing like TB. When I say not infectious, I mean there are very simple measures to prevent it: wearing a condom (correctly) is one. What if we dealt with it like we deal with diabetes and hypertension? All require lifestyle changes, often lifelong treatment and have grave consequences if neglected. It’s food for thought anyway.

You don't see this very often - "waxy flexibility" in a patient with catatonic schizophrenic.

I had a beard.
Now I don't.



You may remember from previous posts the young HIV positive man with diffuse Kaposi's Sarcoma. He is receiving chemotherapy and doing very well; he's now walking.
My friend, an exceptionally strong willed young man, living with Kaposi's Sarcoma and improving every day. You may also notice my terrible moustache.



Finally - if you get bitten by a human, seek medical attention early. This guy waited for 10 days and his index finger became infected down to the bone. I thought this was a bit of pus, but when I wiped away the debris this piece of bone came out. Remember, humans have filthy mouths.





Saturday, 10 November 2012

We keep on trying.

A medical student: ecstatic after two weeks at Holy Cross






The rapper is still alive.




Nosiphe* was brought in by her mother barely breathing. She is thirteen years old and has been in and out of hospital with asthma for the past six years. Her mother said that over the preceding three days she was having some shortness of breath and wheezing, but little else. She lay there on the gurney in casualty struggling to get oxygen in and out of her lungs because her airways had constricted as a result of an acute asthma attack. By the time I saw her she was exhausted and starting to give up: she had the worst case of a life threatening asthma I have ever seen.
What normally comes to mind when I think of an acute asthmatic is breathlessness, wheezing, a fast pulse and a very uncomfortable looking individual. Nosiphe was the opposite: she was barely breathing, her wheeze was minimal and very protracted, her heart rate was slowing down and she was barely rousable. These are all signs of what I like to call: impending doom; if you don’t act fast, there will be nothing left to act on as your patient will be dead. So, we wheeled her into our resus unit and I intubated her. The problem with an asthmatic like this is that because her airways were so tight and constricted, trying to get air in and out of her lungs was a real chore. One can see why someone suffering with this ailment gets exhausted very quickly. We gave her a whole host of drugs to dilate the airways and kept her on the ventilator overnight before transferring her in the morning to our referral hospital.
***
The past two weeks have been extremely interesting, especially from the emergency medicine point of view. As I may have mentioned before, the emergency department is what gets my juices flowing. Admittedly, here it is not quite as sleek and efficient as back in the UK and the team work can be very inconsistent. It all depends on who is staffing the department – some of my nursing colleagues take more of a “step back” approach, or interpret my call of: “Can I get some help here,” to: “I think the doc is ok, shall we go for tea over the road or go get that thingy from theatre that someone wanted yesterday.” However, most are excellent and do help, although I expect we look like a bunch of headless chickens a lot of the time – running around trying to find the right size airway or the connector for the oxygen supply.

Charred to a crisp - the girl who fell fitted in a fire.

Nosiphe’s story is just one out of the hundreds we see weekly here. However, I doubt I will ever see a case of asthma like that again; it is the stuff you really only read about or simula te in teaching scenarios. In addition to Nosiphe’s case, I attended to a girl in her twenties who was found fitting in a fire. The entire left half of her body was covered in full thickness burns and her face was charred to a crisp: all the nose hairs were burnt, her eye lashes singed and there was soot in her mouth. For those that don’t know, this is when the alarm bells start ringing as it may mean that the patient has burnt their airway, which can swell up and occlude the wind pipe. A very unpleasant experience I’m sure, but fortunately it didn’t happen. We stabilised her and carted off the poor girl to the tertiary burns unit. I spent the rest of the day with the smell of charred flesh on my hands.
The burns girl came back a few days following transfer with a very upbeat discharge letter: she died two days later. Why, I don’t know – possibly due to sepsis or dehydration. With full thickness burns one loses the body’s main defence against infection: the skin.

Fractured cervical spine -
C5 body (ignore the small chip)

So, as well as a life threatening asthma and burn case, I tended to a man who had fractured his  cervical spine; a boy with diabetic ketoacidosis, which is now a lot easier to manage since I introduced a protocol for it (although, this week we have run out of fast acting insulin and glucometers to check the blood sugar - not ideal); a young man with spontaneous bacterial endocarditis and plenty of sick children who come in on the brink of death thanks to all the enemas their Gogo (grandmother) has given them. It has also been a week for putting needles into hearts: we have had two cases (one adult, one paediatric) present in extremis secondary to a large collection of fluid around the myocardium. A slightly nerve racking procedure later (pericardiocentesis) and hey presto: the patient is a hundred times better. Both are now on the ward and doing well.

All this emergency stuff has been gripping, but the bulk of what we see is all HIV and TB related. Both patients with fluid around the heart were caused by TB. This past month, however, has been tough. Our referral unit has been on a skeleton staff – nurses and administrative staff have been striking over pay and people have died as a result. One of our patient’s who was referred, a toddler, died after some folks, dressed in white coats, ran through the ward, chased out the nurses and removed the oxygen from the little one: absolutely horrific and completely unacceptable behaviour. The strike is also the reason why we are without essential medicines such as insulin. I must say, I can be pretty useless without my tools – what good is a diagnosis if you cannot do anything about it.

A bad case of shingles in an HIV positive girl

A young HIV positive boy with warts throughout his oral cavity.

A left occulomotor nerve palsy (cranial nerve 3)
 in an HIV positive patient with TB meningitis - a dilated left
 pupil, a "down and out" eye and a ptosis (drooping) of the left eyelid.

***
Apart from all the gloom with the strike, which is just about coming to an end, I am starting to fall in love with this country. Why? I do not know. For all the troubles one sees, there is a real smell of hope and optimism in the air.
***
As a side note to the opening story, Nosiphe didn’t survive. I expect she was without oxygen for too long prior to her arrival at Holy Cross – she died a few days later on the intensive care unit. If only there was a better transport system and emergency ambulance service, she may have lived.

*Nosiphe – this is not her real name.




A rather large battery that I fished out of this little nose.

A very flat tarantula that a Gogo squashed after it bit her.

Our medical ward won an award for being super.


Tuesday, 23 October 2012

Cutting Along the Coast

Walking the Wild Coast


 
Sometimes I feel as if I am on one long holiday. Then again, I don’t think I have ever worked so hard. The day to day pressures are huge and involve a lot of self discipline. There is no senior to check if we have done the job “correctly,” or family member asking what on earth is going on with their loved one. In fact, there is very little accountability and an acceptance from lay people that the doctor is always right, which, as we all know is not always true. However, because of this I think there is an even greater importance for us as clinicians to feel responsible for our patients. One has to think: “What would I want done for my family/friend/lover?” We are limited to what we can do a lot of the time, but there are many resources at our fingertips to help.
(left to right) Ben, Sofia, Tom (medical student), Alvin and
Hannah - all enjoying a spot of Sunday afternoon jazz.
So, why does it all feel like a massive vacation? I think the weekends away exploring this beautiful country have something to do with it. The past two weeks I stayed with my lovely friends: Alvin, Hannah, Ben and Sofia. All four are British doctors – two of them have been here over a year now and the others have just arrived. I didn’t just take time off to go party with them in Durban; I went to spend some time at the maternity hospital where Hannah works, to improve my caesarean section skills. In seven days I performed eighteen operations by myself as well as assisting several others. It isn’t the most complicated piece of surgery in the world, however, there are plenty of complications, not to mention that fact that you are dealing with at least two lives. I say at least: I delivered two sets of twins.
Rhino in Kwazulu Natal
I was in two minds about developing my surgical skills. When I started this job just over a year ago, there was an expectation by myself and colleagues that I would be proficient at performing “caesers” within a few months of starting. However, a lack of doctors meant that there wasn’t really time to train me and my other skills were needed elsewhere in the hospital. As more medics arrived it soon transpired that I was the only one that could not “cut.” As a result I spent some time in theatre with my colleagues assisting with the operations. However, as everybody bar me can cut, there isn’t really a need for me to as well. Before, the need was there to help relieve the strain of my colleagues as it can be a bit of a work out to extract a baby from the womb. Secondly, there was the prospect of some fresh blood arriving, much like I did last year, with minimal obstetric experience. Unfortunately, they never arrived due to bureaucratic delays in the Eastern Cape.
Without this current “need”, it has raised an interesting ethical dilemma. Should I really start to train and perform caesers on women around Holy Cross and possibly put them in jeopardy as a result of my own inexperience? Would I not be just falling back into that obscene cliché of “practicing one’s skills on Africans?”
Jazz in Durban
I did a lot of thinking and decided to go ahead with the intensive training up at Hannah’s hospital. My reasoning? For starters, none of us at Holy Cross are obstetricians or anaesthetists, we are all generalists and rely a lot on each other for support with the sharing of ideas, knowledge and skills. Knowing how to get out of a difficult situation at both the top and bottom end of the patient is much easier if there are two of you who know what to do. Secondly, although I expect I shall be leaving next year, one can never tell what the future holds. The same story rings true for my colleagues and some may decide to depart sooner than expected, meaning that more will be required of me. Thirdly, I still have this desire to return to this continent in the future and you never know when a certain skill set will be required, particularly obstetric skills. Fourthly, it was a nice excuse to spend some time with close friends who I haven’t seen enough this past year. Either way, the training that I received at the maternity hospital was invaluable and I would recommend it to anyone interested in a career in obstetrics or rural medicine.
Jazz in Durban
Spending just under two weeks working at a large referral hospital was also very interesting. The centre receives patients from all over Kwazulu Natal, which can mean some exceptionally long ambulance rides and the occasional helicopter flight. Hence, they deal with a lot of unwell obstetric, gynaecological and neonatal cases. I must say I was rather impressed by the amount of doctors, nurses and equipment they have. However, as is often the case, I soon realised that even at a tertiary centre like this one, they face much of the same issues as we do at Holy Cross.
The jazz really was excellent. The Rainbow Restaurant in
Pinetown, Durban - really good vibes.
They need more doctors and nurses as well as better administration. For two out of the seven days I spent there the theatres were without sterile drapes and their CTG machines (devices for monitoring the wellbeing of babies in utero, something we are without at Holy Cross) were out of paper. At least at Holy Cross, when there is an unwell mother or newborn, assuming things are not going off elsewhere, we can spend some time attending to the patient. For my colleagues at the maternity hospital, every patient is sick; many patients need close monitoring, which is nigh impossible in the current circumstances.
****
Rugged coastlines

I mentioned that I took two weeks off to attend caesarean section training. If you have paid any attention you may have noticed that I spent only 7 days of it at Hannah’s hospital. No, it is not that everyone works 3.5 day weeks, as good as that sounds. I spent the second half of week two with friends back in the Eastern Cape traversing the Wild Coast by foot. We walked 61km in four days, along rocky cliffs, expansive beaches and the occasional swollen river. There was sun, rain and lightening as well as a good bit of trudging through muddy paths in the darkness. The walk was from Coffee Bay to Port St John’s. We were joined by a dog whom we christened Pete. There was much talk of adoption of this loyal friend whom accompanied us for the four day hike. However, as quick as he came, he disappeared into the night as we slept at our final destination. Possibly, I hope, to find the next group of wayward hikers and escort them on their way.
Now I am back at Holy Cross and desperate for a wash. There is a distinct lack of water coming from the taps, so the patient’s will have to bear my bodily odour for a few more days. However, with some of the halitosis that gets dished out, I think it is a fair deal.

Expansive beaches - impressive facial hair too.

Biltong break.

Pete looking after some happy hikers






Wild Coast kids




Wild Coast kids enjoying my beard



The end of a very enjoyable walk