Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Clinic pictures


These are some pictures taken by Sophy, one of my fellow residents of clinic. On the left is me leading the first ever journal club (a review of a journal article - we talked about one regarding circumcision and reduced risk of HIV transmission) for the clinical officers at FACES.


Below is one of the exam rooms in the tents. Until one month ago this is where all patients were seen. While I was there we moved into the new cement building (with ceiling fans!), but we would still see patients in the tents when things got too crowded inside. Although in general the clnicians loved the new cement building (see below), they did miss the ease of getting a second opinion from their colleagues when they were only separated by a bit of canvas.

Masai Mara

I left Kisumu at the end of April to travel around Kenya. I joined a great group from Holland, two of whom had also been working in Kisumu for NGO's. Not only did we have a great time, I now know how to say "Look, elephant!" in both Dutch and Swahili.

Finally, I thought, traveling would be so easy - no matatus to squeeze myself into, no chickens as fellow passengers, just a nice safari van. But part of me was not so surprised when, about three hours, into our trip, I saw smoke oozing out of the engine (which is located under the front seats, so smoke blows right onto the passengers.) Our guide's initial response was - "Oh, just open the window and it won't bother you." Ummm. yeah. Luckily we stopped before actual flames erupted from the engine. And so 10 hours later and lots of quality time spent in the not-so-booming metropolois of Narok (the town just outside the Masai Mara preserve), we were rescued by a new car and fabulous driver, Julius, who would become our best friend over the next ten days as we negotiated mud puddles and night drives through herds of elephants.

So we arrived in the Masai Mara, one of the most beautiful areas of wild life preserve in Eastern Africa, just before dusk. We got stuck in mud for the first time just outside a Masai village where a large group had gathered to raise money to send one of their children to school. They were more than happy to welcome the mzungus (and their shillings) into the gathering. The Masai dress distinctively in red blankets (to scare off animals) and elaborate bead work on their necks, through their ears, on their wrists. They loved seeing their pictures on our digital cameras. The woman holding the camera is Janneke, who is a fourth year medical student in Holland, currently working at the CDC in Kisumu doing tuberculosis research.

After being pushed and dragged out of the mud by the very helpful Masai we continued bumping along the roads as night fell over the Masai Mara. The area is undeveloped and incredibly beautiful and much more so seen by the light of the full moon. Unfortunately this makes it difficult to see the road and it wasn't long before we were stuck again. Although we seemed to be in the middle of a totally empty plain, we were soon surrounded by a group of Masai who said they were out hunting lions. Makes being outside of your safari van at night a little more exciting. After trying unsuccessfully to push our van out of the mud, we soon gave up and had far more fun with the Masai dressing us up in their blankets and spears and taking pictures while we waited for the rescue jeep to drag us out of the mud. And (unfortunately?) we didn't see any lions that night.

The most striking thing about the Masai Mara is the open-ness of the space - the quiet, the endless blue skies, the fields covered with animals - antelope, buffalo, giraffe, zebra, a pride of lions resting below the trees, a cheetah wandering by the side of the road, a herd of elephants grazing nonchalantly as we stare open mouthed, a rainstorm moving towards us across the previously sun-drenched plains.

One of the most beautiful views was on an early evening trip to the hippo pools. Hippos make some of the strangest noises - a bizarre mix of a roar, grunt, and squeal; something like lion crossed with pig. They also have very big feet - this is my foot next to one of their foot prints. On the drive back, as the sun set in a blaze of red between dark grey rain clouds, ahead of us the full moon cast the thunderheads in silver and lightning flashed across the sky, intermittently bathing the landscape in bright light as our safari van hurtled through the night - and nearly ran into a herd of elephants.

Being a tourist in Kenya is an entirely different experience from working alongside Kenyans in clinic. Although we had a great time with Moses and Julius (our guide and driver), most of our interactions with Kenyans were clearly based on an expectation that we were there to spend our money, take our pictures, go on safari, and go back to our homes in the developed world. Everyone was still warm and gracious and welcoming but I was very glad I had started my trip with such wonderful relationships with the people I was working with in clinic.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Last days


It is hard to believe my time in clinic here is coming to an end. I am really sad about leaving (and not at all looking forward to going back to residency in a few weeks – though I have only 6 weeks to go!). I have made wonderful friends here and feel more so than I ever do at home that work is making a big difference in people’s lives. I will also miss the sunshine, fresh mangoes, and daily swims in the pool! At our staff meeting this morning (attached are pictures of staff singing and dancing to open the meeting...and Sophy filming it), they gave me a beautiful woven bag and a card as a thank you and people have been asking all day if I will come back. Of course I will. It is hard to see such a level of need and suffering – and such wonderful people working to alleviate it - and not want to return.

These last pictures are around town – two of our friends from clinic took Sophy and me out to buy some local music in a tiny shop down an alley where they custom made mixes for us. Tomorrow night we’ll all go out and listen to some of the real thing before I head off. Also included: the view from our apartment of Lake Victoria at sunset.



I will spend the next ten days traveling – on safari in the Masai Mara, climbing Mt Kenya, more safari near Nairobi – then off to London to visit Katherine and Eugene.

Hospital visits

Every week we visit our clients who are hospitalized. The public district hospital, also known as “Russia”, was built in the 1960’s by (you guessed it) the Soviets and is quite similar to the hospitals I saw in Cuba – from the cement block architecture, to the peeling paint on the walls, to the open wards, with 10 – 20 beds per room. However, Kenya’s public hospital is slightly worse. There is visible dirt on the floors and walls, flies everywhere, almost overpowering smells coming from the open toilets just off the wards, and the degree of illness – emaciated, near comatose patients in most beds – is chilling. Not surprisingly we try and do everything possible to keep patients out of the hospital – even if they are sick enough to merit admission in another world. I think as much disease is caught as treated here – a patient with active TB will be sitting next to a patient with advanced AIDS. It is malaria season now – I diagnosed 6 patients with it just yesterday – and it often brings out other diseases in our already debilitated patients. The quality of medicine practiced is, at times, frightening – tests not done for days, treatments not given (sometimes because a family just can’t afford to buy the medication needed), diagnoses missed. The care on the ward is run by clinical officers who are rotating through for three months – with less training than most medical students in the U.S. so in some ways the level of care is no surprise. We visit patients as much as anything to check that they are being evaluated and treated appropriately and to either bring or help their families buy the medications they need. What is really remarkable about all this, is one of the clinical officers from our clinic was telling me how much better it is now – it is rare to see two patients to a bed (except in the pediatrics ward where that is standard), AIDS patients are actually cared for (rather than being left in the corner, denied beds, and not touched by any provider for fear of contracting the disease), food is provided for patients three times a day, and the bathrooms are actually cleaner than they used to be. The picture above is from the outside (looks pretty nice from here!) and two of the clinical officers I have been working with.

The private hospitals are a different story - still definitely not what I am used to, but at least not the public health nightmare that the district hospital is. Not everyone here is suffering the level of poverty I am seeing so often.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Kakamenga Rain Forest

This weekend's travels took me to the last remaining swath of rain forest in Western Kenya, Kakamega, which used to be part of a band that stretched across Africa from the Ivory Coast. As a result of human encroachment and land overuse it has shrunk to only 230 square kilometers, which is now being "protected" by a local organization. As always the travelling was as much an adventure as being there.

The forest is near a mid-size town but essentially quite rural. After an easy matatu ride to the town, I wandered through the bustling Saturday market in search of buses to Shinalayu - a small town that marks the end of the road for public transport. The "bus" was actually just a pickup truck with two rows of facing benches and a roof. As always, the rule in Kenya is there is always room for one more. On the way out, this was fine - a cozy mix of people, chickens, and market purchases bumping over the country roads. On the return trip, in addition to the twelve of us seated on the benches, four chickens, and two small children, we then proceeded to add EIGHT more people to crouch in the (nonexistent) space between our knees and two more hanging off the back. It was like a bad version of that soap commercial ("aren't you glad you use Dial..." though of course most people don't have the luxury of daily baths or deodorant). I thought we might have gone one too far when one of the chickens started to lose it - after a flurry of squawks, feathers in the air, wild pecking, and lots of shouting in Swahili, order was somewhat restored.

From Shinalayu, I then took off on an hour's walk down the road towards the rain forest. It is beautiful country, quite lush, the red road lined on either side with farms - and of course, many small children, yelling "Mzungu" and running out to shake my hand. It is also a bustling thoroughfare for commerce - the bicycles (as pictured on the right) or people's heads (above) are piled high going to or from the market. Two popular items of transport are the long grasses used to thatch roofs or as cattle feed and long branches for firewood. I later learned the reason these were all being transported rather inefficiently. As part of the environmental protection of the rain forest, goods that are illegal to remove from the forest (grass, wood, bark), are okay to take as long as they are carried out by hand and not by a vehicle that would pollute the area. Though, of course, other diesel-powered vehicles are allowed through - and no-one is trying to really stop the removal of products from the supposedly protected forest.

The forest itself is beautiful, filled with butterflies (home to 45% of the country's species), birds, and monkeys. I stayed in a little cabin on stilts - looking out into a sea of green. It was great meeting the other travellers and sharing stories - including two other women, Spanish and Swedish, who had done quite a bit of traveling on their own. We went on an afternoon hike in the dripping forest (it rains 200 cm per year and this is the rainy season), stood inside trees hollowed out due to "strangler" vines, watched the monkeys play at dusk in the trees outside our rooms, and did an early morning walk to listen to the birds and watch the sunrise. We did see one viper - but it was very small and our guide assured us it would only bite if we tried to harass it - so there is no picture of said snake and I am here to tell you about it. Very relaxing just sitting on the porch listening to the sounds of the forest.

The matatu ride back was great. There are no scheduled departures, your bus just leaves when it is full. The one I climbed into was blasting reggae in Swahili - the cashier (fare collector/general recruiter of passengers) was urging passersby to check out his very nice car and join the trip to Kisumu (and all points in between). We then took off around the neighborhoods of Kakamega recruiting additional passengers - remember, no vehicle is EVER full. Then took off down the mountain, barely slowing to let off passengers and pick more up - literally, they often come at a run. Despite all the unscheduled "stops" we made the trip back down in far less than it had taken to get there.

I spent a very American afternoon - sitting by the pool with Sophy, another medicine resident who has just arrived from San Francisco and the pediatrics resident, Lisa, who is about to head home.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Food


My lunch everyday costs about 50 cents. The Kenyan diet staple is ungali - a big pile of starch which can be made from corn, yucca, millet, or any other grain which is boiled in a big pot and served in a lump next to your beans/meat/greens. (see photo to right). You then break off a little chunk, make a scoop out of it and use that as a spoon to eat your food. (see left). Lunch is usually beans, sukuma wiki (greens), and ungali, rice, or chapatis (there is a sizeable Indian influence here). The common thing to have on the side is nyama choma - which is roast meat (not planning on trying that...i'm sure its great.)

As Kisumu is right on the lake, fish is a huge part of the diet. It is sold directly out of the market - which always smells great on a hot afternoon. And in restaurants (open air shacks that are everywhere called hotelis) is served whole - eyeballs and all. The better part of the market is the fruits and vegetables - mangoes, pineapples, passion fruit, avocadoes - all very in season and very yummy.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

BUGS!

The other night was like a scene from an Alfred Hitchock movie. It was pouring rain and every creepy crawly thing that lives outside was attempting to get in and many of them succeeding. Within minutes of the onset of the rain, moths were pouring in through cracks around the screens. I looked up to see hundreds of flying bugs outside. Before I could plug up all the holes in the screens 2 lizards and probably 50+ bugs found their way in. After trying to beat them off for a few minutes, I finally retreated to the safety of my mosquito net covered bed. Once the power went out the lack of light calmed things down. I came out the next morning to a ground covered in bug carcasses (apparently these particular flying things only last a few hours).... not one of the prettier sides of life here.

Last night I was much smarter and all doors were tightly shut at the first rumble of thunder and I could watch the idiot bugs swarm my porch from the protection of my bug free living room.

Outreach




Today I travelled with one of the outreach team to the slums. The outreach teams consist of a group of young adults who are trained at the center and get paid a small salary to go out every day of the week to different sites around the city and offer HIV testing and counselling. There are also two professional counsellors who do the testing and the training. The group I was with was composed of kids (the oldest was 21) who were in recovery - mostly from alcohol abuse. All had graduated or nearly completed high school (a relativelly rare feat) and then had found themselves with nothing to do and fell into drinking and smoking weed (there are few harder drugs, like cocaine or heroin in Kisumu). The unemployment rate in Kenya is estimated to be THIRTY FIVE to FORTY percent!! The youth center also offers a drug treatment center which all these kids had been through and were now employed there.

The most fascinating part of the day was talking to the kids between their recruitment efforts about their experiences. Although they joked about it frequently, they were clearly frustrated by the poverty and lack of opportunities in their country. They were fed up with the government corruption and lack of government action to create jobs. Barak Obama, whose father is from Kisumu, had recently visited the region and there was frequent talk about how great they would have it if someone like him was in charge. They thought their own government was old and inbred (which it is a bit). They also thought Obama being the president of the U.S. would make their lives better as well. Emigration was universally seen as the best option - but not really a feasible one for most of them, both because of the cost and the lack of visas. Their life goals basically centered around staying sober and keeping a job. One or two of them mentioned wanting to go to college but not being able to because of funds. The same acceptance and depression I saw in the patients newly diagnosed with HIV was visible here. And I can see why. We were in the middle of the horrible poverty of the slums and these kids were faced with few options.

The point was illustrated later in one of the patients I saw with one of the counsellors. Her husband had died in 2000 (of an accident - not AIDS for once) and had left her with four children to raise and no income. She is now 28 years old and has gotten by the past seven years by essentially working as a prostitute (though she described it as having multiple boyfriends). She had never yet been tested for HIV but was engaged and wanted to check before she settled down. Not suprisingly, her test was positive. This is the fourth time in two weeks, I have seen a positive test done - and that is aside from all those newly diagnosed and referred to our clinic. She came back later with her fiancee who was negative. They walked off together, looking oddly happy. She had seemed visibly reassured by the promise of treatment.

I don't know that the kids I was working with would feel the same way. Their disbelief extended to their own work. Though each of one of them swore they would never die of AIDS (the prevalence rate is 30% among their age group), they also felt like their country had no chance of recovering from the disease, that they are being ignored by much of the world because they were young and African. We had some interesting discussions about putting HIV + patients in concentration camps (which is actually what was done in Cuba - though they weren't exterminated - just exlcuded from the rest of society) and whether condoms and ARVs really worked!

I am reading "And the Band Played On", a book about the early AIDS crisis in the U.S. and the parallells between the attitudes of these kids and that of the gay community in the U.S. at that time is eery. Prevlance rates of HIV in the Castro in the mid-80's were similarly estimated to be 30%. The difference, of course, is there were "only" a few tens of thousands of people affected in the U.S. then - and mostly people who had access to information and education and ultimately medication. In Kenya, a recent survey showed that condoms were used only 23% of the time and it is estimated that only 5% of people who should be on ARVs are. Scary numbers.

(I took the pictures above while one of the kids took me on a tour of the slum area. There's also a picture of two members of the outreach team.)

Music

No wonder Kenyans are such happy people - their music rocks! I went out over the weekend with some Kenyans and a UCSF med student who is in town for a few weeks. After finally getting going at 9:30 (despite our 7:45 meeting time...all expected, we chose to meet at a place where we could have a few beers while waiting!), we first went to the local dive. This was a cement walled room, bare lightbulbs and frequently patched walls, a mix of plastic chairs and what appeared to be old church pews squeezed in next to the pool table (more than one person was hit or nearly hit by swinging cue sticks - their concept of right of way or personal space is a bit different from ours), and warm Tuskers only - don't even think of asking for cold. The band was led by the percussion - a collection of six or so huge bongos, a few gord like things that rattled, and various other noise making instruments that combined to create some incredible rhythms - impossible to sit still while you are listening. Everyone was dancing - actually initially it was mainly just men. In Kenya, it is very rare to see a couple showing affection or even holding hands - however, totally normal for two men to walk along holding hands (and, in case you were wondering, I was told today there are no gay people in Kenya). So apparently its also totally normal for two men to dance together, normal for a Masai warrior in full dress, including a machete at his side, to be on the dance floor - but very odd to see a mzungu out there! The music was a take on traditional Luo folk music - ohangala.

Next we went on to a more traditional club with fake rock walls, black lights, and cold Tusker, where one of the local popular groups the Malo Malo Kings was playing sort of a mix of reggae, rock, and folk music. Definitely going to bring some of this back!