Friday 15 July 2011

Epilogue 2, The Last Post

Epilogue 2, It is hard to know what to say in the end, platitudes and gratitude are the staple of goodbye speeches, but I think Mseleni has meant more than just superficial sentiments. I still believe that I wont really be able to fathom its affect on me for some time yet but one last time I will try and put my thoughts down.

Everyone keeps asking me about the things I will miss and it is hard to not to talk about specifics; flying to clinic, the excitement of OPD, the weekends exploring and living by the golden beaches and warm waters. I think it will also be hard not to miss feeling a part of the hospital community, getting involved with the running of the place and having a sense that what I did had a real effect on people.

Perhaps the best way to think about how I feel now is remembering how I felt in the beginning. Being so far away from home and everything familiar was always going to be a challenge and arriving in Mseleni I was cautious about how I may feel isolated. However, my good fortune meant that from the moment I arrived I was surrounded by individuals that never gave me any opportunity to dwell on the past, and instead challenged me to do more and better. I may have met these individuals as mere colleagues but I have left them as the closest of friends.

What bothers me most about leaving Mseleni is that I know that I can never again have all that I have left behind. Sure, I may be able to go back again someday but I’ll be at different place in my life, my friends would have moved on and even the place may have moved on. It will never again be the same.

Above all I will miss myself in Mseleni. Professionally and personally I became someone I’ve aspired to be in this sleepy little village in the heart of Maputaland, someone that it is not always possible to be in the metropolis of London. I keep thinking that no significant experience can leave anyone unchanged and through time I will discover how significant an experience Mseleni has truly been.

For now I will live vicariously through my memories, my pictures and my writings, remembering the hard times as not so bad and the good times as great.









Monday 11 July 2011

Epilogue 1, Needles, Cows and Snakes

Epilogue 1, As I begin to reflect on my time in Mseleni it is easy be rose tinted about it all, but the truth is that there are certain things I wont miss. And to be honest, there are three things that I’m amazed I managed to avoid during my stint there.

The first is a needle stick injury. In terms of practicing medicine anywhere in the world, this is always a risk. With hospitals in South Africa not being set up in the most safety conscious of manners it is not surprising that most of my colleagues had to be on courses of post exposure prophylaxis (PEP) at some point. I had anticipated that through my stay there would be at least one instance where I or someone loses concentration and a mistake is made.

The transmission rate of HIV through needle sticks does not have a lot of hard evidence and there is little real proof regarding the efficacy of PEP therapy, even so I was glad not to have contributed to the statistics. Forgetting the anguish of thinking the worst for 6 weeks, the debilitating gastric effects of the ARVS are substantial and thus I am fortunate not to have wasted any time being ill with the medications.

The second great avoidance was the cows on the road, but this was not for a lack of trying. In Zulu land cows roam freely, particularly on the roads. With no lights on the road and opposing cars flashing their brights, conditions are ripe for bovine collisions. Most of the MVAs (motor vehicle accidents) that come into the hospital have been cow related and the results vary from minor injuries to major trauma and even several deaths. When its cow versus car, I’d usually place a bet on the car to come off worse.

On a couple of occasions I came pretty close. Driving in the darkness it can be quite difficult to pick out the shape of a dark cow crossing the road. This becomes especially so after a long drive back from Durban or a late night in Sodwana. It has only been through the quick reflexes of my friends’ driving, some well maintained cars and simply dumb luck that has prevented me lying on the road like so many every day.

The third great escape is of course snakes. Locals find this a great source of amusement but I find it hard to call it an irrational fear when Mozambique Spitting Cobras, Boomslangs, and Black Mambas are common place. Though the tamer puffadders are the most common culprits, I’ve seen a multitude of patients writhing in agony from the bites and I’d rather not experience it firsthand.

The one afternoon coming down to my park home I found a slithering creature creep underneath the house. I could only really think one thing, this clearly gives credence to my ideas about keeping an army of mongoose pets. It didn’t really matter that it was probably a harmless (relatively) brown house snake, the incident was unsettling nonetheless. The important thing however, is that through a healthy combination of paranoia, diligence and a predilection for closed shoes I got away without a bite.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86GQf4F8htI

Saturday 9 July 2011

Day 343, Gorillas in Uganda




Day 343, My time in Mseleni has been typified by the many adventures I’ve had, so it felt only right that I end with one. For the last six months, my lifelong ambition has been to see mountain gorillas in the wild, and a trip to Uganda with my friends proved my swansong adventure in Africa.

Expecting the oppressive heat I was pleasantly surprised by the cool evening landing in Kampala. Soon enough though we found out there was plenty else to be suffocated by other than heat. As we drove to our hotel our senses were bombarded. The smell of industrial smog permeated as we stood bumper to bumper with the din of traffic. Motorcycles buzzing around like flies carrying everything from bananas to families, cacophonous honking of truck horns, and the smell of fresh and cooking meat and vegetables accompanied us all the way.

The gorillas live in a mountainous area to the east of the country bordering Rwanda and the DRC. We took a 9 hour, dusty road trip to the region which included crossing over the Equator. A brief stop to confirm the Coriolis Effect and the science geek in me was satisfied.

Bwindi Impenetrable Forest is a fairly ominous sounding prospect for those at the peak of their physical prowess, so I was already tentative about my chances even before the trek began. A briefing from our guides on procedures and likely animal behaviours and we were allocated to the Mshiya family group, but this did not mean a guaranteed sighting, it all depended on the guile of the trackers and a little bit of luck.

The trek started through the outskirts of a mountain village. Ordinary people walked passed us as I already started to puff. By the time we reached start of the steep climb I was in trouble. Luckily the trackers ahead had radioed to let us know they had found the family on the other side of the hill, it just meant a further hour’s trekking at 2,000 feet and climbing. My friends were coping well but I convinced them to stop so I could rehydrate on more than one occasion.

Luckily conditions were perfect; the ground was dry, the air cool, and the gorillas unusually close by. Any other circumstances and I may not have had the energy to get to the top of the hill. It was mid morning when we met up with our trackers, we’d followed the path they had macheted and we stood with only a layer of dense foliage prevent us from seeing the animals. A little disappointed at first, we realised that the scouts were continuing to hack away the vegetation.

We snuck a quick glimpse, a face of a baby and what looked to be a Silverback. Still we waited trying to steal the odd glance, taking in the atmosphere of the moment. Once the animals were comfortable they ventured into the open. First it was the Silverback, sitting in the shade and munching away at shoots and leaves. Then we ventured further on to watch as the female climbed up a tree to have breakfast. Lastly it was the toddler, 3yrs old, swinging through the branches and gawping at the strange people and their little clicking machines. Mesmerised, we stood there for what felt much more than the allotted hour.

On the journey back down I was able to concentrate on the misty mountains and the vistas around me, and it began to dawn on me what a privilege it had been to be in their presence. Only a handful of people are allowed everyday and the arduous trekking is limited to those who are capable. With only 760 of them left in the world one hopes that the conservation efforts reap success.

For my part, this is the sort of experience that I would not have been brave enough to venture into in the past. But thanks to my adventures in Mseleni I have already begun plotting my other lifelong ambitions.

Friday 1 July 2011

Day 335, End of Days

Day 335, The on call this week was my last call. Given that I will be returning to a job in general practice it was actually my last call ever. Sure, I may choose to work out of hours shifts, but as far as being an on call doctor it ended on a cold night in Kwazulu Natal. After the many exciting emergencies and soul destroying outcomes my last hurrah was not a bang but a whimper. I was allowed to sleep through most of the call with only mundane interruptions from the nursing staff.

In contrast to the call, my last full day on the wards at Mseleni was a reminder of why I may not miss this place much. We were short staffed and stretched pretty thin covering the OPD for large portions of the day. On the paediatric ward they decided to work me one final time; a 3 month old, desperately ill from pneumonia arresting at the same time as a 7 month old on the opposite side beginning to seize uncontrollably. One didn’t make it, the other survived, for now at least.

After the shocker of a day I returned to what I’ve recently known best, packing up. Sounds like it should be easy but it is remarkable what I’ve managed to accumulate in my time here. Sifting through the collection of odds and ends, I realised how my preconceptions about this place were so wrong; a pair of unopened shoelaces for shoes I ditched for being too impractical in the bush, a reel of thread to fasten mosquito netting I never required and a bike lock to secure my bags in case unscrupulous individuals lusted after them.

Like a snake shedding its skin I have been whittling away at my possessions to streamline my return home. My friends and colleagues are being lumbered with the oddest of gifts and they receive them in good humour, hopefully being able to put everything to use. Finding a suitable home for my belongings is no mean feat. The task is made more difficult mainly because whatever little time I have left is largely spent toasting my departure and I feel it would be a shame to spend it otherwise.

It is certainly more than just possessions that I will take with me and hopefully it will be more than just possessions that I leave behind. I don’t honestly know what I was expecting when I came here, but what I’ve encountered is far more than I could have bargained for.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5WQU-yNzEek