Sunday morning was spent at the genocide memorial museum and
each visit there provokes a new thought, the story of a young man who had only
fellow students to invite to his wedding as he was the sole survivor from parents , siblings, aunts , uncles ,cousins
neighbours and childhood friends, was chilling.
Sunday pm Emmanuelle drove us 2.5 hrs to Sorwathe (society
of Rwandese and the commercialisation of tea) tea plantation guest house. A tea
processing factory set up by an American for the local tea growers to process
their leaves near to their fields. A fair trade co-operative. The last 18km of
our journey took an hour along unmade roads through a sea of tea plantations;
it is a spectacular and peaceful place on earth but very bumpy to get too.
The plantation manager drove us the 5 km to the hospital on
Monday, it is a 4 year old state of the art hospital with few patients and even
fewer staff. Rwanda is short of doctors, Gilbert the 27 year old medical
director told us there were no doctors left after the 1994 genocide and the
country now has 80 doctors graduate per year , they hope one day the hospital
will be fully staffed and utilised. The old joke about doctors and policeman
looking younger is a reality here and mentorship for the medical teams here is vital,
one cannot book learn experience.
We undertook a very productive ward round
with the new consultant (old at 29 - See pictures below) and he was very receptive to ideas of
palliative care needs, not ordering
investigations that will not affect management, looking at patients
holistically and keeping an open mind , he confessed to finding it very
difficult to tell people there is nothing more he can do – he is right. He does
not have the advantage of team support as we do at MSH.
Today we have a full day teaching the home based care
workers who are coming to the end of their 4 month theoretical training, which
is followed by 2 months of practical work, so in true style last evening was
spent busily preparing slides whilst swatting mosquitos!! The first half of the
day has gone well though and we have found some wifi access which is pretty
limited here so who knows when the next instalment will come!