Thursday, 24 May 2012
day 10
Sadly my last day. We still don't have any data back from the labs - not surprising since having to process 72 samples can't be easy.
Ward round was fab as it was led by Dr Marcano who is a brilliant "internista" and took great histories and did some great teaching as he went on to illustrate the point that the history generally gives away the diagnosis. Which is probably the most useful thing I can think of, that a student should be taught, if nothing else. It doesn't take a genius to take a good history.
There weren't any new patients today, but I did spend the rest of the day doing about 10 semi-structured interviews, which was both tiring and interesting. Its mad how you can get by with spanish as basic as mine!
Ward round was fab as it was led by Dr Marcano who is a brilliant "internista" and took great histories and did some great teaching as he went on to illustrate the point that the history generally gives away the diagnosis. Which is probably the most useful thing I can think of, that a student should be taught, if nothing else. It doesn't take a genius to take a good history.
There weren't any new patients today, but I did spend the rest of the day doing about 10 semi-structured interviews, which was both tiring and interesting. Its mad how you can get by with spanish as basic as mine!
day 9
Yesterday was Fab - long long ward round - about 5 hours long, then a bit of clinic.
And lots of great cases.
And lots of great cases.
A case of Myiasis, and probable neurocysticercosis, and lots of toxoplasmosis as usual. Oh and a girl with an oculogyric crisis. Still don't know exactly what the precipitant for hers was.
Day 8 - dyspepsia
Sadly I started day 7 feeling nauseous after breakfast and throwing up just after getting out of Douglas' car. Not a nice feeling.
It took me a while to put dos and dos together; day 8 I felt like crap and like my skin and throat were on fire - yes it was the deaded doxycycline. My trusty, budget, friend that has kept me malaria free for all these years at a bargain basement price no longer agrees with me, and gave me oesophagitis and skin hypersensitivity.
I spent the day in bed and have tried omeprazole (freely available over the counter here along with most prescription meds) which is doing the trick so far. No more voms and far less heartburn
It took me a while to put dos and dos together; day 8 I felt like crap and like my skin and throat were on fire - yes it was the deaded doxycycline. My trusty, budget, friend that has kept me malaria free for all these years at a bargain basement price no longer agrees with me, and gave me oesophagitis and skin hypersensitivity.
I spent the day in bed and have tried omeprazole (freely available over the counter here along with most prescription meds) which is doing the trick so far. No more voms and far less heartburn
Tuesday, 22 May 2012
Day 1 - hospital Manuel tovar Nunez
I had the good fortune of getting just 4 hours sleep before my first day which was also my birthday. Well worth it though -
Ward rounds start at 7am which makes sense given how hot it gets here.
The hospital was much like a district hospital in the UK, with excellent availability of drugs including most antiretrovirals which are all free.
My ward round had a heavy Toxoplasmosis theme to it - very common out here and usually treated with septrin as it's hard to get hold of sulfadiazine and pyrimethamine.
CMV is also something far commoner here and readily treated if suspected.
It's amazing how with more and more patients on HAART we are seeing very little CNS related admissions in the UK compared with when I started as an FY2.
Ward rounds start at 7am which makes sense given how hot it gets here.
The hospital was much like a district hospital in the UK, with excellent availability of drugs including most antiretrovirals which are all free.
My ward round had a heavy Toxoplasmosis theme to it - very common out here and usually treated with septrin as it's hard to get hold of sulfadiazine and pyrimethamine.
CMV is also something far commoner here and readily treated if suspected.
It's amazing how with more and more patients on HAART we are seeing very little CNS related admissions in the UK compared with when I started as an FY2.
Tuesday, 15 May 2012
Monday, 14 May 2012
It's 1am. Just arrived at my amazing hotel, paid for by my hospital's in house charity, the St Stephen's Aids Trust. Thank you. Dr Arias, his wife and daughter came to pick me up and told me first that Venezuela is a relaxed country unlike Spain (mm hmm) and I need to loosen up, and instead of saying thank you to Mrs Arias for the lift, they just say it with "un besito". Great I thought, I love relaxed.
Then the bombshell. "Pues, Farhad, yo vendre a cogerte las 6.30 ...". Relaxed, and 6.30am ward rounds... don't quite go together. Happy birthday Farhad ;-) better get to bed.
Farhad
Then the bombshell. "Pues, Farhad, yo vendre a cogerte las 6.30 ...". Relaxed, and 6.30am ward rounds... don't quite go together. Happy birthday Farhad ;-) better get to bed.
Farhad
The hidden curriculum goes to the Orinoco delta
I am sat in the departures lounge of Maiqetia Domestic Airport in
Caracas, awaiting a flight to a town on the edge of the Orinoco Delta called
Maturin.
My brief was to go "have fun". Seriously.
My boss, Dr Mark Nelson, met one of my colleagues here, a while
back at a conference on Margarita Island, and then in Peru, where they were
were awed by his presentation. A doctor called Dr Arias approached him and
mentioned that a local tribe called the Warao, who live in the delta, had an
abnormally high prevalence of HIV, Hep B and Hep C triple infection.
I just met Mara, one of my contacts here in Caracas, who has been
instrumental in putting together this "SpR exchange" and apart from
equipping me with the knowledge required to be safe and get by in Venezuela
(this is no Magalluf), has also insisted that if I like drinking cervezas, I
will have a great time.
So why exactly am I here?
Well, since my days as a medical student, I've always wondered why clever doctors don't talk to clever anthropologists much. I met one of the cleverest, in my opinion, on elective and decided that culture and health are pretty much inseparable and that trying to improve health outcomes without an appreciation for the culture is simply futile in most cases.
Well, since my days as a medical student, I've always wondered why clever doctors don't talk to clever anthropologists much. I met one of the cleverest, in my opinion, on elective and decided that culture and health are pretty much inseparable and that trying to improve health outcomes without an appreciation for the culture is simply futile in most cases.
Many people know about Venezuela's recent past - Chavez's fiercely
socialist stance and fiery relationship with their big neighbour the USA. It's
oil wealth. Some know that Chavez's policies towards social inclusion and the
health and welfare of minorities have been commendable, in my opinion. Fewer
(myself included) know that this country has a national health service that is
committed to providing free health care and at present can and does provide
care for HIV, Hepatitis, Oncological illnesses and much more, that many other
nations struggle with.
So the big questions is, when a country has the motivation and the resources to tackle some of this planet's most perplexing problems, why then are we not reaching those who need us? And more to the point, why are the better known more simple killers such as diarrhoeal illness and malaria, still killing scores of people here?
So the big questions is, when a country has the motivation and the resources to tackle some of this planet's most perplexing problems, why then are we not reaching those who need us? And more to the point, why are the better known more simple killers such as diarrhoeal illness and malaria, still killing scores of people here?
I recently read a book called the 10 day MBA, which took me back
to a presentation I gave when I was 18, talking about why certain
religious/ethnic communities are in decline whilst others are flourishing. I
remember I started my trying to define the problem and the question. Little did
I know then that that was exactly what most MBAs teach when employing problem
solving strategies. This is actually a very useful tool to use, when faced with
any problem.
So I asked myself, what is the question I am here to answer. The
truth is, I don't quite know as yet. All I know is that on a google and medline
search, there is very little data regarding the health of the Warao people.
I have potentially only a few
days in the field, its best to ask the people, or "stakeholders" what
they think. Drawing on the health needs assessment my group performed as a part
of our diploma in tropical medicine last year in Pangani, Tanzania, I've
decided to conduct some semi-structured interviews asking the following:
1) what do you perceive to be the main health problems here?
2) What do you perceive to be the solutions you need to these problems?
3) what do you perceive to be the barriers that exist at present to achieving solutions to these problems?
2) What do you perceive to be the solutions you need to these problems?
3) what do you perceive to be the barriers that exist at present to achieving solutions to these problems?
I think a cross-section of stakeholders including health providers
and users would be ideal, as would various community leaders.
I would then like to liaise with supervisor Dr Arias, here, in
Maturin, and ask what the actual main health problems, solutions and barriers
are, using data from his practice.
I am sure this plan with evolve, but I think one thing to bear in
mind is that whilst it may be very convenient to try and focus in on a
perceived area such as "cultural barriers to health seeking
behaviour" this may in fact be a distraction from the real issue, which
may be that the tribe's ethnicity and culture may in fact have little impact on
their risk factors for acquiring blood borne viruses such as HIV and Hepatitis
B and C.
***
So lets go back to the problem
solving methodology. I originally learnt it years ago as follows:
1) What actually is the problem / question?
- Is it really a problem?
- Can it be broken down?
- Can it be broken down?
- Can we analyse the problem further?
2) What are the possible solutions?
3) Implement a solution
4) Evaluate the solution - did it work? what have we learned from
it
5) is the problem still what we thought it was?
***
So as I sit here in Caracas awaiting my flight to Maturin, I would
like to hypothesise that the problem statement is simply:
"Individuals in the Warao tribe have been noted to have
triple infection with HIV, Hep B and Hep C."
I would then like to analyse it further
- what is the background rate of each infection in the
country/region/ethnic group?
- does the ethnic group span national boundaries ?
- what do we estimate to be the uptake of testing and what is the undiagnosed
burden?
- how are we investigating and are our tests appropriate?
- who are we reaching / not reaching eg due to linguistic and physical barriers (50% of Warao don't speak any Spanish)
- who are we reaching / not reaching eg due to linguistic and physical barriers (50% of Warao don't speak any Spanish)
- is the distribution equal in all sexes / age groups / occupations
/ social groups
and then to the interesting bits:
If this phenomenon is real and significant, what are the potential
causes:
- cultural?
- behavioural?
- linked to economic / social / political factors (ie is it
structural)?
[interesting point - read Paul Farmer's definition of
"structural violence"]
My flight is about to depart, I shall return to this soon!
F
F
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