Saturday, May 30, 2009

Tour of Bor and assessment in Malek

The next day was our only full day in Bor, so we had to make the most of it. We started by meeting IMA's team leader in Jonglei, Dr. Makina, and the state level minister of health, whose name I honestly don't recall. Dr. Makina is an MD/MPH, and the IMA (International Medical Agency) is the most important health care player in SS right now (the Government of SS, or GOSS as the cool kids call it, is broken and broke, and a multi-donor trust fund is the only money available for public services). It was a very informative meeting, and we got a lot of historical and
current information about Jonglei, Bor and Malek. The census data is shaky at best. But they were able to outline the biggest challenges they face, and where they think opportunities for aid might lie. It was a useful meeting.

Aware of our tight schedule, we first set out with Dr. Benjamin to tour Bor Town Hospital. The hospital is a converted barracks, staggering to meet the needs of its population. The buildings are dilapidated, and a few have been abandoned due to asbestos or massive bat invasions. There are makeshift buildings, such as the surgical ward, which is literally a tent donated by MSF. Inside, the heat and stuffiness are sweltering. I was shocked that either surgeon or patient could survive an operation under such conditions, but Dr. Benjamin said nothing. As in almost all other resource poor medical settings, they do almost all operations under spinal anesthesia.

Just as the conditions of Juba Hospital made me understand the dire need for health care in the capital city of SS, so did the conditions of Bor Town Hospital. But I was also struck by the distinct recognition that these people are doing the best they can with the resources available to them. There is no funding for salaries, yet they have four midwives. Their budget is hardly worth mentioning, yet they have an x-ray machine and an ultrasound. They do antenatal care. They have a lab where they run tests, and they treat patients based on the results. They do the best they can with what they've got.

After the hospital tour, we set off for Malek, a half hour drive from Bor Town. In Malek, we surveyed a couple of potential building sites. The team favorite was hands-down the site near the Nile with the open grass field, where Deng envisions planting crops to feed the patients of our proposed clinic. We then had to introduce ourselves to the village elders, which was a drawn-out affair of seeking to understand and to be understood. From our side, Orin did an excellent job of
being gracious and diplomatic. On their side, it was helpful (if not encouraging) to hear their reservations about our promises (and whether we would fulfill them, or disappear). It was also nice to know that they acknowledge our work educating their refugee relatives in Kenya.

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