So I’ve been in Malawi for two weeks now. This past week was
my first of six weeks at Nkhoma Synod Hospital. One can find it on Google Maps.
It’s about 50 km northeast from the Chadabwa/Mitundu area I was working in as a
Peace Corps Volunteer. I have been and will be working mostly in the pediatric
ward at the hospital. We’ve had 80+ patients each day, with a turnover of about
20% each day due to new admissions, discharges, and deaths. This is an absurd
number of patients given that the staff is at most three nurses, two clinical
officers (somewhat similar to a physician’s assistant in the States), one
doctor for only half the day, and me and two other medical student who barely
know what the hell were doing. This is the maximum staff we have. Usually, most
of these people are either out in the parking lot talking with friends or
hiding somewhere thinking about how tired they are. But that’s a rant I’ll go
on a different day. Today, by briefly explaining three patients I worked with
this past week, I want to give you a picture of how bad the situation is here,
especially now as the rainàmosquitoesàmalaria ramps up.
I didn’t really take care of this first child because there
was nothing to do by the time she got to the hospital. She was about one to two
years old and suddenly developed malaria at home. The story I heard was that
the family lives in a very rural area on the outskirts of the hospital
catchment area. There’s a very basic health center near to there home, and when
the parents took the child there, the staff quickly told them to go to our
hospital because her illness was so severe. This is a distance of about 30 km
over muddy, washed out, hilly roads. Unfortunately, the health center’s
ambulance was broken. Then were told to get the child here on their own. This
time of year, most families have miniscule cash reserves. The yearly cycle of
cash flow from selling portions of one’s harvest reaches its nadir around this
time, and basic things like arranging rapid transportation to the referral
hospital become very difficult. The parents managed to scrounge up enough cash
to hire a motorbike to bring them to the hospital. This was the only motorbike
in the area, and apparently it had some problem so that it could only get up to
a maximum speed of 10 km/hr. On the steeper hills it lost power, and the mother
with child in hand had to get off and walk. About two thirds of the way to the
hospital, the motorbike completely broke down, and the mother had to carry the
child the rest of the way. By then, the child was seizing. By the time they
reached the gates of the hospital, the child was dead.
There was another child, a cute cubby little 4-year-old boy,
who I hadn’t seen until after he had been in the hospital for a few days. He
also had malaria, and it was confirmed that the parasite had gotten into his
brain (called cerebral malaria) on the second day of admission. Before I saw
him, he was seizing on and off for a few days and combative at times when
awake. The nurse had asked me to see him because he was acting strange after he
seemed to have recovered the previous 24 hours. I went over to his bed and saw
him sitting in his mother’s lap with her barely able to hold on to him as he
was flailing around and biting her at times. He was laughing at the same time, and
at first glance he just looked like your typical problematic toddler. I told
the mother that he looked much better and full of energy! She gave an awkward
laugh but then shook her head and briefly stated that he was acting very
strange. I watched him for a bit and realized that his eyes were darting all
over the place. He was calling out the names of people that weren’t there. He
was swatting at flies that weren’t there. A couple of the other clinicians and
I brainstormed what was wrong: HSV brain infection? Rabies? Psychotic episode?
We couldn’t figure anything out that day and couldn’t really settle him down.
The next morning one of the doctors saw him, and she immediately proposed the
idea that he’d simply lost all his vision. I flashed my penlight over his eyes
and he didn’t react at all. We ended up having the ophthalmologist come up and
take a good look at the retina of each eye. He confirmed our suspicion. We
concluded that he lost his vision due to the malaria infection in his brain.
Given that he is young and his brain is still developing, there is a chance
some of his vision will return, but most likely he will remain blind the rest
of his life. I was choked up as I broke this news to the family.
The saddest story for last: The doctor and I were seeing a
new patient. Again, this one had severe malaria (pretty much every patient we
admitted in the last week had malaria +/- other stuff) and looked pretty bad.
We were asking the mother about what was going on with the child, and I asked
her weather anyone else in the family had been sick recently. She offhandedly
said her husband died the day before. I’m fairly decent at Chichewa, but I
often mishear things, especially when people use words/phrases with double
meanings. I was surprised but what she said and thought maybe I was mishearing
her so I called over the nurse to make sure we were all on the same page. We
were understanding each other, and we quizzed her a bit more about the husbands
death to see if might be related at all to the child’s illness (for example,
did he have TB that he might have given the child?). It didn’t seem like he had
any type of contagious disease so we moved on trying to figure out how we were
going to treat this very sick child. Without going through all the details,
I’ll skip ahead to the next morning. Most days, the majority of the medical
providers at the hospital meet up at 7am for Morning Report. This entails
discussion about what happened on each ward overnight and maybe a brief lecture
on a certain topic from time to time. The clinical officer that was on the peds
ward overnight described how this child had declined quickly and passed away a
few hours prior. I can’t imagine how that women felt first loosing her husband
and then loosing her last-born child the next day.
At least one baby/child has died in the ward every day I’ve
been here. After living in Malawi for over three years and knowing how
dysfunctional things can be here, this doesn’t surprise me at all. It only
makes my angry.
The guesthouse I'm staying at, just up the hill from the hospital. I don't have any evidence yet, but I still think it's haunted. |
2 comments:
Sad yes but I am glad you are giving us a true picture of what you are dealing with. Remind yourself of your successes when the times get tough!
Overwhelming...i think of the modern medical advances we tend to take for granted...like basic immunizations... As angry as it makes us...we can channel that energy to push onward to help people and provide health care/education/hope. Blessed to have a compassionate and focused person like you making a positive difference. thank you for sharing.
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