Tuesday 15 July 2014

Exits & Ebola


At the end of the week in which we heard the news that the community health officer and three nurses from a health centre in a village just a few miles away from Segbwema had died from contracting the Ebola virus, we decided to give up our game of chicken against the onward progression of the epidemic of the dangerous virus that has now killed over 500 people in West Africa and return to the UK slightly earlier than planned. 
           Although, in part due to the continued expansion of the outbreak, more expertise and support now appears to be getting to where it needs to, in those first few weeks when cases were rapidly appearing in our district of Sierra Leone, the atmosphere felt very unsettled. In the days before we departed I had been alone at the hospital, with limited personal protective equipment (gloves and aprons) and my main source of information on new cases and deaths was through my friend Victor who owns a small bar in the village. 

While news of the outbreak quite quickly made it onto the headlines of the BBC world service with comments from the World Health Organization and Medicine Sans Frontiers, the reality on the ground felt very remote from a radio studio. At the time I had a patient (herself a healthcare worker) who worryingly had a fever that wasn’t resolving despite treatment for malaria and bacterial infections. However despite the increased media coverage, trying to get advice on how to ensure she was tested for haemorrhagic fevers including the Ebola virus was no simple task. After several unsuccessful attempts at contacting a surveillance officer I then had to personally find a motorcycle rider and pay them to take a blood sample to the laboratory in Kenema. The next day when I phoned the surveillance officer to chase up the result, I was a little concerned to say the least at his initial response of ‘what sample? I didn’t receive any sample...’ Thankfully several phone calls later I was able to establish the sample had been tested and was negative. Although undeniably our decision to leave was one based on self-preservation, and there is naturally a feeling of guilt about our friends and colleagues we left behind, at the time, flying blind against a virus with a mortality rate of up to 90%, with just a box of out of date latex gloves for protection, is something that instinctively felt like a bad idea.  

 Since being back in the UK although there have been on-going difficulties with communities not wishing to engage with the health services to prevent further spread of the disease (perhaps not unsurprising given that significant number of people in rural areas do not trust western medicines but rely on traditional healers), when I spoke to staff at the hospital a few days ago, I was relieved to hear that they had now received appropriate quantities of personal protective equipment and training and that all the staff members remained safe.

In the midst of a difficult few weeks at the hospital (both related to the outbreak and not) one joyful moment came when one of the hospital’s long serving nurses gave birth to a healthy baby boy. Despite looking ready to burst for some weeks she had continued working devoutly. On this particular Tuesday morning she was looking even more exhausted than usual. When she came to see me on the maternity ward after her shift had finished she confessed to me that her waters had broken the previous night but she thought she should come to work to do her morning shift first before seeing the midwife. After assessing her with the midwife, she finally succumbed to the fact that the time really had come when she needed to stop working. Thankfully she delivered a healthy baby boy later that night. The next morning I could see a moment of panic on her face before she realised I was joking when, after congratulating her, I said that we could give her the afternoon off to recover but could she work the night shift instead? It is a testament to her commitment as a nurse that she continued to care for her patients up to just hours before she needed a hospital bed herself.

Goodbyes were naturally difficult; perhaps most to my friend and colleague Tamba Missa, the medical superintendent who has run the hospital with or without support from the end of the civil war when he slept on the clinic floor for several months. As in all professional and personal relationships we have had our turbulent moments resulting from the frustrations or failure of a given situation but our connection both as doctors and friends has grown stronger over the months we worked and lived together.  The physical cooperation in surgery naturally lends itself to a sense of camaraderie and I will sorely miss those moments when we were jointly delivering a baby during a caesarean at midnight, but I will also greatly value the shared pleasure of seeing a complex unwell patient on the medical ward pull through as a result of pooled knowledge and experience. For me perhaps the defining moment when we became friends as well as colleagues was when he came running into my house saying he needed to hide from repeated groups of school children collecting funds for various projects who kept knocking on his door! Or perhaps when he confessed to me that his technique for avoiding shaking hands with some whose hygiene he wasn’t convinced by was to suddenly start pretending to search for his phone in his pocket; something that I had seen him do repeatedly and was always confused by!


I know that during our time at the hospital we have barely scratched the surface in beginning to deal with some of the difficulties the hospital and community faces in ensuring access to medical care; such problems and inequalities will take decades, if not generations to solve. However, I hope we have been able to leave some imprint with a few of the people we have had the opportunity to live and work alongside, as they have left their impression with us; the student inspired to pick up a book from the library shelf and then beaming with their certificate as they win an essay competition, the mother of a premature baby who brought her once tiny infant back to me in clinic healthy and smiling after months of kangaroo care (where the baby is held skin-to-skin almost continually), the community on the TB ward whose faces lit up when we brought a food package, the staff member who now knows how to deal with a woman who bleeds during her delivery, the small boy who turned up at the door every day from 7 ‘o’clock onwards to ask repeatedly if he could borrow one of the toy cars with his gentle persistence of the phrase ‘I play with car?’,  the simple pleasure of a shared Friday beer with my friend Victor or the mutual celebration after hours of sitting next to this laptop with the medical superintendent of him being able to send an email independently.  


Although the last year has brought with it many extraordinary experiences it is not something that can or should be packaged up as an entity to be left in a box as something to reflect on; there should be no convenient distinction between here and there, this year and the next, the privileged and the needy. Whilst pragmatic issues of careers, money and families lead us to re-integrate back to our lives in the UK our relationship with the hospital and with our friends will continue, all be it initially from a distance.


Thank you for reading and excusing (or highlighting) my mistakes over the last year.

Update 20th August 2014: Very sadly over the last month 5 members of hospital staff  including 4 nurses have lost their lives as result of the Ebola outbreak. 




Friday 30 May 2014

Who Pays?


Late on a Sunday afternoon as I wasted time negotiating how much of the hospital bill the relatives of a deteriorating critically unwell young man should pay before they could take their brother/son/nephew to another hospital, I felt a slightly younger, more idealistic version of myself, perhaps the one acknowledging the Hippocratic oath at his graduation, sitting on my shoulder, appalled at what I had become. How did I become the doctor discussing financial matters whilst my patient’s breathing problem worsened behind me? Albeit that the money would not be coming anywhere near my pockets, the picture does not sit well. Naturally the instinctive and immediately compassionate action is to say ‘Don’t worry about the bill, just get the patient as quickly as possible to wherever their chances of survival are highest’. And yet in a hospital whose primary source of income, and therefore long term survival for the benefit of its community, is dependent on the minimal fees its patients pay, non-payment of the bill may mean the hospital cannot afford to purchase the necessary medicines to treat, and pay its staff to care for, the next unwell patient who arrives. I have been witness to the reality of empty drug cupboards and have been aware of times when the staff were not paid their salaries for 3 months. The acceptance of absconding patients or part-payment of bills, whilst beneficial for individual patients and families, can have significant wider consequences for the hospital and its ability to fulfil its basic role. Very quickly the assessment of a plea not to pay the bill becomes less than straight forward (especially when your instincts tell you that a particular family probably does have the means to pay.) But how far do you go? I felt ashamed enough negotiating how much of the bill would be an acceptable amount; physically preventing them from leaving was inconceivable.
Some of the most unsettling conversations I’ve been part of, which usually occur in the night for some reasons, happen after a patient has died and relatives of the deceased begin to negotiate how much of the hospital bill should be paid before the hospital will release the body. To an outsider it may seem barbaric to have such pragmatic conversations in the moments after a relative’s death; a time we feel which should perhaps be reserved for grieving. However, the reality is that somehow, someway, healthcare provision has to be funded.  If society is not set up to pay collectively through taxation or insurance schemes and the government does not subsidise the hospital, sadly, in that moment, it appears that the financial burden rests with the father who has just lost their daughter in the middle of the night.
When I first arrived, I found the crude interface between money and treatment very difficult, somehow offended as money changed hands on the way to the operating theatre or before an intra-venous drip would be set up. Initially I tried to remain separated from the issue with the line of ‘I’m sorry, I’m only a visiting doctor, you’ll need to speak to someone else about the cost and the bill’ or ‘I don’t deal with the money, I just treat patients’. However, the clinical condition and care of a patient cannot be separated so easily from their financial state. This is seen in the daily collision of these two spheres: the dehydrated patient who can only afford one litre of intravenous fluids, the man with abdominal pain who can’t afford his stool test, the mother who puts off bringing her child to the hospital until it is too late for fear of the hospital bill (just over £7 for a child admission).  Aside from any ethical wish to withdraw from the battle lines of cash and treatment, when you find yourself alone on the ward in the night and being looked to by the nurse in charge to make an executive decision about whether a patient has paid enough to leave, very practically it becomes almost impossible not to engage with economic matters. Unfortunately, the equation of how to balance the need for hospital income against a grieving father’s request for his daughter’s body isn’t taught in medical school.
The hospital, quite rightly, has a policy of treating patients who need emergency care regardless of their immediate financial resources. Although this reduces delays and ensures the most unwell patients get treatment urgently, defining what constitutes an emergency case can be difficult. Illness is a spectrum not a discrete entity; a case of malaria treated early can often be resolved readily with tablets for 3 days, but if untreated can progress to severe malaria with coma and convulsions. At what point do we intervene? Do we have to let our patients become unconscious before we treat them?
Patients usually stay at the hospital until their hospital bill is paid. Collection of any monies after a patient has left is neither feasible nor practical. As a result patients may end up staying for prolonged periods of time at the hospital after they have recovered or, in the case of the maternity ward, delivered their baby, whilst they await their families to come to settle the bill. Yet, often this does not make economic or clinical sense. On Tuesday morning I sat with the midwife as we debated whether it was time to send one of the long stay maternity patients home. Although only a negligible amount of the bill had been settled, the longer she and her baby stayed in hospital, the more recurrent episodes of infection they developed, caught from other, less well, patients; a situation detrimental to both their health and the hospital’s budget with a steady depletion of antibiotic supplies in the pharmacy store. After a logical assessment, naturally she went home that afternoon. In retrospect perhaps we should have sent her home sooner but it sets a difficult precedent.   
A recent visitor to the hospital raved about an MSF (Medicin Sans Frontiers) hospital he had visited in another part of the country and how wonderful it was that the treatment was entirely free. Whilst the removal of such a financial burden unquestionably improves access to medical care for that specific local population, such interventions are only sustainable for the future if there is recognition by the community (whether small village, town or country) that they will need to invest in health facilities and staff. They can also exacerbate geographical inequalities. Although its humanitarian benefit is not in doubt, completely “free” treatment from NGOs (non-governmental organisations) may not help change the perception about the need for society to invest, at least in some capacity, in clinics and hospitals.
Notably, often it is not large sums of money that can make significant differences to the standard of care the hospital can provide. The start of the rainy season has brought with it an influx of young children with malaria and pneumonia to the paediatric ward. When combined with a relatively new cohort of inexperienced first year nursing students who provide most of the nursing care, not unsurprisingly, there has been episodic chaos. One of the most worrying concerns was that children did not appear to be getting the right medicine at the right time. Undoubtedly contributing to this problem was the fact that the medicines collected for each child were stored in old plastic boxes with cracked lids with the bed number written on a piece of tape stuck to the detachable lid (think ice-cream tub but given the climate I doubt this was their initial purpose). As a result, medicines often fell out, became misplaced, or worse still, the wrong lid got placed on the wrong tub and therefore the medicine for one patient was apparently allocated to a different bed. The solution, bought at the local market, was 20 new coloured plastic boxes with hinged lids and a permanent marker to label them. The cost: approximately 50 pence a box. The result: significantly less confusion and significantly more children getting the right medicine at the right dose and the right time.
Although the relationship between money and healthcare is undoubtedly less direct in the UK, with an excessively and unjustifiably over priced car park ticket probably causing the most financial irritation during a visit to an NHS hospital, many questions remain over the future of our health service, by whom it will be delivered and how it will be paid for. From my experience, front-line medical treatment and hard cash are a frightening combination and do not belong together at a patient’s bed side.  Our options appear to be to cherish and fund the NHS or get ready with your credit card details or insurance policy next time you need an ambulance.
The patient on that Sunday afternoon did travel on to another hospital, although I do not know his outcome. His family paid 80,000 Leones of his 250,000 Leones bill (£12 of a £38 bill) and the hospital made a loss; the money not even covering the cost of medicines used. The most difficult question for healthcare in the 21st century is as relevant in a small mission hospital as it is in government offices; Who pays?
Note: If you are considering an overseas medical job in rural Sierra Leone please click on the either of the links below for details about an exciting opportunity (Bursary available):
·         http://www.workingabroad.com/database/medical-doctor-nixon-memorial-hospital-segbwema-sierra-leone

Thursday 24 April 2014

"Yes, but aside from the hernia..."


6.29am. Hear a knock at the door. Greeted by a nursing student who hands me the chart of a new patient on the maternity ward. ‘Sister sent this chart for you to see the patient”. Try to establish from the student how unwell the patient is, whether any vital signs have been recorded and whether I can finish brushing my teeth. Student insists she is only the messenger and that ‘Sister said you should come’. Decide it’s too early in the day to give my nursing triage tutorial on the doorstep and head to maternity. Thankfully, the woman who is 30 weeks pregnant is not too unwell but has been feeling progressively worse with fevers, ‘generalised body pain’ (a favourite symptom which features in most patient’s complaints) and headache. I organise our limited panel of blood tests (blood count and a malaria test), commence her on treatment for malaria, advise the student to monitor her observations and after examining her, reassure the expectant mother that her baby’s heart rate is healthy.  
8.24am. Drop into lab to check on the progress of the arrival of HIV tests as since the previous night current stocks have reduced to zero preventing any testing or blood transfusion.
8.30am. Arrive at the outpatient department and catch up with the other junior doctor from the UK.
8.43am. Telephone medical superintendant to see if we should start the ward round without him. Informed that (at short notice) he and the sole midwife for the hospital have been called to attend a training workshop in Bo (Sierra Leone’s 2nd city) for 3 days. Advised to start ward round without him and continue for next 3 days.
8.57am. Maternity ward. Thankfully, no women are currently in labour and the woman from earlier is starting to look brighter.  Good news from a lady who had a caesarean, whose scar, which was infected, has now fully healed and her baby who weighed a meagre 1.7Kg at birth has now breached the 2Kg mark and is breast feeding well.
9.40am. Children’s ward. Together with the other doctor, weigh up our options for a child admitted with sever malaria and anaemia who needs a blood transfusion. Despite explaining to the family that we cannot offer safe blood transfusion currently until the HIV tests arrive, they feel there is no option for them to travel to another hospital. Telephone the lab again. Informed that someone is picking the tests up from Kenema as we speak. Maintain the child with fluids and continue treatment in the interim. Continue to see the remaining patients on the ward and also have to give a lengthy reassurance to a mother whose child is happily running wild around the ward that, unlike the first child, her little boy would not benefit from a blood transfusion.
10.32am. Start to get exasperated with patient on Men’s medical ward, whose sole response to questions in any language is that he has a hernia. On examination although he does in fact have a small reducible unproblematic hernia, more worryingly his heart rate is twice as high as normal, he is incredibly dehydrated, struggling to breath, anaemic and in heart failure. Try to prevent outward signs of further infuriation with relatives who, despite the obvious visual malady of his critical condition, also voice the only problem to be ‘hernia’ for 10 years(!) and request that we schedule surgery. Explain that his hernia is not currently the most pressing concern and we need to initiate emergency medical treatment.  
10.58am. Start seeing outpatients. Usual mix of patients; one group of whom are very well and most of my time is spent convincing them that they do not need injections or lab tests despite their insistent requests, or trying to advise both patients and nursing students that malaria is not a symptom but an illness. The second group of patients are those whom appear pleasantly unaware of quite how unwell they are and most of my time is spent negotiating with them and their relatives on the need to be admitted to hospital. Admit 3 patients to the ward; a 12 year old boy with a massively swollen abdomen, tense with accumulated fluid now making it difficult for him to lie flat or breathe, an infant with malnutrition and malaria, and one young lady, very unwell with suspected TB.
12.14pm Check in on the lab to find out that happily the HIV tests have arrived enabling blood transfusion to be organised.
2.47pm. Breathe a momentary sigh of relief as the last outpatient card on my desk is duly handed back to their owner and they are instructed towards the pharmacy. Try to not look disheartened/anxious/confused when 30 seconds later, two members of the Sierra Leone army walk into my office and request for me to see one additional outpatient who, unfortunately for him, has a rather unequivocal diagnosis; very unusually, they have brought me a corpse. Thankfully they do not have expectations of resurrection but simply need a medical doctor to confirm that the person was, in fact, deceased. For a moment I think they are going to bring him straight in to the consulting room but they agree to take their vehicle and the body round to the room we use as a temporary mortuary next to the men’s medical ward to be examined.
3.12pm. Conduct a superficial scan of the wards and check on the earlier admissions.
4.00pm. Walk down to the nursing school classroom to teach the final year nursing students on (ironically) safe blood transfusion, including the prerequisites tests required and a separate lecture on the safe use of antibiotics. Correct various assumptions about the role of antibiotics. The prize for most unusual applications goes to one female student who is confident that antibiotics should be taken every month after a woman has her menstrual period in order to ‘cleanse her’.  I wonder why we have problems with antibiotic resistance…
6.04pm. Called to the delivery room to assess a woman in labour.  
6.24pm. Telephone my Nan in the UK to wish her well for her cataract operation.
6.33pm. Supervise the delivery of a new healthy baby boy. Almost miss the key moment when his shoulder get stuck due to the above telephone call (whoops). Nevertheless, new mother and child do very well.     
10.57pm. Called to Men’s ward to assist the other doctor with a young man admitted vomiting large amounts of blood due to a suspected bleed inside his stomach. Manage to place a line in his arm to give him intravenous fluids and, after establishing which family members had a compatible blood group, several units of donated blood.
2 am. Called back to Men’s ward. Greeted by a policeman in the middle of the ward and a semi-conscious patient at the other end of the ward with a trail of blood connecting the two. Informed by policemen that man was seen drinking excessively earlier, then possibly got into a fight with a ‘friend’ and was found semi-rousable beside the main road with blood seeping from the back of his head. Begin to assess the patient who becomes more alert, starts thrashing violently, swears at everyone on the ward and then vomits profusely. Thank the policeman for his kind delivery and begin to think I have been transported back to a certain south east London A&E where I treated not dissimilar patients. Once he is slightly more amenable to assistance I give him some intravenous fluids, clean his head wound and place a temporary dressing. Realise that the plastic apron has not been especially effective at protecting my clothes and shoes from the patient’s bodily fluids.
2.38am. Return to house. Wash blood and non-descript bodily fluids off clothes and shoes and climb back in to bed.
Shameless advert: If this sounds like fun, the hospital is about to begin searching for and recruiting medical doctors. Details to follow soon. Please note, (naturally) the post will not be compliant with the European Working Time Directive.

Update May 2014. Please see links below for details of medical post.
 ·         http://healthmattersinsegbwema.blogspot.com/p/medical-opportunity-advertisement.html
·         http://www.workingabroad.com/database/medical-doctor-nixon-memorial-hospital-segbwema-sierra-leone



Friday 28 March 2014

Tarmac & Progress

View looking down to Segbwema from outside the hospital
in  2014
View looking down to Segbwema from outside the hospital
in  2010
 For the first time in Segbwema’s recent history I was able to walk down to the town tonight (for the necessary therapeutic cold beer) on a smooth tarmac road. After the months of construction and dust the highway connecting Kenema and Segbwema is almost finished. In a place where progress since the end of its civil conflict can often seem agonisingly slow, such pivotal developments in infrastructure are worthy of celebration. Improved access to Kenema, Sierra Leone’s 3rd city and on to Freetown should optimistically act as a catalyst for development in the area, improving trade, increasing the availability of services and supplies and will hopefully make the town a more appealing place to live and work, attracting future healthcare workers.  Whilst one of the downsides of increased human travel is certainly highlighted by this week’s Ebola virus outbreak which, according to the World Service, has now possibly edged across from Guinea and Liberia into Sierra Leone, improved connectivity with the outside world should be fruitful for Segbwema and the hospital. My only other lingering doubt is whether the number of road accidents caused by the poor visibility and uneven gravel will be replaced by road accidents caused by motorists over-zealously increasing their speed on the novel flat black surface; only time will tell.
This morning the Anti-Corruption Commission held a workshop for staff and students at the hospital. Sadly corruption remains endemic in Sierra Leone (as no doubt it does in many other countries) extending from million dollar under the table deals at the top of the tree, right down to the grass roots of dishonest primary school teachers expecting a few thousand leones (£1-10) from their pupils to ensure they get the right marks in their exams. Realistically it may take a decade, or more likely a generation, for corruption to be removed from Sierra Leone’s way of life. Nevertheless this transition has to start somewhere and the workshop and unexpectedly uplifting talks this morning focusing on the need for positive role models and prevention of corruption seemed a reasonable place to begin.
When I think about Sierra Leone’s recovery and development I remember a patient I once discussed with a neurology consultant as a student. The patient was an 18 year old who had suffered a traumatic brain injury when he had driven home intoxicated with drugs and alcohol and had a head-on collision with a truck. When I first met him he had been in a rehabilitation hospital for 6 months gradually re-learning how to speak and how to walk. The consultant made the salient point that in addition to the challenges faced by having to regain the basic human functions of communicating and moving, his path to integration back into society was made more challenging by his starting point. He was not a high flyer from a supportive family but had dropped out of school at 16 with no qualifications, been unemployed for 2 years prior to the injury and been struggling with drink and drug problems.  Had he not had the serious car accident, his path to a productive independent adult life would still have been challenging; with the brain injury the magnitude of task increased several fold.  Sierra Leone was certainly no high-flying middle class patient with a supportive family when civil war broke out. Decades of one party rule, corruption, political mismanagement and rampant borrowing had resulted in a slow grinding poverty with erosion of education and economic growth. Whilst I’m sure that if integrity was a value slightly more endemic through both the governmental and private sectors certain gains could be achieved more quickly,  in many ways it is perhaps understandable that some areas of development are not as far forward as we would hope or expect giving their starting point.
Another first this month in Segbwema’s recent history was having a hospital staffed by a grand total of four doctors (possibly a record since the hospital re-opened) thanks to a very productive 3 week visit from a semi-retired GP and his wife. He, like me, had visited the hospital 3 years ago and it was heartening to hear him talk and reiterate the developments that had occurred since then. From surgery happening in a side room between two wards to a rehabilitated and functioning operating theatre, from muddled notes to organised patient charts and from often scantily filled medical cupboards to a well stocked pharmacy. Undeniably, the difficulties and challenges the hospital and community face remain huge and often seem insurmountable. The daily grind can make it hard to appreciate the long term progress that has occurred but perhaps it is important to stand back once in a while to see that gradual positive shift of circumstances and situations. 
On the gardening front the quick grow lettuce leaves were looking very promising until their progress was permanently halted when they were squashed by the bottom of a certain 2 year old girl who was playing exuberantly with a toy car outside the front door. I’m sure there’s a metaphor there somewhere or perhaps I should simply give up on home grown produce.

Friday 21 February 2014

Tears Over Ten Pounds


Although I had scribbled down a few thoughts to write here before we left Sierra Leone for a short break to the UK in January, I somehow felt I would be committing literary fraud had I uploaded such ramblings via an ultra-fast broadband connection in London.  Now back in Segbwema, sitting with my head torch and the frustration of watching the percentage on my laptop battery rapidly reduce as the mobile internet modem repeatedly flashes ‘unable to connect’, I’m beginning to think perhaps my need for authenticity was over-valued.
Having returned less than 2 weeks ago, the memory of sitting in a pub near London Bridge certainly feels more than a 6 hour flight away. Incidentally the said pub was the place where some of the events of the past 6 months caught up with me and I did the almost inexcusable act for a (relatively) grown man of leaking a tear or two in public. The barman may have ascribed my sadness to the realisation that a ten pound note is no longer deemed sufficient funds to guarantee the purchase of two pints in London, and whilst this almost constitutes a valid reason for not returning to the UK, my thoughts were elsewhere, with a patient I hoped I could have done more for. Still I’m sure we proved a talking point for the couple on an awkward first date next to us.
Whilst there were many welcoming familiar faces to return to at the hospital, sadly one of those that was not among them was Evelyn, the lady we were caring for on the TB ward, who, after several months of ups and downs (and breaks in her TB medication) had sadly passed away.  Another loss to report, although of several thousand magnitudes less significance, is that of the final tomato plant grown from seed in August which finally succumbed to the January heat. Perhaps if I was a detached journalist I’d feel comfortable making some comparison about the odds being stacked against both the tomatoes and my patient in a difficult harsh environment, but when that patient is also a person whose daily interactions and exchanges considerably brightened up your day, such comparisons seem coarse and inappropriate for a very human situation. Initially I thought about cutting my losses altogether with my micro- agricultural endeavours, or else trying to grow something slightly more instantaneous like cress. However, after remembering that I’ve never been one to see the point of cress, I’ve settled on quick grow lettuce as the middle way. (Updates to follow…)
Despite perhaps some of the aforementioned gloomy news there are signs of progress at the hospital and much to be looking forward to. The hospital is functioning reasonably with access to essential medicines and happily another junior doctor with an interest in paediatrics arrived with us at the end of January, increasing our medical staffing by 50%! The maternity ward is reassuringly full and the proportion of women with new babies in cots at the end of their beds is the highest I’ve ever seen, including twins that arrived a couple of nights ago. The number of children at Janna’s impromptu  ‘door step’ school seems to be growing by the day (sometimes it can be a challenge to get to the door as you have to wade through a mass of young bodies lying drawing on the floor) and the chunky chalks we brought back have been an instant success with the floor and walls outside our house now being covered with colourful letters, numbers and pictures which certainly makes for a prettier sight than the remnants of the rebel's ‘RUF’ graffiti that despite being over 10 years old, still remain.
Now all we need is that broadband connection…..