Today I make this blog entry from MURHEC (Mbarara University
Referral Hospital Eye Center). This is
Tuesday afternoon, but our patients started arriving on Sunday, shortly after
lunch. We had 50 patients from Ishaka
and Bwambara arrive on Sunday and another 16 from Rukungiri yesterday.
On Monday, we were able to examine all of the
patients and complete 18 cataract surgeries.
It was a long day as we finally got done about 7:30pm. It was all worth it when, this morning, the
eye patches were removed, and there were 18 happy patients!
Today, we have completed all of the 18 post op exams and taken
in an additional 14 patients from Rukungiri.
The operating room has been humming.
They are not done yet, but there were 32 operations scheduled for
today. I suspect that we will have about
25 surgeries on Wednesday. Five of those
surgeries will be children under general anesthesia. One of those will be Phiona. Phiona is a six year old girl that I mentioned
in a blog after we had been to Bwambara.
She is a beautiful girl with a huge smile. I have some initial good news. After being concerned that she might have a
cancer that was causing her L eye to protrude, it is now felt to be related to
a hemangioma. A hemangioma is a
collection of blood vessels that form a tumor, but it is non-malignant and can
usually be treated with medicine. Her
procedure tomorrow will be to take biopsies to confirm the hemangioma
diagnosis. Please keep her in your prayers
and I will let you know when I hear biopsy results.
When our team was in SW Uganda in December of 2015, we were
surprised to find out that there was only one functional CT scanner in the that
whole section of the country. That
scanner was at a local private hospital.
The scans were not horribly expensive, but really not accessible for
most Ugandans in this region. Then when
we arrived on this trip, we found out that the functional CT scanner was no
longer functioning! So the closest place
to get a test, that we consider routine, is a 5 hour drive away. The CT scanner in the government hospital remains
broken and I understand that they are in a dispute with the person they bought
the machine from about who should pay to fix it. Meanwhile, many physicians are trying to care
for patients in a way that has not been required in some time.
This whole scenario of helping people get eye services and
the trouble with the CT scanners got me thinking about how we, in the US, have
an Excess of Access to medical care. We
can get x-rays, labs, ultrasounds, CT scans, MRIs, etc. just about any day of
the week. To that end, our medical
business is built around convenient access to medical care. We as medical patients/consumers have almost
grown to expect this convenient access. I
don’t guess that I have any great nuggets of wisdom regarding this issue except
that I encourage you not to take the medical care and the access to it for
granted it. It is truly a blessing that
we have as Americans.
I think that we will be busy here at least through Thursday
and possibly into Friday.
Just a glimpse ahead.
We will be heading to Jinja on Sunday after church. We will go to Jamil’s village of Pallisa on
Monday for a school screening and then host a general medical clinic in our
friend, Pastor Henry’s, church on Tuesday.
We will keep you informed of how things are going.
This is what we Due!
Jay