Sunday, 1 June 2014

My hospital placement in Ghana

Introduction

After leaving Sierra Leone I flew to Ghana where I had organised to do a medical placement at a regional hospital located in a small coastal city in the West of the country.

The hospital was full of informative public health signs such as this one.


Writing blog posts about medical placements is a difficult task for several reasons. First, for reasons of privacy and professionalism, I must be very careful not to reveal anything that could identify patients or staff members. Second, as an outsider to the culture about which I am writing I am aware that I bring my own views and values to bear on the things that I have observed. I do not wish to sound judgmental about things that I don’t have the cultural background to fully understand, however I’m a person of strong convictions and there are certain things that I believe – for example the right to dignity and compassion in the face of suffering – that I cannot put aside even in vastly different working environments to the one that I’m accustomed to in Australia. Third, it is difficult to truly and faithfully convey, without risk of sensationalising, what it is really like in a hospital in a developing country to an audience who have never experienced it for themselves.

As such, I’ve decided to modify my approach to placement blog posts this time around by writing about one theme of my placement instead of trying to laboriously recall everything. The theme I’ve chosen is disability.

I’d like to preface the following discussion with a note about the people I came across during my placement: the vast majority of people (doctors, nurses, allied health professionals, patients, patients’ families) were kind, welcoming, and professional. Ghana is not a rich country, but nor is it desperately poor (for the sake of comparison, GDP per capita (Ghana) = USD 1,729; GDP per capita (Sierra Leone) = USD 635; GDP per capita (Ethiopia) = USD 400). Not once during my placement did I witness somebody die due to lack of resources at the hospital (qualification: I did not rotate through the emergency room, and I’m sure that this is a somewhat different context). Rather, where resources were blamed, the true cause of the bad outcome was inevitably more complex than a simple scarcity of resources.

Weekend shenanigans: Nzulezu stilt village

Weekend shenanigans: Kakum national park

Weekend shenanigans: Hahn's cottage 


Discrimination and mistreatment of people with disabilities is a global scourge. To enable the fulfilment of a healthy, happy, and maximised life, people with disabilities must often be provided with special services, be they medical, educational or financial. My experience in developing countries has been that these special resources and facilities are often not widely available. Ghana was no exception, but what really surprised me in Ghana was the degree of stigma that people attached to disability. It was as if people were unwilling, or unable, to look past the disability to see the person behind the disability. I came across two disabled patients during my time on the ward: Kwesi “Social”, and Baby X.  

Baby X:

Baby X was born by caesarean section at about 2am during a nightshift that I attended at the delivery ward. Baby X was one of a set of non-identical twins, and what made her special was that she had severe hydrocephalus. Hydrocephalus is where there is a build-up of cerebrospinal fluid (the fluid that bathes and cushions your brain) and in an infant, whose skull bones are yet to fuse, this leads to a greatly enlarged cranium. This particular baby’s head was about the size of that normally belonging to a six-year-old child.

The surgery itself progressed without incident, and both babies were immediately taken to the adjacent room for resuscitation as they were born with low Apgar scores. I stayed in the theatre until the incision was closed and then followed the doctors into the resuscitation room where the disabled baby was lying on a high-tech resuscitation table surrounded by three nurses. The baby was not breathing but otherwise looked well, with muscle tone and good colour. The nurses, however, were not attempting to resuscitate her, but, rather, were laughing. The doctor asked them what they were laughing about and they showed us that the baby had a full set of teeth. The doctor told them that this was beside the point and asked them why they weren’t resuscitating the baby, to which they responded that the baby’s heart was not beating. The doctor and I exchanged sceptical looks at this point and then the doctor asked the nurses to have one more listen and, unsurprisingly, they were listening to the wrong side of the chest and when we listened to the other side of the chest the baby had a regular heart beat with a good pulse rate.

At this point the doctor told the nurses to suction the baby’s mouth and they refused and the real reason behind their apparent gross incompetence was clear: they were not going to resuscitate a disabled child. Instead, they wrapped the baby in cloth and took it to show the mother, which was horrific as they unwrapped the baby next to the bed and showed her the baby’s head and said “this one, not good”.
This baby was then left to die because of her disability. Without further investigation it is impossible to speculate about the prognosis for this child (the cause of the hydrocephalus, its severity, and its impact on the development of the cerebral cortex were all unknown, and in a country with greater resources something like this would have been corrected surgically and the child would have lived). I think that the ethical issues around resuscitation of apparently severely disabled infants in a setting like Ghana are certainly not clear-cut. On the one hand these children are liable to lead difficult and often tragic lives (like Kwezi, who I’ll get to next), but on the other hand the systematic refusal to act in the medical best interests of a child with disabilities stinks of eugenics.

Kwezi “Social” Parker-Wright:

Jen, Olly, and Kwesi


Kwezi is an 18-month old child who was born with congenital rubella syndrome. This means that, some time during his gestation (most likely during the first trimester) Kwezi’s mother contracted rubella, an infectious disease that is not particularly harmful to adults but may have disastrous consequences for the unborn foetus. In Kwezi’s case this meant cataracts, severe intellectual disability, a persistent dermatitis, and the inability to walk* (* I suspect that this is a combination of developmental delay and neglect).

Kwezi was admitted to hospital with gastroenteritis. He was accompanied by a social worker and staff members from the orphanage where he was living before being admitted to the hospital. Kwezi is an abandoned child; his mother, unwilling to continue to care for a child with such disabilities, left him in a rubbish bin. Luckily he was found and taken into State custody. Interestingly, Kwezi’s mother is alive and well, and the social workers are aware of her identity and are in contact with her (alarmingly, she is pregnant again). Did Kwezi’s mother face criminal prosecution for the gross act of child abuse committed when she threw out her child with the trash? Of course not! Rather, she got what she wanted: a clean slate where the “burden” of looking after her disabled child was passed on to somebody else.

Far from being a burden, Kwezi is one of the sweetest and most adorable children who I’ve ever had the pleasure to meet. He is so easy to please and entertain. To Kwezi, everything is entertaining and everybody is a potential friend. Here are some photos of him:

Kwesi and Olly

Not actually allowed to take photos of patients, but he wasn't a patient at the time (yay loopholes!!!)



I met Kwezi on the first Friday of my placement, the day that he was admitted. On that day he was very sick. On Monday’s ward rounds I saw him again and his physical condition had improved greatly, so the doctors formally discharged him from the hospital. On Tuesday, he was still there, and two of the nursing students on the ward, Olly and Jen, told me that the other mothers in Kwezi’s ward (one of two small annex wards where mostly hopeless cases – social work cases and children suffering from HIV – were accommodated) had told them that the social workers had not been on the ward since the previous Friday. This was a huge problem because the hospital does not provide essential care services such as feeding and bathing, so patients are entirely dependent on their families or other carers for these services. As such, Kwezi had not been bathed, had his nappy changed, or fed (except for small bits of milk by the other mothers in the room who did not want them to die). Olly and Jen were on the case, and spent the remainder of their time in Ghana (almost 3 weeks) doing these things for Kwezi as he remained in the hospital, abandoned for the second time in his short life. A lovely cleaner from the hospital, Aunty Didi, also took it upon herself to care for Kwezi. Witnessing the kindness and compassion of these three people was a great antidote to witnessing what went down with the orphanage workers when they simply abandoned him.

Over the following week, we were told by one of the head nurses that she had sought an injunction (court order) for Kwezi to be removed from his current orphanage due to their gross negligence. I was pleased to hear that such a remedy is available and, in this case, was granted. The problem then was that no other orphanage was willing to take him and he remained in hospital for over two weeks after his discharge (at one point, actually on my birthday after we took him to a local hotel to relax by the pool, which turned out to be a bit of a failure due to a massive thunder storm that afternoon, he was re-admitted as he’d acquired pneumonia whilst living on a ward full of sick children, which is hardly surprising). On my final weekend in Ghana a group of us students visited an orphanage outside of Takoradi, and whilst there we got the impression that it was a place where Kwezi would be given proper care if we were willing to fund the expenses that the orphanage would incur in treating his disabilities (which obviously we were). We mentioned this to the staff at the hospital and tried to contact the social worker (unfortunately I ended up leaving Takoradi less than 24 hours later at very short notice, so ceased to be involved in the matter). The problem was that the social worker was extremely difficult to contact and then suddenly, without notice, Kwezi was taken from hospital and transferred to an orphanage in Accra.

We were told by the nurses at the hospital, who have seen many cases like this one, that most orphanages want children like Kwezi to die and will do their best to neglect the children in the hope that this will happen. They told us that this is inevitable and that there is nothing that we can do about it. I disagree; I think that with sufficient publicity and international attention Kwezi will become an awkward embarrassment for them to neglect. Luckily for Kwezi, he met Olly and Jen, who not only provided for his basic survival needs whilst abandoned in hospital but have also set up a fund for Kwezi. The aim of this fund is to provide Kwezi with what he needs to maximise his quality of life, ie, cataract surgery for his eyesight, physiotherapy for his walking, and a teaching assistant to provide him with intellectual stimulation at a level appropriate to his disability. Moreover, I hope that the existence of a fund will pressure the orphanage where Kwezi is currently residing to actually feed him and care for him. Afterall, it’s easy to throw an unwanted disabled child out with the trash, but it’s harder to do this when an international audience is watching.

Here’s the link to the page for the Kwezi fund: https://www.facebook.com/thekwesifund?fref=ts

Note:


I also wanted to write about 2 other themes: poverty and education in healthcare seeking behaviour, and the accountability of negligent staff and parents in the context of a paediatrics ward. However, I’m struggling to do this so have decided to leave these things out of my blog. Apologies for such a narrow post – some things are a bit too hard to write about in a public forum.

Elmina castle on Cape Coast