Through the eyes of a Rwandan doctor

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I worked with a Rwandan doctor in Liberia recently. Partners in Health (PIH) has sent trained Haitian doctors to Rwanda, and trained them to train health professionals in Liberia. It is a South-South capacity building attempt that is inspiring. I met a Rwandan doctor, who was around college age at the time of the genocide in Rwanda. He said he just kept having this thought in his mind “How is genocide possible? How is it possible?” He was suffering to wrap his mind around how his fellow country men could commit such heinous crimes. He searched everywhere for answers, he wanted existential answers and joined a seminary. (more…)

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Pride and Pericardiocentesis

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There are no paintings on the walls in the hospitals I have worked at in the capital of Liberia.  The bareness of the walls parallels the limited equipment I have on hand.   Listening to some of these patients, or looking at their X-rays without the benefit of modern technology, I get the feeling I am seeing pathology in its most extreme form – the way people saw it when the diseases we now treat routinely in the West were first discovered. Listening to the sandpaper sound of one man’s pericardial rub, caused by fluid moving around the heart muscle from an infection or cancer, I think, “Oh! That’s why we call it a ‘rub!’”  Sometimes the challenges of this work, such as helping a grandmother survive a simple asthma attack, are rewarding.   Other times my co-workers and I face the horror of losing a two year-old before we have even made a diagnosis. (more…)

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