Sunday 3 December 2006

AFRICAN VIEWS

Life expectancy improving every where except sub-Saharan Africa !! From 2005 Human Development Report. chapter 1, page 19
The Human Development Index produced by the UN is a measure of quality of life. It includes life expectancy, education, literacy, and financial resources of the average individual in that country. The closer to the number 1 the better the quality of life. For sub-Saharan Africa the index has not improved since 1985 while in virtually the rest of the world it is going up at great speed. The health care and education in Africa is tantamount to a crime against humanity. This graph was taken from the Human Development Report of the UN 2006. page 265
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Friday 1 December 2006

Service to the Poor

A Reflection January, 2002 Ray Towey, Tanzania

Service to the poor at a personal cost is a purifying process because the spiritual journey needs a painful removal of illusions previously held. There is no gracefilled experience without an emptying and there is no emptying without resistance. The poor are the gift for clarity of vision. When love of the poor replaces fear of the poor the kingdom of God is at hand, the poison of racist words has no power over you, the stranger is welcomed, our gifts are shared, nonviolence reigns as the greater power.
When you give from your excess you still remain secure, when you give from your core you change, and when you change, at the core, for the sake of the poor the Kingdom of God is at hand. VMM offers service to the poor at a personal cost; the location is Africa, an opportunity for personal transformation, an experiment with the Gospel demands where all outcomes are in doubt and all outcomes possible.
VMM offers no easy solution, no easy answers, just a few questions among friends. VMM offers nothing but a channel for a personal journey. We lack the security of an endowed institution. We proclaim a fractured Church and embrace it as our own. We are prudent for those in the field but you return to no private health plan, no cloisters of comfort, no team of counsellors, even no bed or home to lay your head unless you work once again for it as anyone, poor or rich in our own culture. The poverty of our institution means its smallness cannot obscure the journey. That is a blessing!

Service to the poor at a personal cost is not extraordinary. It is the ordinary chance meeting when time is spent and money not made, when money is given away and time is made, for the poor, for the community, at a personal cost. Until the personal cost is spent is it seen that the joy of the personal cost is the greater. There is no special debtor in the Kingdom of God because we are all debtors to the God who chooses life, who chooses us.

And so we come home and exchange our stories, the good and the bad, and continue to explore the journey and test out the Gospel to see if it is still good, to see if it is still news,
to the poor.

Article from Anaesthesia Newsletter 2003

This article was published in Anaesthesia Newsletter May 2003

In Shock and Awe………………A letter from Uganda


Dr.Ray Towey FRCA was a consultant in Guy's Hospital London, has worked for the past 10 years in East Africa and is currently working in northern Uganda.

Africa has a great capacity to put you into both shock and awe so as I write this letter from St.Mary's Hospital Lacor in Gulu northern Uganda forgive me for borrowing the sound bite from the US military planners for we here are also in a war zone in more ways than one. The real enemy in our situation is poverty, poverty of medicines, equipment, infrastructure, trained personnel, management and the poverty is indeed shocking. However what is awesome is the capacity of our staff and especially my African colleagues to cope with these deprivations and with amazing good humour to actually deliver a high standard of medical and surgical care, much cherished by the local community. In another way we are also in a war zone in that there has been a war continuing in northern Uganda for over 15 years and road ambushes by rebel troops are a weekly occurrence. This is not a high tech. war. There are no B-52 carpet bombing payloads or cruise missiles or weapons of mass destruction, (or should I say weapons of mass injury/murder), but for the local population being killed or injured by a AK 47, a rocket propelled grenade or landmine, all by the way imported from the so called "developed" world at a handsome profit, is just as devastating as being hit by high tech. killing systems. For us in the hospital the sense of security is good, that is while we remain in the hospital. Travelling is another story.

We care for both the government and the rebel injured and probably most importantly because the local mission in the person of Brother Elio will give a decent burial to any fatal rebel casualty, as an institution we have not been a target. This is awesome in a conflict that has defied almost all moral bounds in its cruelty. Last week in our ICU we had the incongruous sight of one rebel soldier lying next to one government soldier. The professional response of the staff to treat all injured the same is exemplary and yes it is awesome when you consider how much the local people have suffered in this conflict. We are about 4 hours driving distance from the capital, Kampala, on a tarred road. In my analysis I divide the world into three areas, the rich northern countries, the capital cities of the so-called developing world, and the rural areas of the developing world. In short we are in the final category, in some ways the final frontier. In my time I have worked in all three areas and each has its own stresses not to be minimised. We are a five theatre suite and we have the capacity to work all five at any one time though this is unusual. With so little resources how do we manage that? In a nutshell skilled dedicated staff and appropriate technology. Many anaesthetists are technophiles and I plead guilty. This article will reach you via the Internet by way of a radio modem and a modified boosted GSM type mobile phone. This connectivity from our location continues to amaze me. It is indeed a small world though much divided.

Our anaesthetic practice is founded on spinal blocks and draw over ether and halothane. It is hard to know what we would have done without the EMO and OMV vaporisers made by Penlon in Abingdon. If there is any Penlon staff out there, many thanks ! A supply of oxygen is always a concern for the rural practitioner and our hospital uses both oxygen concentrators and cylinders. Our paediatric ward has the capacity to treat 16 children using DeVilbiss oxygen concentrators with flow splitters and this frees up the cylinders for theatre use. Many thanks to Sunrise Medical, Wollaston, in the West Midlands ! Hopefully this year we will also have oxygen concentrators for theatre and we then anticipate a major reduction in oxygen cylinder usage in the hospital. As we can only obtain cylinders from Kampala, a journey not undertaken lightly, a move to oxygen concentrators will be much appreciated. To see this appropriate technology making a substantial contribution to the patient care in this remote area is a most satisfying experience. I think it would be fair to say that our anaesthetists can give very good conditions for almost all surgical procedures with our basic equipment. Of course we have limitations. It is appalling to see a patient in theatre with a ruptured uterus because she has been in labour for two days having had no access to any analgesia or any proper care transferred from a more remote area, or to watch someone bleed to death because we have no fresh frozen plasma or platelets, or to walk away from a patient dying from respiratory failure because our capacity to ventilate is limited to just a few hours.

Probably the most appalling example of inequity is the knowledge that a large proportion of our patients are HIV positive but cannot afford treatment. The shocking truth is that profit for the so-called "developed" world comes before life giving treatment for the rest. The national debt of Uganda is about $4 billion and each year $50 million is still being paid back to western banks in debt repayments. It continues to amaze me that most Africans have so little bitterness in the face of this appalling inequity. When $780 billion per year is spent on the world's armed forces, $17 billion on pet food in Europe, I have to ask, why is Africa still paying debt repayments and has almost no anti-retroviral drugs? In global terms this amount of debt is small change but for our patients it is a life to death change, so if you could help me with an answer to that question I would truly be in shock and awe.

Ray Towey

RE-ENTRY CULTURE SHOCK British Medical Journal 24 March 2007


Perhaps I should put it down to re-entry culture shock. In the last 14 years of working in East Africa as a medical missionary I have had many opportunities to experience that very special bitter sweet detachment when you arrive back into your own culture and realise that you are a stranger and see your own home culture through the eyes of an alien. With practice it’s a feeling that can be overcome in a short time before you make too many social gaffs and leave your friends and family glancing at each other in embarrassment. The rural areas of Africa have to be poorest medically speaking in the world and the statistics suggest that life expectancy in sub-Saharan is equivalent to 1840 in England and Wales. This has a particular poignancy for me as an anaesthetist as the date of 1846 is generally regarded as the discovery of anaesthesia. So I think I am entitled to some degree of medical re-entry culture shock when I return to UK.

However re-entry culture shock is not an altogether negative experience. As in any crises situation it’s also a time of opportunity and a time to reflect and learn. So this time I am left with one word which alone sums up my assessment of the amazing advances in UK and the appalling comparison with medical care in Sub-Saharan Africa. The gap of medical care available in the developing world in comparison with medical care in the developed world is widening with every modern advance but its not the advances in medicine that this time put me into some kind of shock. Infact it’s the advances in veterinary medicine which have shocked me rather than the advances in human medicine and I have to conclude that the comparison can only be described as obscene.

Open heart surgery is now available for domestic dogs and cats in the developed world whereas in Sub-Saharan Africa most of these patients requiring such expensive care are sent home to die assuming they even reach a hospital. Is it possible in generations to come the medical community will wonder at how we could tolerate such an obscene disparity of care. As a young hospital doctor in the late 60s and 70s it was an exciting time for the speciality of anaesthesia. Cardiac surgery was taking off and intensive care units had been established as a facility for the big urban centres but still had to make an impact in the districts. As a young anaesthetic resident the cardiac rotation was a prized experience. We knew that on this rotation we would learn so much that would benefit our own professional development and give us such experience to manage better the critically ill in other areas of hospital practice. Invasive monitoring in theatre, the fundamentals of intensive care and cardio-respiratory support, the assessment of patients, the management of dysrhymias were the foundations of a new era. We knew that this was the future of modern hospital medicine and we would be a better part of that future after our cardiac rotation. I am sure the young veterinary surgeons and anaesthetists must be relishing open heart surgery for dogs and cats in a similar way. In the 60s and 70s the development of hospital intensive care units was given a major boost as open heart surgery progressed so I am sure the same process will take place for animal intensive care units now.

In 1846 the first successful anaesthetic to be publicly demonstrated was ether and this agent is the mainstay in rural Sub-Saharan Africa now as its properties of safety and cost make it the best choice. Of course for open heart surgery in domestic animals a newer generation of anaesthetic agent is available which for me only to accentuates the obscenity

Perhaps I will come through this culture shock and learn to accept this appalling disparity of care between domestic animals and human beings with some equanimity and avoid any embarrassing social gaffs or perhaps this article is a sign of my underlying inability to adapt. After all you have a right to be at ease in your home culture. At the moment though I am hoping that I do not adapt. Am I suffering from a severe form of speciesism or is there a global underlying racism that allows this obscenity to be tolerated?