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Showing posts from November, 2022

Na mbage ti kota ngu ti Oubangui [On the banks of the Oubangui River]

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  After 4 months in Bambari - OMG Bangui looks like a massive bustling metropolis!  I am agape at the stocked shelves of the "Bangui Mall" which is a fancy department store featuring a well stocked supermarket on the first floor.  Prices are somewhat crazy but if you can find it at Safeway or Walgreens, you can find it at the Bangui Mall. I walk from one NGO residence to another which is allowed in daylight hours.  To my left, just 100 yards away - the Oubangi.   That's Democratic Republic of Congo on the other side of the river.  Nice to see it, even if the bustling part of the waterfront is elsewhere.  A few guys eating lunch next to their dugout canoe to my left (not pictured.)  My plane leaves for Richmond VA then NJ in three days, with me on it as long as I COVID PCR negative on Monday (why is a negative PCR needed to leave the country?  because!)  I will return in time for December 1 in Bangui - the national holiday commemorating the declaration of the Republic.  Th

Mbi gwe ti kiri - girisa mbi ape-o! (I'm leaving but will return; don't forget me!)

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  Great run over two weeks - zero deaths in the PICU.  I am perhaps jinxing things as there are one or two kids I hope to see tomorrow morning but would not surprise me if they don't make it.  Today two little kids out - home! - after long and complicated stays, the moms kind of bonded because they were the longest residents, seeing the other kids come and go.        More important, I finally got a yes from boss's boss for some projects, "I will support you" - a first.  Maybe I can get some real improvements started (not expecting to complete anything) of the many things pediatricians and visiting experts have been writing about for years, without anything actually getting accomplished.  And, most important - Thanksgiving!  I leave post in two days.  The trip from Bambari to Bangui to Paris to Atlanta to Richmond - few days there - to New Jersey -1 day there - to Paris to Bangui to Bambari will make 16 days away from the Hospital of which 5 days will be in US.  Worth

Asara ye ape (It doesn't matter - Sango). Miwali jam (I have awakened in peace - Fulani)

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We exceeded one week with no pediatric deaths.  I do not want to jinx it, but still cannot resist celebrating our collective success, or good luck, or who knows what.  I am very lucky to spend every day in a place that is just so rewarding - the peds icu.  Because, beyond that. . . Looking towards pediatrics from the Peds ICU room walkway Pediatrics building ramp under construction - thank you NGO "Humanity and Inclusion."  And yes that young man has elaborate external fixator emerging from his fractured right arm.      I am now halfway-ish through my contract.  I have read the reports of the visiting experts, and my predecessors, who have revealed much to me by all the documents they leave on the laptop we pass down one pediatrician to the next.  The recommendations for meaningful improvement are the same, over and over.  I decided to see what my predecessor did, and why it yielded little to no lasting benefit, then try to move the ball down-field a little by going at the pr

Mami Wata anzi go ti azo (Mami Wata steals men's voices)

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     My European/American expat colleagues did not know about Mami Wata.  This (usually white, blond) female spirit lives within bodies of water, from which she can emerge to . . . well, it depends whom you ask, but it's usually not good.  In any case, she causes many problems here.  Back in Peace Corps days I recall that the fish-farming volunteers were challenged by reluctance of Central Africans to sleep next to their fish ponds to prevent fish theft, because of the risk of Mami Wata (knowledgeable readers feel free to correct me).  Also, when I briefly visited the hospital in my Peace Corps town of Berberati while in medical school,  the second most frequent diagnosis in the internal medicine ward was possession by Mami Wata (these were young men who spent several days catatonic, after which the curse lifted.)  The topic arose when I asked about the danger she might pose to fisherman in the nearby river (thankfully there are few Mami Wata in the Ouaka River near Bambari!)  The