Tag Archives: Tanzania

Tanzania — Week 4

15 Mar

3/15 THURSDAY — Thursday always means extra-long morning report, since we stay in the chapel with the whole group (nurses and so forth) after devotions rather than going to a separate physician room; the extra-long morning report then necessitated an extra-extra-long meeting with Bob to ascertain exactly what had been discussed, since much of it had been in Swahili. Afterward, we went up to labor & delivery and peeked at Adam — I finally got the chance to listen to his heart and lungs, which actually sounded perfect. While we were there, his mother showed up with two thimblefuls of colostrum that she’d expressed, obviously planning to feed him via his NG tube; she waited for us to finish our exam. I tried to convey via gestures that I thought he was beautiful, but I don’t think she understood. She did notice the stethoscopes in our hands and asked, “Nzuri?” — meaning, is he OK?
“Nzuri,” I said, smiling and nodding. (Well, relatively speaking, I suppose I was telling the truth…)
“Asante,” she said with a relieved smile, and slipped past us, along with the nurse, to feed her sweet baby in the only way she could.

We hung around L&D for a while thereafter, because, one curtain away, a young woman was in labor with her first baby. The nurse checked her cervix, and in the midst of a torrent of Swahili, I heard her say “saba” (seven); our hopes of finally seeing a delivery started to rise. Unfortunately, when she withdrew her gloved fingers, they were stained with meconium. Foiled again! So it turned into yet another c-section (and one of the doctors was forced to miss a chunk of the teaching seminar ;)). Oh, well, at least we had something to do!

And then… it was time for Zanzibar! We’d really wanted to take the bus to Dar es Salaam (eight hours) and then the ferry to Zanzibar (two hours), but we only had three days for the whole venture, so we decided to pay more and just fly rather than sucking up so much time on either end with the travel arrangements. Fortunately, Carol, our driver from the first week, owns his own taxi, so we were able to hire him privately to take us to the airport rather than trying to navigate a dalla-dalla and a bus; we didn’t have any bags to check, so the whole experience was very simple. Precision Air flies in a circle, from Kilimanjaro to Zanzibar to Dar es Salaam and back again, so I spent the hour flight next to a Canadian man who’d just finished a nine-day safari with his family (complete with hot-air balloon ride over the Serengeti); they were headed to Dar, so they stayed on the plane after we got off. He had never heard of PAs, but was extremely interested in the state of HIV/AIDS in Tanzania, asking questions about everything from prevalence to transmission methods to antiviral medication — so that conversation made the hour pass quickly. He was an older gentleman with an air of wealth about him — it was clear he was accustomed to receiving answers and obedience — so although he was perfectly pleasant, it honestly felt almost like getting pimped! ;)

Once we landed in Zanzibar, the 45-minute taxi trip to our lodge was a piece of cake. Our jovial cab driver opened the sunroof without being asked — he’s clearly used to tourists — and the roomy minivan gave us room to stretch our legs, which was a welcome relief after the cramped plane ride (only 18 rows!). From the cab, we saw red colobus monkeys, which are unique to Zanzibar, and the smells of smoked meat and grilled fish wafted through the windows at intervals, making me salivate. Tourism seems to have ensured a slightly better quality of life for the Zanzibari people than for those living on mainland Tanzania; there’s still some pretty desperate poverty here, but it isn’t as extreme as what we’re used to seeing. (Also, another telling contrast to the mainland — all the roads are paved.) We saw some men digging a ditch along one of the more major roads, and the cab driver said they were making preparations for a wireless Internet network. That would be completely unimaginable (as well as completely unnecessary) in, say, Machame.

Since it was a workday for us, we arrived fairly late, but there was still a little sunlight left, so we changed into swimsuits and splashed into the clear green water of the Indian Ocean. The tide was all the way out — multiple colorful wooden boats were temporarily abandoned on the patches of sand where they’d been beached — and the sand was so fine that it felt almost sticky along the damp water’s edge. We could just see a distant line of darker blue waves breaking in the distance — but although we walked straight out to sea for almost half an hour, the bathtub-warm water never rose any higher than our thighs, and the breaking waves never seemed to get much closer. I tried to drop down and swim, but there was little point; my hands hit the bottom with every stroke. I finally ended up just floating on my back, staring up at the cloudless blue sky, hearing absolutely nothing beyond the rushing of the water and the wind.

After spending an hour or so in the water, the sun was starting to go down, so we headed back up to the lounge chairs we’d claimed. We both ordered piña coladas (cliche, perhaps, but necessary ;)), then pulled out our Kindles and did some reading. The trees swayed gently overhead, the breeze was pleasantly cool, and the view couldn’t be beat; we kept looking up from our books to make sure it was still there, and exchanged more than one disbelieving remark about how lucky we were. I think everyone has at least seen a photo of Zanzibar (or someplace similar) — clear green water, powder-fine white sand, colorful wooden boats, dark-skinned fishermen — and I’m discovering that, in terms of photographs, this place is exactly the opposite phenomenon of the rest of Tanzania. I’ve mentioned several times how, in so many settings, our cameras just don’t capture the full spectrum of a situation… yet in Zanzibar, things actually *are* every bit as gorgeous as all those stunning, just-slightly-unbelievable magazine spreads and calendar photos. You sort of take the flat, glossy images with a grain of salt while you’re sitting in your American living room, but then you get here and it genuinely looks like someone has taken Adobe Photoshop to the entire beach! :)

Around seven, when we could no longer see our books, we headed to the on-site restaurant for dinner. It’s an open-sided building with a thatched roof, lit by table candles and hanging tin lanterns with decorative cutouts; they sway in the sea breeze as you eat. We started with an appetizer of chapati, tzatziki, absolutely delicious guacamole, and a very distinctive hummus, and then I had the best grilled kingfish of my life, served with a delectable coconut-based sauce enhanced with cilantro, mango, cumin, lime, and I don’t know what else… I see why Zanzibar is called the Spice Island! My stomach is literally growling at the memory — and as far as foods that have been ‘ruined’ for me back in the States, I’m fairly certain my generic frozen grocery-store tilapia filets just moved to the top of the list. ;) I capped off the meal with a fruit salad of watermelon, mango, banana, and passion fruit (which, for those who have never tasted it, has a definite ‘bite’ — but it’s starting to grow on me).

3/16 FRIDAY — We’d decided to spend Friday in Stone Town, which is the history-laden ‘city within a city’ inside Zanzibar Town, complete with Turkish baths and old slave markets. I set my alarm for 6am so I could get some pictures of the sun rising over the Indian Ocean — stunning — and then Erin and I went back to the on-site restaurant to collect our free breakfast, consisting of coffee, bread, butter, marmalade, chapati, eggs, and several different kinds of fruit. The front desk called us a cab, and off we went, complete with open sunroof and pleasant smoky smell. (I finally figured out what it smells like — the paper-thin smoked prosciutto I used to eat in the Netherlands. Yum!)

Based on our guidebook, we asked the driver to drop us off at Darajani Market as our starting point — which turned out to be every bit as chaotic as the Machame market, multiplied by about fifty. There was blood spattered on the ground from the various meats being sold, so while gingerly watching my foot placement, the first thing I did was walk smack into a bicycle parked in the middle of the sidewalk… nearly impaling myself on the contents of its basket: a gigantic doubled-over SWORDFISH! I’d had no idea how big those things get; it was at least four feet long from tip to tail. I was too stunned to even give a thought to taking a picture, but it’s definitely seared into my brain forever.

Like Machame, most of the market stalls were devoted to fruits and vegetables, which is great at home (EDIT: ha! Just realized I referred to Machame as ‘home’ ;)), but which we didn’t have much use for here. So we wandered away from the market, deeper into the maze of narrow twisty stone alleyways and colorful doors, clogged with clattering bicycles, jam-packed curio shops, enthusiastic vendors, and traditionally-dressed Muslim schoolchildren. We spent most of the morning browsing through the shops; a lot of what we saw was pure kitsch (I think every single shop had the same banana-leaf artwork and elastic cowrie shell bracelets), but we trawled long enough that we each found a couple of really excellent deals. Erin chanced across some necklaces made from polished coconut beads, which we haven’t seen anywhere else during this whole trip, and I netted several pairs of unique dangling earrings, including a pair made from malachite, for an average of $3 per pair. I also bought a series of small watercolors from a narrow private shop sandwiched between two of the run-of-the-mill curios — the artist was sitting in the back working on some pen-and-ink drawings, and his assistant came out and talked to us about the artwork. Zanzibar (and particularly Stone Town) is famous for its beautiful doors, many of which are brightly colored and/or festooned with brass spikes (in the Indian tradition; supposedly it keeps the elephants away), so I bought three small watercolors of the doors: one blue, one green, and one brown. They’re going to look great in my apartment, side by side in a triple frame.

The other gem of our shopping excursion was actually one of the first shops we chanced across, in a less touristy area of the alleyway maze. It was a wide shop, with two doorways, each flanked by stacks of small, attractive, hand-carved wooden chests. Unlike most of the other vendors, this man — who was fairly young and dressed quite Western, in Adidas track pants — didn’t call out to us and assure us of his “lovely prices”; he waited until we stopped to admire the craftsmanship, then explained to us how they were made and invited us to step into the back for a look at his cluttered workshop. Basically, he and a few partners collect old wood from all over Zanzibar and recycle it by hand-carving it into decorated boxes of every size, from palm-sized jewelry boxes to trunks the size of small footlockers. Some of them were subtly beautiful, with the depth of the carvings yielding variations in the wood coloring; others were more overtly decorated with gold fittings, latches, and drawers.
“This one has a secret compartment,” the man said with a grin, pulling out the two lower drawers on one chest. He grasped the divider between thumb and forefinger and pulled that out too — and lo and behold, two small square compartments were attached to its back side. I loved it, and was sorely tempted to buy it, but wasn’t sure it would fit in my bag when it was time to go home; plus, it was early in the day and we had a long way to go yet.
We didn’t even have to give voice to our thoughts. “Walk around, spend your day,” the man said with a smile, “check out some other prices… and then, if you decide to buy, I think you will be back here.” He handed us a card with his shop address — a good thing, since it’s unlikely we’d have been able to find the place a second time — and cheerfully waved us on our way. (Again, a far more relaxed attitude than any other vendor we’d come across *anywhere* in Tanzania!)
And with good reason… because he was absolutely right. We saw similar chests in a few other places (it’s one of the smaller things that Zanzibar is known for; the guidebook actually mentioned it), but none that were so unique or so fairly priced. So our last stop of the day was, indeed, back at his shop, where we handled nearly every chest he had, opening and closing and exploring until one called our names. For me, it was a small, simple, dark-wood box with a carved flower on the top — I’d really liked the ‘secret compartment’ chest, but this one just ‘felt right’ in my hands (and only cost $8!).
We chatted with the shopkeeper a little more — he just seemed so different from his counterparts, with better English and a more Western attitude — and, after inquiring about a giant color photo of a soccer team, discovered that he is actually a player for the Zanzibar national team! He runs the shop in the off season. That explained a lot, from the track pants to the English skills. Even the fairer prices and relaxed attitude made sense — the other Tanzanian/Zanzibari vendors are, in a word, desperate. This man wasn’t.
“Thank you so much,” I said as we left. “You are the only person today who hasn’t tried to pressure us into buying — and you were right; your prices are also the most fair of anyone’s.”
“This is why I opened the shop,” he explained, nodding vigorously. “I would come home at the end of a season and want to buy gifts for my friends on other teams, but couldn’t find anything ‘traditional Zanzibar’ that wasn’t overpriced — for the tourists, you know,” he said, with an apologetic glance. (Yeah, we know. ;))

We ate lunch at an open terrace restaurant called Archipelago; it looked over the water at a small sandy beach where the local fisherman launch their wooden boats. The menu stated that all their fish was line-caught, never net-caught, and was caught fresh each day, never frozen. I don’t remember the exact wording of the apology, but it basically read that, if, therefore, they weren’t able to serve a given item on a particular day, that it was simply the luck of the ocean. (As it should be, right?) I decided to be bold and go with octopus, which I actually really enjoyed. It was served with a side of pilau rice and the same type of spiced coconut sauce as last night’s fish — delicious. Of course, we had to get dessert; I had an orange almond cake which was unlike any cake I’ve ever had before: very light, not particularly sweet or dense, with just enough dough to hold the copious amount of crushed almonds together. We left the restaurant fully satiated, having tickled every taste bud with the wide array of flavors, but not bloated — none of the disgusting too-full feeling that so commonly follows an American restaurant meal. I wish I could eat like this all the time.

We wandered further — up and down the alleyways, down along the water where dark-skinned boys launched themselves off the stone walls and into the water. We sampled ice cream, investigated a women’s fabric co-op, visited a small museum where a musician sat playing local music. For dinner, we went to Dorohani Gardens, which is a large, green, open park along the water’s edge. Every night, local vendors set up booths selling various things — samosas, seafood kebabs, ‘Zanzibar pizza’ (thin pastry crust filled with chicken, cheese, tomato, egg, mayo, and onion), and various inventive desserts (I had a crepe with mango and Nutella, which was delicious). Each booth has a small grill, and the vendors cook the food while you wait. There was also a table selling sugar cane lemon juice — we got to watch them chop the sugar cane and squeeze the juice from the pulp — so we had a glass of that, which was very refreshing after our hot, sweaty day of walking around. As the sun sets, the vendors light lanterns at their tables, so the whole park glows with soft light and smells of charcoal and grilled meat. It’s a popular snack/dinner spot; people perch on benches or along the sea wall, balancing paper plates on their laps, nibbling and chatting as stray cats wander among the throng, begging for tastes. We bought most of our food from a guy named Ali, who took a liking to us; while our pizzas were cooking, he let us taste some of his vegetables and taught us a few new words of Swahili.

We ended our day with drinks at Mercury’s, a waterfront restaurant and bar named after Freddie Mercury, the lead singer of Queen, who was born here in Zanzibar and lived here until going to boarding school in India when he was eight. The bartenders were a lot of fun, and there was a live band playing a traditional version of ‘taarab’, which is a kind of fusion music combining Indian and Muslim influences; Zanzibar is famous for it. We stayed until 9pm or so, then called our cab driver from this morning and got him to take us back to Paje, exhausted but satisfied. I think we planned this well — by doing the exploring, walking, shopping, etc. on the first day, we ensured that we can just happily be a couple of beach bums tomorrow! :)

3/17 SATURDAY — It rained overnight, so our morning breakfast (same food as yesterday, but eaten at one of the outdoor beachfront tables) was a bit overcast, with a few distant rumbles of thunder — but beautiful nonetheless; the contrast of the dark gray clouds and light green water was stunning. Fortunately, the storm had blown out to sea by 10am, and the bright sun was back in full force. Erin and I camped out on the same two lounge chairs as yesterday, under a thatched umbrella, right beside a rustic rope hammock (which *feels* far less romantic against one’s swimsuited rear than it looks in a photo, I can assure you!), and spent the day alternately reading, swimming, journaling, and taking photos. The storm meant that the water was deeper and a bit cooler than yesterday, perfect for swimming, and there were masses of seaweed and colorful shells washed up onto the shore that hadn’t been there yesterday. We took a break from the sun at lunchtime and went into the restaurant for light salads and cassava chips, then returned to our spot. It was an incredibly low-key day, which was exactly what we both wanted and needed.

When it got too dark to read, we went back to the room, got cleaned up, and went down to the restaurant for dinner. We started with beef samosas with a spicy pickled mango dip, then each got huge slabs of grilled tuna as a main course, served with pilau rice and soft grilled potato wedges. We rounded it off with spice cake and vanilla ice cream, then had mojitos at the beachside cabana bar and sat outside and marveled at the night sky. Unexpectedly, just before we headed in for the night, I saw a dazzling streak of light over to one side — the brightest shooting star I’d ever seen. Well done, Zanzibar.

3/18 SUNDAY — Not much to talk about today; it was basically a day of travel. We got up early to try to get some sunrise pictures on this last Zanzibari morning (to no avail — too many clouds — making me glad I’d been proactive on Friday!), then hung out on the beach for a few minutes, collecting shells and marveling at how far out the tide was. We had our usual breakfast (the chapati is really growing on me, especially when you add some butter and marmalade), then packed up, retrieved our passports from the hotel’s safe, and hopped in a taxi back to the airport. It was an hour’s ride there, an hour’s wait for the flight, a quick hop to Dar, an hour’s wait *there*, then an hour’s flight to Kilimanjaro, and another 45 minutes or so back up to Machame in Carol’s taxi, so it was late afternoon by the time we staggered through the door to the guest house. We both immediately took showers — after having been sandy, sweaty, salty, sunscreen-y, or (usually) some combination of the above for three days straight, it was incredible to feel clean — then spent the evening simultaneously unpacking from Zanzibar and packing up for… home! In 72 hours, we will be back in Carol’s taxi headed back to JRO airport — I can’t believe it!
 
I think we planned this trip well by putting it at the *end* of the rotation; our Zanzibar lodge wasn’t a luxurious place by any means (tiny rooms, cold-water showers, and of course no air conditioning) but our perspective on ‘luxury’ is so different at this point that it felt like a darn Hilton! :) Getting a couple of days to just rest, relax, swim, read, eat good food, and experience a new place was really great. In hindsight, it was also wonderful to be ‘in charge of ourselves’ — able to do what we want to do when we want to do it, and not be dependent on anyone else’s input — since we’ve been so often disappointed when we entrust our daily schedule to the MLH higher-ups. But at this point, I think we both feel ‘recharged’, ready to go back to Machame and tackle our last three workdays full-out. We coincidentally ran into Dr. Masaki (the pediatric doctor that I’ve been trying to pin down for, oh, three weeks now) in Bob’s office on Thursday morning, and he ‘confirmed’ (for whatever that’s worth — Bob said to take it with a grain of salt) that he would be doing pediatric rounds tomorrow and Tuesday this week, so maybe I’ll finally get a little bit of peds time. Either way, bring it on, Machame… let’s see what you’ve got for our last few days!

3/19 MONDAY — Victory! We finally got to work with Dr. Masaki (the pediatric doctor)! Things started off a little rough (he was supposed to do five circumcisions, and one of the older surgeons pulled rank on him and basically gypped him out of an operating room), but he rallied, and the end result was definitely my favorite day here at Machame thus far.

First, I found my (tentative) presentation topic during morning report when Dr. Masaki discussed a seven-year-old boy who’d been brought in Wednesday with a cough. Via the history, he elicited that the child had drunk from the Kilimanjaro River two weeks earlier and had developed the cough shortly thereafter. On exam, the child appeared to have a foreign body in his mouth; he underwent minor surgery to extract… a worm! A ‘liver fluke’, to be exact, which is a kind of helminth that, near as I can figure, bears strong resemblance to a leech; it starts off small (the child evidently didn’t notice it in the river water he was drinking), then attaches to whatever bit of flesh it can and increases in size as it fills with blood (thus causing the child’s cough).
The doctor had saved the thing in a jar — still alive — so we took a field trip to the hospital lab to have a look at it.
“It was attached just behind the child’s uvula,” he said casually, peering at the jar, tapping the glass to try to make the worm stretch itself out. Fully extended, it was as long as a finger. “This is our third case here in two years.”
*shudder* …Forget the cough — if something like that had been stuck in *my* mouth for two weeks, I think the chief complaint would have been more like ‘persistent vomiting’!

 We did ward rounds after that and saw a total of sixteen patients. The most common complaint by far was pneumonia, mostly in very young children (infants and toddlers), but we also saw a four-year-old Maasai child with worms, a twelve-year-old girl with a femoral neck fracture (highly unusual), and two really interesting three-month-old girls: one with fairly significant anemia (her palms and tongue were markedly pale), and the other with marasmus (severe malnutrition) — she was born at a weight of 3kg, but presented here last week at 1.7kg, which is less than FOUR POUNDS!!! I couldn’t believe she was still alive!
 
It was amazing to be so completely enthralled in what we were doing; the morning was over before I’d checked the clock once. There were a lot of things I didn’t know (like the *causes* of marasmus), but my brain was firing the whole time, making potential associations about what we were seeing, asking myself what I’d be doing for these children back home with our limitless resources. I was particularly curious about the anemic three-month-old after my rotation on peds heme/onc, and asked about splenomegaly, but none of us could feel a spleen tip today. Dr. Masaki said they can’t test for hemoglobinopathies until babies are older (I’m assuming that’s because they don’t have electrophoresis here, so they have to wait for most of the fetal hemoglobin to disappear before checking a blood smear), but that’s where my money would be, particularly since this family comes from a lower-lying area where malaria (and, thus, sickle-cell) is more common. This baby was just recovering from a fairly significant infection, too, so if she does have a hemoglobinopathy, it makes sense that her red cells could have taken a hit.

I did speak up about the femur fracture (whose leg was in a rudimentary traction system made of rope). “That’s a really unusual place for a child to have a fracture; do you think she has some kind of mineral imbalance?”
“Yes, this is very possible,” the doctor said, nodding his head. He showed me the x-ray, remarking that the child’s bones appeared uniformly light on the scan, not as dense as they should be. Then he added, “She’s also now complaining of abdominal pain and diarrhea, and pain when she urinates.”
Well, if that didn’t sound like “stones, bones, groans,” and so forth! “Has she had her electrolytes checked? Her calcium?” I asked.
The doctor smiled, as if he knew exactly what I was thinking, and said, “That has to be done at KCMC.”
“We can’t do chemistries here?” I asked in disbelief, trying my best to sound curious instead of appalled. He shook his head with a wry smile.
Wow. Just… wow.
Anyway, in my head, that girl’s going to have hyperparathyroidism until proven otherwise. I hope she manages to get the care she needs. The lack of lab support was a recurring theme today — there was another patient, nine years old, who’s getting an I&D tomorrow for recurrent septic arthritis of the knee, and when Erin asked about cultures, she was told that all they do is a Gram stain. Unbelievable.

On the up side, one of our sixteen ward patients was ‘Adam’, and he seems to be doing a bit better — although his suck reflex still isn’t super strong, he’s actually able to breastfeed now, so his NG tube has been pulled, and his mom and the nurses say they haven’t seen any twitching at all. I’m wondering if he didn’t maybe have some form of neonatal meningitis rather than a permanent brain injury. I hope so, for his sake.

In addition to being the house pediatrician, Dr. Masaki also works in the HIV clinic, so his rounds included a stop in the female medical ward to see an elderly HIV+ patient who is entering her fourth week in the hospital. He gave us a brief summary of her history as we stood by the bed, “…and then we found out she had TB,” he said casually, “so now she’s on the drugs for that as well…” (Erin and I are soooo getting tested when we get home…!) The patient has reportedly been sick for a year, but just started antiretrovirals on Friday (sigh), and currently has a CD4 count of 34 and a new complaint of a terrible headache. Dr. Masaki thinks she has cryptococcal meningitis (an opportunistic infection unique to HIV patients), so now she’s on antifungals as well. Based on looks, I had estimated her age at 86 for my Typhon logging, so it was a shock to discover that she was actually only 67. Very sad.

After we were done with ward rounds, we headed back toward the ORs. Four of the scheduled circumcisions had gone home when they found out they’d have to wait a few more hours (for the more senior surgeon to finish using the operating room) — they’ll be back tomorrow — but two brothers, aged two and four, remained. So Erin and I sat on the bench outside the procedure room, waiting to get started.

The anesthetist walked in before Dr. Masaki did, and looked at us, seemingly perplexed. “You are here to observe circumcision?” he finally asked cautiously.
“Yes,” we said.
He paused. “…You know what it is?” he asked.
“Oh yes,” we assured him.
“It is the removal of the prepuce — foreskin — away from the glans penis,” he said, carefully enunciating each of the medical terms.
“Yes, we’re familiar with the procedure,” I said, trying not to get defensive.
He came and sat down next to me. “You do this in your country too?” he asked, seemingly surprised, and we got into a conversation about the indications for circumcision (according to him, it’s mostly for cosmetic reasons and cleanliness) and the most common ages for it to be performed (usually after age two in Tanzania, but some boys don’t have it done until they’re teenagers, particularly the Maasai).
“I believe it also reduces HIV transmission a little,” I said, “is that right?”
“No!” he said emphatically. “How? How would this reduce transmission?”
“I don’t know exactly how,” I admitted, a little surprised, “but I’m pretty sure it does lower the rates a bit.”
Dr. Masaki walked up at the point,  so we let the conversation drop. The nurse brought the younger brother into the room (two years old), sat him on the table, and positioned me at his side, wordlessly placing my arm around him in a half-hug, before she walked away to continue her preparations. Erin and I showed him the sheets of stickers we had in our pockets, and he seemed mildly interested in the animals, stars, and shapes we playfully stuck to his legs, but after a few minutes of this, he started looking around the room apprehensively, watching the medical preparations with suspicious eyes. He stuck his fingers nervously into his mouth, then turned his face into my coat with a wail.
I picked him up, patted his back, rocked him back and forth. He quieted down immediately and laid his head on my shoulder, which melted my heart into a thousand tiny pieces.
“You have to do peds,” Erin said, watching my face. “You’re in your element right now.”
I smiled. (As an aside, I actually think she’s right — one of the things I’m taking away from this rotation experience is a bit more certainty that I am, in fact, likely still headed where I thought I was headed two years ago when we started this crazy PA school adventure.) But I felt bad for the poor little guy — even more so when the anesthetist made me pin him to the table while he hunted for a vein and inserted the IV to inject the ketamine. It would have been so much less traumatic for the boy if they had just let me restrain him on my lap — or, even better, had let his father come with him into the room and hold him while the IV was inserted. I don’t think reducing fear on the part of the child is a big focus of what they do here — although this manifested itself amusingly when someone noticed the colorful stickers still marching down his limp toddler’s legs and asked us about them. Erin and I both pulled our stashes out of our pockets, and the doctor, nurse, assistant, and anesthetist all stared in wonder, asked several questions (“Did you bring those for the children?” …Um, as opposed to a bribe for my evaluators?!)  — then helped themselves! The anesthetist asked, “Do you have any more with animals?” then, when I pulled some out, asked if he could have a sheet. Dr. Masaki asked if he could bring some home to his son; I told him I’d bring him a whole book of stickers tomorrow. It was hilarious to watch full-grown adults explore something so simple that they’ve just never really seen, like teaching the clinical officer about hand sanitizer last week.

I chatted with the anesthetist while Dr. Masaki worked, and at one point, a nursing student entered the room. Dr. Masaki asked her if she knew the indications for circumcision; she named a couple of things, and he started filling in the gaps. “There are also some studies that show that circumcision reduces transmission of HIV,” he told her, and I raised my eyebrows at the anesthetist and cocked my head toward the doctor.
“…She is just telling me this!” the anesthetist blurted out in surprise, meaning me. (I was glad the topic had come up again, both for my own confirmation as well as a way of ensuring that the staff didn’t think I was an idiot!) We continued the conversation — basically, Dr. Masaki didn’t know the exact mechanism of transmission reduction either (which made me feel better), but he did remind me that having an STI raises one’s susceptibility to HIV, and that circumcision definitely does cut down on STI transmission, so perhaps that’s a piece of the puzzle.

Each circumcision took about an hour all told — the procedure is fairly similar to the ones I’ve seen in the States, but more simplified in some ways; the foreskin is pretty much just cut off with a pair of scissors, and the majority of the time is spent suturing together the two layers of skin around the base of the glans. I’d never seen any suturing done in a circumcision before, and was told that it doesn’t strictly *have* to be done — but it seems like there’s considerably more bleeding among older patients (which makes sense as far as why we in the States do the procedure within the first couple of days of life), so the sutures likely help with that.

Erin and I grabbed a late lunch / early dinner at the canteen, and then she went to track down the orthopedic surgeon (who’s writing her evaluation); I’m planning to work with Dr. Masaki again tomorrow, and I’m hoping he’ll write mine. It’s almost 5pm, so the Swedes should be getting back pretty soon from their safari; I’ll be glad to see them (the guest house feels lonely with just the two of us!). Except that we haven’t had electricity all day long — woke up without it and still don’t have it; Dr. Masaki was holding his x-ray films up to the windows all day — so I hope the Swedes are slightly less desperate for hot showers than Erin and I were yesterday…

3/20 TUESDAY — Victory, for the second day in a row — with 24 hours to go in Machame, we finally saw a vaginal delivery!

The early part of the day was really nothing to write home about — Erin went back to internal med clinic with the awesome Dr. Massawe, and I went back to peds (no new patients, so no ward rounds today, but five, count ‘em, *five* circumcisions, one of which was on a six-month-old) and also spent 90 minutes in the internal med clinic with Erin and Dr. Massawe while the pediatrician went to lunch. Somewhere during those 90 minutes, Dr. M discovered that we were leaving tomorrow night, was completely aghast at the news (“No! That felt like only two weeks!”), and insisted on taking us out for drinks tonight at six. (“I think we can manage that!” we said in unison.)

Around 2pm, I ended up back at the guest house, doing some packing and cleaning… and was standing outside talking to the Swedes on the porch when Erin came trotting over the hill, exclaiming from a distance, “It’s baby time!” She’d stopped by the maternity ward on her way home and had been told “within 30 minutes.” Well, by this point we all knew that that meant “move NOW!”, so I grabbed my white coat and the four of us scurried back up to the hospital.

There were two women in labor, both first-time moms. One was at eight centimeters (she was the “within thirty minutes” candidate); the other was at six. Given the scope of my audience here, I’ll spare most of the details, but the baby, a healthy boy, was indeed born right at the thirty-minute mark, with no tearing, hemorrhaging, or other maternal complications. He was the fifth delivery of the day, and they had apparently been “Boys, boys, all boys!” said the delivery nurse good-naturedly as she tied a piece of disinfected twine around the squalling baby’s umbilical cord — then jumped as he let fly with a stream of urine, all over her front!
“That’s what you get for complaining about boys!” I teased, and we all had a good laugh.

 Overall, it was a really good delivery (and the first one Erin and Maria had ever seen!). However, without being too graphic, I did notice that the ‘mechanics’ of the second stage of labor looked visually somewhat ‘off’ compared to other deliveries I’d seen — I was really afraid the mother was going to tear (and the nurses apparently agreed, since one of them had the scissors in her hand for an episiotomy at one point, then changed her mind). When the baby’s head finally emerged, it became clear that he was posterior (with the back of his head having been pressed against his mother’s tailbone), which accounted for the difference in appearance as well as for his mother’s painful ‘back labor’. As I said, she came through it extraordinarily well, but the reason I bring this up is that OB providers are supposed to be able to *know* a baby’s position, plain and simple, no matter how little technology you have available — because when you do a cervical check (to feel for dilation, effacement, and station), once the baby’s head is engaged, you should also ideally be able to feel for the fontanelles and therefore know the position of the head. Granted, it takes a lot of practice, but it’s worth it; there are ways to make a baby turn during early labor, which will make successive stages easier. If this isn’t being included as part of these nurses’ training, well, it should be. (Side note: interestingly, there was no physician in the room either; just two nurses and three nursing students, plus the four of us ‘wazungu’.) But I suppose all’s well that ends well; we took turns holding the brightly wrapped newborn (who blinked his swollen eyes repeatedly against the sunlight, trying to grasp the sudden dramatic change to his formerly dark environment) and welcoming him to the world, which made everything feel happier.

We went back to the house, still glowing with the experience, and chatted on the porch until 6pm, when Dr. Massawe came to fetch Erin and me. He drove us up the hill to a small hotel, which had a restaurant attached to it; the three of us sat in the flower garden and split a bottle of sweet red Tanzanian wine and a plate of the most delicious samosas I’ve ever eaten. He asked a bunch of questions about our lives and families, and told us about himself; he’s had a fascinating life. He’s spent time living in Australia, Italy, Germany, India, and a few other places, and it shows; his English skills are better than almost anyone else in the hospital, and he has a clear respect for cultural and medical differences that not many of these providers share. The last five or ten minutes of our evening were spent in a mutual thank-you exchange. “I am very sorry you are leaving. I have really enjoyed you. …Of all the students coming from Duke,” he said thoughtfully, “I think you two have caught me the most of anyone.” We had to work hard not to melt on the spot!

We made it back to the hospital just in time to meet Asha and Maria for the special goodbye dinner Asha had arranged for us — chicken, rice, gravy, spinach, and French fries. The canteen ladies are so incredibly nice; they were a bit standoffish in the beginning, which we’ve figured out was because of the Nebraskans (apparently they pitched some kind of hissy fit about the food during their first couple of days, before we showed up, and thus tarnished the reputation for all ‘wazungu’ yet to come), but Asha and her Swahili skills have really smoothed the way for us. The ladies couldn’t stop hugging us and talking about how sad they were that their ‘marafiki’ (friends) were leaving, and we all took a bunch of pictures together. We knew both women had teenage children and large extended families, so we had the idea to ask them via Asha if anyone might want some of the clothes we’re leaving behind; they eagerly said yes, so we’re going to drop a bag off tomorrow. Glad to find a good home for all those old clinic clothes — they’re dowdy and ill-fitting in our eyes compared to what we wear at home, but will be incredibly appreciated by someone here. And my black Teva flip-flops have survived two Duke Basketball Campouts in addition to a month in Africa; it’s way past time for them to go, but it makes me happy to think of one of the smiling canteen women wearing them here in Machame after I’m gone.

3/21 WEDNESDAY — Our last day at Machame was a bit fragmented due to all the things we needed to accomplish, but we did get to observe the maternal-child public health clinic, which was a new experience (and really nice for me to be able to compare with home, particularly the childhood immunization schedule). We got to do Leopolds again and try the wooden ear trumpet that they use for auscultating fetal heartbeats (I know that thing has a proper name, but I haven’t been able to remember what it is!), and I got some information on their schedule of vaccines, which basically consists of BCG at birth, three doses of DPT, polio, and hepatitis B, and one dose of measles (at nine months). One of the nursing students tried to tell us that babies were also vaccinated for hepatitis C, which we tried to gently challenge (there is no such vaccine, which is unfortunate, because the world would be a significantly healthier place if there were), to no avail. But nothing for meningitis, rotavirus, pneumococcus… not even a Hib vaccine. It’s definitely very different — but I guess they try to focus their efforts on cost and effort vs. mortality, which makes sense.

I’m really glad that other side of this clinic exists, too — because goodness knows these women desperately need prenatal care and counseling on family planning — but there were also a lot of things that bothered me about it, perhaps more than in any other area of the hospital, with the possible exception of surgery. Mothers aren’t given folic acid until week 20 of pregnancy; their urine isn’t ever tested for protein or glucose except at their very first visit (when the test is ‘really’ only being done to confirm pregnancy); and, my personal favorite, they all receive five, count ‘em, five tetanus shots during EVERY PREGNANCY, regardless of how long it’s been since the last one — and the tetanus is plain old toxoid, no pertussis or diphtheria protection included. Sigh. These things bother me because I feel like it’s a misdirection of resources. If you’re going to give folic acid at some point anyway, why not start it at a time when it can still make a difference as far as neural tube defects? If you’re only going to do one urinalysis per mother per pregnancy, why not just do a simple HCG at the initial visit (which they do anyway) and save the bigger test until a point in the pregnancy when it can actually give you some valuable information about preeclampsia or gestational diabetes? Sigh. Sigh. Sigh.
 
We got a lot of other things accomplished today, though; we finished packing, donated our leftover surgical eyewear and masks to the surgery department, gave our clothes to the canteen ladies, passed off our leftover stickers to the peds department, handed out thank-you notes to the people who’d had the greatest impact on us, and had a delicious lunch (pilau and beans) at the canteen with Asha and Maria. The most surprising and hilarious moment of the day was when Erin, from the shower, suddenly screamed. I ran to the bathroom to discover that a nearly six-inch-long colorful lizard had dropped off the curtain rod and landed down next to her feet! Amid much squealing and hilarity, I managed to get it out the front door — while Erickson, one of the young inpatient boys with osteomyelitis, nearly collapsed laughing as he balanced on his crutches in our yard — only to find another one in the water heater closet and a third crawling on our screen door. Time to go home! :)

Carol showed up at 5:30 and shuttled us down to the airport; our flight didn’t leave until 9:30, but he wasn’t keen on driving in the dark, which I could understand. We checked in, did a quick run through the (single row of) tiny airport shops, passed through immigration (they checked our fingerprints electronically! First time that’s ever happened — in Third World Africa, of all places!), went through security, and plopped ourselves into chairs to wait. We hadn’t eaten since lunch and both of us were hungry, but the airport restaurant had already closed (typical Tanzania…) and the only other sustenance to be found was Pringles, nuts, and candy, so we decided to wait. One nice diversion: a fellow passenger from Virginia discovered that we were budding PAs and told us that he had “a soft spot for female PAs working in emergency medicine”, because he’d once injured his thumb rather badly and had it sewn up so expertly by a PA (twenty-three stitches) that the hand specialist he later saw felt that even he wouldn’t have been able to do as well — and the wound isn’t even visible now. Props to PAs. :)

We finally got on the plane (next to a British safari guide who reminds me strongly of Muldoon from Jurassic Park), hopped over to Dar again (sigh), sat on the ground for an hour (double sigh), then finally took off again for Amsterdam around midnight Tanzania time. As much as I’ve been talking about the big-picture things I’ve learned and the perspective that I’ll take away from this trip — all of which is perfectly true — I am actually quite ready to leave Africa. The plane was taxiing and started to pick up speed, and an involuntary smile split my face; the only thought in my mind was, “yes, take me home, take me home.” I didn’t necessarily mean Durham in particular, just ‘someplace familiar’, ‘someplace I understand’, ‘someplace where I can actually talk to people’… like the Netherlands! :) I can’t even tell you how thrilled I am to be going back there, even if only for 48 hours. Just listening to the silly cabin announcements has got me all excited, because I swear they pick the KLM flight attendants for their crisp, perfectly enunciated Dutch — it’s like a symphony to my ears; I can’t get enough.

We’re gaining two hours on this trip — it’s a nine-hour flight, but it will only be 7am Dutch time when we get there. Right now, my body thinks it’s half past midnight, and apart from a cup of orange juice on the hop to Dar, I haven’t eaten anything in almost 12 hours. After a month of rice, beans, and fresh produce, that type of simple food is actually what sounds best to me — but if I’m honest, I’m still really looking forward to my little compartmentalized plastic tray of packaged, dyed, processed calories right about now! :)

3/22 THURSDAY — …Words cannot describe how incredible it feels to be back in the Netherlands! On the plane this morning, the ‘time to destination’ dipped inside an hour, and I had to work hard to hide the fact that I was simultaneously crying and laughing. “This City” came on my iPod around the 30-minute mark — too perfect — and when we started our descent, my breath did that thing where it catches in my chest and becomes too big for my body. Melodramatic reactions, perhaps — chalk it up to lack of sleep if you like — but this country was home for a year and a half, and has been my ‘second home’ ever since as far as my heart is concerned. Apart from a few days in 2007 on my way to England, it’s been eight whole years since I’ve been here; I never, ever would have thought that I would have — or could have — stayed away that long. The time lag has the effect of making everything appear at once dazzlingly new, like I can’t open my eyes wide enough to take it all in, and yet still absolutely and perfectly familiar, like a comfortable old pair of favorite jeans. It’s fascinating to me how completely I remember the language, the public transportation system, the necessary instincts to keep from being run over by a bicyclist — like flexing long-disused muscles — and yet my five senses are so hungry that the usual ho-hum, day-to-day attitude I remember is gone. On the contrary, I want to look at every row of houses, eat at every street vendor, ride on every tram, drink in every experience.
 
And I want to throw my arms around every single person I hear speaking Dutch; my ears are craving it, and it falls out of my mouth almost as easily as it used to do, maybe because I’ve been in ‘other-language mode’ for a month already. My thoughts are careening back and forth between two languages — a few mental phrases of English interspersed with a few of Dutch. Often, there’s a fleeting empty pause inside my head as a familiar sight or sound makes itself known — and a moment later, a Dutch word I haven’t used or thought of in eight years will suddenly blossom into being. And then, of course, there are other times when I get completely blocked (I asked a cashier for ‘stempletjes’ today — meaning ‘rubber stamps’, the kind they’d mark on my passport — when I meant ‘postzegels’ — the kind of stamps you use for mailing letters. Blond moment! Luckily, she figured out what I meant after a moment, and when I slapped my forehead, blushed, and explained that I hadn’t spoken the language in a long time, we both had a good laugh.). But I can still do it; it’s still there. Erin asked me today if I missed speaking Dutch, and when I emphatically said yes, she asked me why. I had to think about it for a second, and then I replied, “Because it’s something that I learned purely because I wanted to.” Practically speaking, it’s a completely useless skill; everybody in this country speaks English, so there’s really no reason for me to have bothered to learn Dutch. But for whatever reason, I just have this irrational love for the language — so I think it’s one of those cases of liking the things we’re good at, and being good at the things we like. I miss speaking it because it’s a skill that I’m proud of, that I worked hard to develop, and that I don’t often get to utilize. It’s just fun.

But what I really want to do is jump on the train back to Utrecht. I want to buy a ‘patatje met’ in Utrecht Centraal, stroll down the Oudegracht and pop into ‘my’ bookstore, eat a ‘broodje Mario’ from my favorite street vendor, nibble a warm stroopwafel while browsing the outdoor market stalls, climb the Domtoren and view the city from the top, hitch a ride ‘achterop’ the back of someone’s bike, drink a cappuccino on the wide brick plaza, ride my bike into the woods until that secret little red pancake house pops out like Hansel and Gretel’s cottage. I want to fully dive back in to this life, to live it all over again. None of that will happen, of course — we’ve only got two days (really just one day, now), so we’re staying in Amsterdam — but my heart remembers how it used to be.

All right, enough nostalgia. Actually, we saw and did a lot today. When we got to Schiphol, the trains in the major metropolitan area of the country weren’t working (which has NEVER happened in my memory; we were told it was due to a signal failure — faulty software), so we took a bus into the city, which didn’t go to the station, but to the Leidseplein, in the southern part of town. Fortunately, we’d been able to leave our heaviest bags in storage lockers at the airport (the Dutch think of everything!), so the walk wasn’t nearly as horrible as it might have been. We stopped at a little croissanterie for breakfast, then continued on to the hostel. After checking in and stashing our bags, the first thing we did was take a canal tour through the oldest part of the city — one of the things that every Amsterdam tourist must do. After that, we walked down to the Albert Cuypmarkt, a large outdoor market selling food, clothes, bikes, plants, electronic devices, and just about anything else you could think of. Erin had her first stroopwafel (huge, warm, and dripping with fresh caramel, eaten from a waxed-paper wrapper while walking through an outdoor market — the way the stroopwafel experience *should* be — none of these plastic-wrapped preservative-laden things! ;)), and her first ‘patatje’ (french fry) experience — she got garlic sauce, I got the ‘traditional’ mayonnaise. I also had a kroket sandwich (nobody really knows what’s in a kroket, and nobody really *wants* to know what’s in one, but they taste absolutely phenomenal with spicy mustard). After a month of simple, natural African food, I was pretty uncomfortable an hour or so after all that sugar and grease, but it was worth it. :) We stopped at a grocery store later in the afternoon so that I could stock up on all my essentials — amandelkoek, hagelslag, knoflooksaus, pannenkoekmix, and squeezable yogurt with sunflower seeds (don’t knock it til you’ve tried it!) — and also visited the Anne Frank House, which is something else that every Amsterdam tourist *must* do, no matter how brief your time in the city. We had dinner at a place called Tin Pan Alley (the *best* vegetable goat cheese lasagna I’ve ever had) and dessert at a chocolate shop just a few doors down from our hostel. Our last activity of the day was to visit the Red Light District (because, again, everyone should see it once) — Erin’s word for her reaction was “disappointed”, and I have to agree. I’ve been through the district several times now, and while it’s quite the sight, it still never gets any easier to look the women in the eye — you always wonder whether they’re happy, what they’re thinking about, whether they actually want to be doing what they’re doing. I find myself pitying them, and then I wonder whether I *should* pity them. It’s a confusing experience, and more than a little sad.
 
3/23 FRIDAY — This will be brief, since I’m trying to get packed to leave ‘for good’ in the morning, but wanted to write something…
 
How odd — I dreamed in Dutch this morning. Not all night long — but I woke up with a Dutch dialogue playing out in my head. No idea what it was now, of course, but in hindsight, that was kind of neat — hasn’t happened in years.
 
Anyway, we had breakfast at the hostel today — bread, cheese, salami, eggs, bananas, and so forth. The most interesting thing was the packets of ‘chocolate paste’ — like Nutella, but minus the hazelnut. I may or may not have stashed five packets in my purse. ;) Then we went to the train station (with functioning trains today!) and bought both today’s and tomorrow’s train tickets. The poor cashier couldn’t for the life of her understand why we needed round-trips to Schiphol today and then one-ways tomorrow; I had to explain that we were going to the Keukenhof (the famous tulip gardens) today, and the closest bus departure to get there was from Schiphol.
 
We rode the train back to the airport — do you have any idea how much I love the trains?!? It was a short ride, much shorter than the trip used to be from Utrecht to the airport, but I put on my headphones nonetheless, just for the atmosphere. I spent so much time on those trains when I lived there — going to friends’ homes, to concerts in other cities, to English sessions with the man I used to tutor, to swim practices with the master’s team, sometimes even to other countries (I went to Auschwitz and Paris on the train) — and something about it is just so amazing to me. The smoothness of the ride, the quickness of it, watching the world go by in a way you can never do on a plane — I love it.
 
Anyway, we had a bit of confusion at the airport; we found what the monitors showed to be the correct site to catch the bus to the Keukenhof, but we hadn’t been standing there for more than three minutes when a driver disembarked another bus and strode over to us, saying in Dutch, “Are you guys going to het Keukenhof, by chance?”
“Yes,” I said, a little confused.
“The bus doesn’t leave from here anymore,” he said, gesturing down to the far end of the airport. “Walk all the way down to the end and then around the corner of the airport, and there’s a little sign there; that’s where it leaves from.”
“Wow, thank you so much — we’d have been standing here all day!” I exclaimed.
We had to hunt a bit, but the driver was absolutely right. We made it to the park by 10am, and although it felt a bit like a theme park at first (tinny music, a gift shop at the entrance, photo ops with one’s feet resting inside giant wooden clogs…), it rallied quickly, because the place was absolutely *beautiful*. Most of the tulips weren’t quite blooming yet, but there were what seemed like millions of crocuses and other types of flowers, as well as towering trees, an old-fashioned wooden windmill, and a few carefully designed greenhouses with beautiful indoor displays. We wandered the grounds for hours and took picture after picture; it was definitely a day of photo ops.
 
We had another stroopwafel while wandering through the park, and then some ice cream just before leaving. (Cue the stomachache, again! I apparently don’t have my ironclad Western tummy back yet.) We took the bus back to the airport and then the train back to Amsterdam, then decided to wander back down to the Leidseplein. I bought a beautiful watercolor print of the cityscape at night, and we wandered back to the ‘negen straatjes’ (“nine streets”) district, where some of the best restaurants are located. We were meeting a friend of mine, Floor, at 8:30pm for drinks at a pub called De Doffer, so after much deliberation (admittedly, I was too cranky to be of much help in the decision), we camped out around 7pm at a table in the front window of a restaurant called Lust, directly across the street from De Doffer. The food was excellent (goat cheese loempia, guinea fowl with pumpkin, and caramelized pear with vanilla ice cream), but the service was quite slow, and I spotted Floor walking down the street before we’d even been served our dessert. I ran out to meet her and dragged her inside, so we ended up starting our evening right there, then moving across the street after we’d finished eating and a few more of her friends had arrived. Two of them — a girl from Australia and another from Ireland — were absolutely hilarious, and I wish I’d had more time to get to know them. Floor actually works at this pub once in a while, so she knew absolutely everyone there; at one point, she dragged one of the female bartenders out and made me speak Dutch to her (her disbelief was a nice ego boost ;)). It was a completely lovely evening in every way; despite the cold temperature (we were sitting outside) and knowing that we had to catch a morning flight, we didn’t leave the cozy gathering until nearly midnight.

——
 
And now… I’m home.
 
Wow.
 
Things are familiar, and yet not. Real coffee tastes too strong. It feels like a million years since I’ve interviewed a patient. There’s a new restaurant going into the strip next door to my apartment. I can’t remember what’s actually *supposed* to go in the pockets of my white coat (not toilet paper, packets of stickers, or extra socks?). My muscle memory remembers instinctively how to drive, and yet the roads feel so wide and sprawling, it’s hard to remember the importance of staying in my lane.
 
Physically, I’m feeling okay — jet lag in this direction is much easier than the other way around, because all you have to do is force yourself to stay awake for awhile longer (versus forcing yourself to sleep when you’re not tired, which is what you have to do when you fly east). I started my next rotation this morning with a minimum of fatigue. I’ll spare you the details, but I did end up with some sort of African intestinal issue within about ten minutes of landing back on American soil — I had chalked up the previous 24 hours of waxing/waning discomfort to an overdose of sugary, greasy Western food in Amsterdam, but the fact that I definitely had something African, ahem, manifested itself pretty clearly. ;) Ah, well, at least I got through all the fun stuff with a minimum of discomfort! And Cipro is a wonder drug; I’ve never taken it before, but had gotten some before I left “just in case,” and was feeling much better after just two doses.
 
Admittedly, I’ve missed a lot of things — my apartment, real coffee, dependably hot showers, tank tops, exercise, Target, my electric toothbrush, a bed without a mosquito net — and, as a result, a lot of things have been thrown into perspective. I wouldn’t say I have a guilt complex, exactly — but it’s crazy to think about the fact that there are millions of people over there on the other side of the world who don’t have electricity or hot water — never mind Internet or cell phones — and may have never known that amazing feeling of being truly *clean* that I so relished when I got out of the shower late Saturday night. Over there, whole families live in houses one-quarter the size of my tiny studio apartment. Three or four people could sleep in my double bed, instead of me luxuriating in having so much space all to myself. Those people have never walked into a supersized American grocery store, as I did yesterday, and seen the dazzling abundance and variety of food that we take for granted. I’ve asked myself this question a lot since getting into PA school, but now I ask it with a new meaning: seriously, what gives me the right to be this lucky?
 
Thank you all for reading, and for being with me on this journey. I am so very fortunate, in so many ways.

Tanzania — Week 3

12 Mar

MONDAY — Thought for the day: I like the way the circadian rhythm dictates the sleep-wake schedule here. When the sun rises, you get up. When it gets dark, you get ready for bed. Even the Swahili words for time-telling reflect this fact — ‘saa moja’ (literally ‘hour one’) is seven o’clock in the morning. Which actually makes much more sense, if you can manage to wrap your brain around it…

After devotions and morning report, Bob snagged us for a quick ‘field trip’ with his organization, Houses for Health — a bit like Habitat for Humanity, except that the way one qualifies for a new home is by having some kind of health condition (HIV, TB, and so forth) that’s exacerbated by the poor (even by African standards) state of their current house. This is particularly important in a place like Machame, where you’ll otherwise be cold and wet a good portion of the time. $5000 builds a simple, sturdy two-room stone structure, usually painted blue, with a concrete foundation, corrugated tin roof, small front porch, and barred windows with quaint wooden shutters. Each one takes 5-7 weeks to build, depending on the weather; they’ve built over 50 of them so far.

The woman we saw today is a 41-year-old widow and a client of the CTC unit here at the hospital (meaning she’s HIV-positive, which is an automatic qualifier). She currently lives in a dark one-room shack with her three children and infant grandchild. The home is made of sticks and dried mud, and there’s not much room for anything inside except two beds, which all five inhabitants share; it goes without saying that there’s no electricity or running water. (Actually, those ‘luxuries’ aren’t even included in the Houses for Health buildings, partly for logistic and financial reasons, and partly “because then you run into jealousy issues,” Bob explained.) The mud hut is packed together in a very tight cluster with three other similar structures, each housing another family. There are clotheslines stretched haphazardly overhead, a communal cooking area in the yard, and an unbelievable stench permeating throughout — I tried not to look too closely regarding the whereabouts of the toilet. One of the roosters Erin and I can hear from our beds every morning was standing in the yard, eyeing us beadily and crowing up a (deafening) storm the whole time.

The mother was at work, and the six- and fifteen-year-old children were at school, so Bob asked a few questions of the oldest daughter (seventeen), who was at home, holding her round-eyed six-month-old baby on her hip. He also took a few photos of the house, both inside and out. “They keep it clean as best they can,” he murmured to us. “You can tell they really try. That’s a good sign.”

The interview lasted less than ten minutes. “As you can see, the ‘committee’ doesn’t need long to make a decision,” Bob said with a wink as we walked back to the truck. He said the funds are already available (a family from his Lutheran church in Nebraska is sponsoring this family), and that the construction should begin within a couple of weeks, as soon as they can get the property contract ironed out (see below). Which is really unbelievably soon, but I wished we could have rolled up our sleeves and started this very day! I know that this is ‘their normal’ and that of their neighbors, and that they’ve never really known anything much different… but *I* know firsthand how different things can be, and it makes my heart hurt.

On a happier note, we stopped at a second House for Health on the way home, this one already nearing completion. The structure was simple, but sturdy and dry, and smelled good — of new wood and dried banana leaves. The recipient, another HIV-positive woman with young children, couldn’t stop smiling and saying “asante” (thank you) to Bob. As we walked back to the truck, Bob explained to us that they’d had to have a committee meeting about this house — as they soon will for the one we’d just seen — before beginning construction, rallying all the neighbors and relatives to sign a simple contract to ensure that if the mother dies, that the house remains family property and passes to her children, rather than to her brother or anyone else. “In some areas, it’s common for property to pass to siblings, rather than spouses or children,” he explained, “and, of course, this being Tanzania, they’re not always even blood siblings.” Wow. The things you just don’t think about.

When we got back to the hospital, Erin and I went to OB clinic for the day. It ran much the same as it had last Monday — a string of uterine myomas, PID, and pregnancy. However, there was one moment that piqued my interest. Mid-morning, a labor and delivery nurse — one of the ones with better English skills — showed up at the door, holding a blanketed bundle in one arm. She spoke with Dr. Lema in rapid Swahili, then showed him the three-day-old baby boy she held. At first glance, everything looked normal — dark skin, black curls, the unfocused gaze of the newborn. Then she pulled the blanket away from his upper body. “Twitchy,” she said, indicating his left hand.
Sure enough, the baby’s tiny left hand was flexing repetitively at the wrist, again and again. His eyes were wide open — at second glance, clearly wider than they should have been for one just hours old — and diverted to the left. And twitching, along with his rosebud mouth. It wasn’t overly dramatic, but it was rhythmic as clockwork. I’d never seen such marked abnormal neurological activity in a newborn.
“Had little fever this morning, too,” said the nurse. She told us he had been born via planned c-section three days ago due to breech presentation. It had been a normal delivery and his mother was doing well. The little one hadn’t started “twitching” until today.

The doctor took the baby, felt his soft spot, stuck a finger in his mouth to feel for his suck. I felt his head as well; his fontanelle felt normal, not puffed up, as it might have been in the setting of meningitis.
“Twitching on left, eyes to the left,” he noted, “so the left is the side of the problem.”
“Does he have reflexes?” I asked, completely entranced.
Dr. Lema tipped the baby backward, trying to elicit a Moro reflex. Nothing. There hadn’t been a sucking response, either. He handed the bundle back to the nurse.
“Valium,” he said, scribbling on a prescription pad, “and phenobarbital. To stop the twitches. And gentamicin, for a broad spectrum. And an NG tube for feeding — I don’t think he feeds well.”
I pointed to the baby. “Now his eyes are to the right.” His right fist clutched rhythmically in time.
“Even his feet,” the nurse said, indicating the baby’s tiny feet. Sure enough, one of them was twitching, too. I ran my fingernail along the bottom of each tiny foot, looking for a Babinski reflex. Again, nothing.
“Do you think it’s infectious, or some kind of congenital problem?” I asked.
“That’s why I give the gentamicin, to cover Gram-positive and Gram-negative,” he replied. “It may be from a hypoglycemia, but the blood sugar is normal. So now we think maybe hypoxia in utero, or from the birth. It may also be congenital malaria.” I’d had no idea there was such a thing (and neither does Epocrates, unfortunately. Something to add to the list of things to look up when I get home!).
The nurse took the baby away to give him the medications as ordered, but we stopped by to see him on our way out of the hospital later. “Can you believe it is the same baby?!” the nurse asked, sounding triumphant. Sure enough, his eyes were sleepier, much more appropriate for a three-day-old, and nothing was twitching. Apart from the NG tube in his nose, he looked like a normal baby. I asked a few questions about the medicine, and the nurse showed me the phenobarbital, which she was giving in pill form — one-fourth of a tablet, crushed and put down the NG tube. She showed me the site where she’d tried to insert an IV, without success. “You are expert in IVs?” she asked, half hopefully, half joking. Regretfully, I had to shake my head.
“What’s his name?” Erin asked.
The nurse shook her head. “Not yet baptized.”
Suddenly, as we watched, the baby began to twitch again. “What time did he have the Valium and phenobarbital?” I asked. It had been nearly four hours, so the nurse started to prepare some more. We can treat the symptoms, but we still don’t know the cause. He’s going to be my little mystery patient. I hope I’ll get the chance to ask the pediatric doctor about him tomorrow; I’ve tried to track him down every single day and haven’t yet had any luck.

TUESDAY — One of the first things we did was check on the baby, who actually appeared much better, sleeping peacefully in a bundle of blankets, eyes closed, with no evidence of any clonic activity. They’d managed to get an IV started overnight, which must have been a big help. He felt warm, but that may have been from being bundled up in this hot climate (which must be a cultural thing; even the plumper, older babies wear knitted hats as they ride on their mothers’ backs in the hot sun). I was dying to see if he had reflexes today, but didn’t want to disturb his sleep; maybe I’ll get the chance tomorrow. He may just be so heavily medicated that no wayward neuro activity can manifest — it’s likely still there beneath the surface — but it was nice to see him resting comfortably and *looking* better, at least.

More good news: the man with tetanus is improving! He’s still having spasms, but they’re shorter (less than 15 seconds) and less frequent, and he’s able to eat by mouth. Neither Erin nor I had expected him to get better, so that was an unexpected surprise. I wonder which part of the treatment cocktail was the most essential one: the antibiotics, the tetanus toxoid (he never did get the immune globulin), or his own immune system?

However, apart from those two bright spots, today may actually have been the most frustrating day we’ve had so far. All the ‘teaching physicians’ were in an educational seminar (to help them improve their teaching skills), which is apparently supposed to last for the rest of the week. Except for the physicians themselves, nobody seems to have known about this until today, not even the nurses; the pediatric doctor had a huge backlog of patients checked in and waiting for him that he never came to see. Erin and I did spend three hours in the internal medicine clinic — the only clinic that was running — but the provider staffing it today was a clinical officer who isn’t on the teaching staff. Although he was perfectly nice, he wasn’t really accustomed to having students; as a result, we didn’t get much out of our time with him. However, I suppose it could be considered a lesson in what *not* to do; he was changing patients’ blood pressure medications left and right, with no apparent rhyme or reason. One man was on four medications, some of which were dosed twice a day (because the half-life is only a few hours — Erin taught me that today :)). The clinical officer was pleased that the man’s BP had dropped from 200/120 to 160/100, and happily said, “So we can lower his medicine!”
“So is that what you generally do here — when you see improvement in the blood pressure, you take *away* medicine?” I asked, wondering if I had misunderstood.
“Yes. Because if we are leaving the medications like this, the pressure will keep on going down. So I think we can take away this one,” he said, indicating the nifedipine.
Erin was as surprised as I was. “Do you have a goal blood pressure for him? A number that you would like to see?” she asked.
The clinical officer seemed unprepared for the question. He fumbled for a moment, then said, “Maybe 130/80, or 140/90… those are close to normal.”

Now… hang on just a second. (Non-medical folks, forgive me as I ‘talk shop’ for a moment.) I know there are many, many different ways of doing things in this field, and I know I’m a student, a relative lowlife, without a wealth of expertise to draw upon. But. Every single thing about that encounter just seems wholly incorrect to me. First of all, if the meds are helping to lower his blood pressure and he’s not having side effects, then shouldn’t he he **stay on them**? Second, a pressure of 160/100 is still very high — if anything, he needs a med *increase*, not a decrease. Third, besides the nifedipine, his other three medications were a diuretic, a beta blocker, and a nitrate. So if you’re going to pick one drug to stop, shouldn’t it be the wimpy little nitrate first, rather than the calcium channel blocker (which is the go-to class of BP drug for African-Americans in the States)?

And realistically — as Erin said today — what are the chances that you’re really going to regularly discontinue blood pressure meds in 60- and 70-year-olds in Tanzania anyway? It brings us back to that earlier discussion about lifestyle changes — in a situation like this, there’s very little you can change besides medication. And we aren’t talking about 20-year-olds here — older people’s blood vessels get stiff with age and their blood pressure rises; it just does, same as getting wrinkles or gray hair, and it isn’t going to just go away. So… yeah. Still no clue what that clinical officer was doing — it made zero sense to me or Erin — but if nothing else, it’s motivated me to do some research and make sure I know what he *should* have been doing. (Or, at least, what my biased Western brain *thinks* he should have been doing… ;))

Further frustration: after the internal medicine clinic, we tried to go check out the doctors’ teaching seminar, but were told that we might not be welcome (“they’re very selective”). Then, since we hadn’t had any Internet access in ten days, we asked Bob for the use of his computer (which is slower than dial-up speed, but better than nothing)… and had power failures both times we tried, at 9am and 1pm — each time *just* as we’d sat down to get started. Bob explained, “There’s not enough electricity in the country, so they basically have to do rolling blackouts.” Sigh. Around 2pm, we finally managed to get a few minutes of access — but again, my point is that we are continually confronted by the fact that seemingly *nothing* can be simple here. I think I deal with this reasonably well on most days — I’m definitely not as patient as Erin, but I’m getting used to lots of waiting, lots of asking, lots of improvising, lots of come-back-latering — but there are still times when it really gets to me, and today was one of them, because it was just never-ending; every corner seemed to have a roadblock. However, we made the late afternoon better by (1) taking a short hike up the hill, (2) taking pictures with Erikson and Solomon — Erik actually got a great one of me and Erin, (3) having *chicken* (with our ever-present rice and vegetables) for dinner with Asha and Maria, and (4) on the way to dinner, chancing across what was quite possibly *the* most beautiful view of Kili that we’ve seen yet.

Also on the up side, I’m noticing that I’m feeling significantly less intimidated by the Tanzanian people these days; even within this chunk of journal entries, I can feel a difference in tone from last Saturday (hiking through that village on the way to Kili, with everyone staring at us) versus how I feel now. We walked to the Machame market again yesterday afternoon and talked to a Tanzanian guy named Kennis for a good portion of the trip home — he showed us where to buy eggs (“mayai”) — and although I was definitely more watchful than I would have been at home, I didn’t feel scared or overly suspicious. A week ago, I think I would have. Erin says she doesn’t really feel a difference with regard to her own reactions; her theory is that it’s because I’ve learned more of the language than she has, but I disagree. I think I’m just starting to get accustomed to the normal patterns of these people — their interactions with each other in general as well as their reactions to us as ‘white people’ — which makes *me* more inclined to interact (and maybe Erin is partly right and I therefore feel less ‘judged’ and embarrassed about my pathetic attempts at Swahili ;)). You get used to anything after a while, and I think anything that’s repetitive starts to lose intensity after some time, for better or worse.

And as far as Swahili goes, I *am* actually having fun. I’ve learned a lot of nouns and even a few sentences — “sisemi Kiswahili” (I don’t speak Swahili), “sisi ni wanafunzi” (we are students), and the food-related stuff Edgar taught us on the safari. The vocabulary isn’t that hard; they use the Roman alphabet and words are pronounced exactly as they appear, like Spanish, so that part is easy. As long as I can visualize a word, I can usually remember it. The hard part is the grammar, because the bulk of a sentence is often expressed as one long word that consists of lots of one-syllable pieces stuck together, each of which indicates the subject, the location, the time (past/present/future), positivity/negativity, and so forth. Also, there are noun classes — 16 of them, to be exact — which seriously throw me for a loop. For example, you may have noticed somewhere in the course of my ramblings that the word for ‘white person’, “mzungu”, is pluralized as “wazungu”; however, other words behave differently depending on what class they belong to. “Embe” (mango) becomes “maembe”, and “choo” (toilet) becomes “vyoo”. So interesting, and yet so frustrating… :)

Anyway, bottom line: although I’m intrigued, amazed, and further challenged by how quickly the code is breaking (this is why I loved linguistics!), I still definitely haven’t learned enough Swahili to actually *say* anything significant. I’m starting to be able to pick a few concrete words out of most conversations, which is a fun challenge; however, I can very rarely glean enough context to actually figure out what’s being discussed — I’m often just recognizing certain familiar sounds for which I don’t always know the exact meaning. In other words, I know just enough to make myself look really stupid. (Story of my life…! ;))

WEDNESDAY — We were expecting today to be another frustrating string of roadblocks, but it actually worked out quite well. Morning report was more interesting than usual; we discussed a supposedly 120-year-old patient (ages are often defined rather, um, loosely here; most patients have only their birth year written on their charts, no month or day). This woman had apparently come to the hospital yesterday with a week-old hip fracture (plus “edema” in the same leg), tried to leave AMA, got short of breath while waiting for her ride home, and ended up dying. After so many instances of feeling like fish out of water, I think it was nice for both Erin and me to immediately put the mental pieces together (likely deep vein thrombosis turned pulmonary embolism — finally, something that’s the same on both sides of the world! ;)) when the hospital director asked for the most likely cause of death. However, it was unsettling that the clinical officer reading the report (who had actually been the primary caregiver for the patient) had no idea! The doctor asked her point-blank what she thought the cause of death was, and she paused, shook her head, and said, “I don’t know, doctor.” (Meaning she observed her patient’s condition suddenly change for the worse, but didn’t know what was happening, so did nothing besides apply oxygen.) At first I was disturbed that she wouldn’t know something so basic, but on the other hand, something else we discovered to our chagrin in yesterday’s internal medicine clinic (along with the blood pressure stuff — which was, again, a clinical officer, not a physician) is that they often don’t treat DVT here with anything but aspirin. So maybe there’s not much point in knowing a diagnosis if it isn’t going to change your management / the patient’s odds…? Although, according to the orthopedic surgeon, they do apparently *have* heparin and warfarin in stock, so it’s a mystery to me why they aren’t using them. Honestly, the physicians here really know their stuff, but I have to admit (though it feels disloyal to say), that my impression of the clinical officers so far hasn’t been particularly good. They’re often compared to American PAs, so I was excited to watch them, but their demonstrable level of medical knowledge (at least, what I’ve seen of it so far) doesn’t seem to justify that comparison. And it amazes me that (a) there are no *consequences* for the things they do — as you might imagine, lawsuits aren’t exactly prevalent here, but can you imagine what would have happened at home if a medical provider had ignored a clot?!? — and (b) that they don’t ever seem to feel the need to check with their supervising physicians, even when they clearly have questions. Sigh. However, most of the clinical officers are on their holiday break this month, so maybe we’ve just had bad luck with regard to the few we’ve come across (?).

After report, Erin finally got a chance to follow Henrike (the German physician who works in the HIV clinic), since she isn’t on the teaching staff. While she did that, Bob took me to the seminar room, and we spoke with one of the facilitators, a very nice young man from the University of Washington. He immediately agreed to let me sit in, so I spent most of the morning observing a lecture on medical curriculum planning — which sounds fantastically boring, but was actually pretty enlightening (and slightly horrifying) in terms of the necessary “starting point” for medical education in this country. They started off by discussing a “Curriculum Cum Rotation Plan”, or CCRP, which I’d never heard of, but as they started to describe it, it sounded oddly familiar… “a way of linking educational content with how it will be implemented” … “includes information about modules, time required, vacations, etc.” … “contains two components: theory (classroom / skills lab) and practice (field work)”…

About four slides in, the light bulb went off, and I realized that what they were describing was, in fact, nothing more than an academic SCHEDULE! I had to bite my lip to keep from laughing. As a way of highlighting to others how different the Tanzanian system seems to us compared to what we’re used to, Erin and I have mentioned several times how, on our first day of PA school, we were given access to an electronic calendar that detailed exactly what would be happening each day — lectures, guest speakers, labs, vacations — for the entire first year. Just as this facilitator described, we knew exactly how many credits each of our courses was worth, how many hours we’d be spending on each subject, and so forth. Frankly, it’s hard to imagine that an educational system could ever function effectively otherwise. Yet for the Tanzanians, this is an utterly foreign concept, requiring far more planning and forethought than they’re accustomed to.

A tangentially-related issue is that of getting physicians to even attend seminars, planning sessions, and other education-related meetings. When the speaker asked for feedback regarding some of the challenges of implementing this system, he mentioned the need for time and teamwork — but the first thing out of one of the senior doctors’ mouths was, “Money!” The reason why is something called ‘posho’ — what we American career folk would consider ‘reimbursement’ for travel, continuing education, etc. Bob explained to us yesterday that if there is no ‘posho’ for attending a particular session, nobody will show up. “You would think, as a clinician teacher, that attendance at such things should be part of your job — particularly when the sessions are held during normal business hours, when you’d normally be seeing patients anyway,” he said, shaking his head. However, that’s not the case here. A Tanzanian clinician could, theoretically, make three times his usual salary by only attending conferences, never actually seeing any patients. Crazy.

I left the seminar during a break (after which they were going to break into groups and start putting together a mock CCRP, complete with calculation of credit hours (based on a six-hour-per-day class schedule — must be nice! ;))) and went up to the labor & delivery ward. My favorite nurse was there, and she walked me through the postnatal unit, giving me a brief history of each patient. There were four mothers who had recently had c-sections, including the mother of my little mystery baby, who was lying in bed manually expressing breast milk. “We breastfeed him today,” the nurse said, rather proudly.
“How did he do? I don’t think he sucks very well,” I said.
“No, can’t suck. But we give through nasogastric tube,” she explained. “He was baptized this morning. The name of the baby is–” and she enunciated a five-or six-syllable name that I could barely repeat, much less remember. (I think it started with an A, so for my purposes, I’ll call him Adam. ;))
We went and saw the baby after that, and although he’d reportedly had a fever overnight, he felt nice and cool to the touch. He was resting comfortably, eyes closed, not twitching, fontanelles still flat. Although he still had very little root, grasp, or Babinski, I was heartened to see a normal startle reflex!
“His diagnosis is cerebral injury,” said the nurse. “He will go to KCMC for consult, perhaps tomorrow.” She rewrapped him and placed him back in his bassinette.
“He doesn’t feel like he has a fever today,” I said.
“No, because I turn off–” she gestured to the heat lamp mounted on the wall. “Not true fever. He has a diagnosis of cerebral injury,” she repeated as we walked out of the room, “and damage to thermoregulation.”
“Oh. Has the pediatric doctor been to see him yet?” I asked.
“No. Only Dr. Lema [the OB doctor].”
It completely boggled my mind to think that this little guy had been lying here for days, clearly with some serious medical issues, with no one even checking his heart or lungs! If she hadn’t already been escorting me out the door, I’d have asked if I could check him over. Maybe tomorrow.
As we exited Adam’s area, sitting on a stool in the reception area of the maternity ward was a young Maasai woman. The nurse clucked her tongue and said to me, “This is the woman who has had intrauterine fetal demise. I go to collect the bed linens, and Dr. Lema will come, and we will do the induction here,” she said, gesturing to one of the labor rooms behind her.
She left, and I waited for a few minutes, but I knew for a fact that Dr. Lema was in the seminar (he’s the one who immediately cited money as a problem), with no intention of coming to do an induction anytime soon — and I felt bad standing and gawking at a sad-eyed young woman to whom I couldn’t even speak. It was past noon, and I knew we were going to the orphanage with Asha, Maria, and some of their friends at 2pm, so I decided to go eat lunch and do some reading on blood pressure medicines. ;)

At 1:30, Erin returned from the HIV clinic, full of stories about the incredible patients she’d seen. (I’m really hoping to get another chance to work with Henrike next Wednesday — our last day in Tanzania — myself.) However, our orphanage trip fell through, which was a shame, since Erin and the Swedes haven’t been there yet (and a few of the Swedes’ friends, nursing students in Moshi, came up to Machame today specifically to visit the orphanage). We might try again next week. Instead, Erin went to try her luck at ortho surgery and I worked my way through a few sections of my PANCE book. Around 6pm, we had dinner at the canteen as a group with all the Swedish students. Asha had told the cooks in advance that she’d be having guests and that we wanted rice, beans, vegetables, and sauce, so that’s what we had, finished off with (of course) bananas. It was absolutely delicious (although I think I’ll have eaten enough bananas after this month to last me a couple of years!) ;)

Tanzania — Week 2

3 Mar

SATURDAY — Erin and I were both looking forward to our first Tanzanian weekend, because it meant we’d get to go into Moshi and get a few things handled. The utter lack of a schedule is one of the most difficult things for us about being here — Tanzanian culture is interesting in that way — so today was going to be our attempt at setting up a bit of our *own* schedule as far as how the rest of the month was going to go. We got up early, packed our backpacks, debated over taking our cameras, decided against it (we really want to take some more pictures at some point, but it just doesn’t feel safe to be flashing fancy things around), and walked out to the dalla-dalla (minivan) stop in front of the hospital. When we got on, there were only a few passengers, so we were fortunate enough to both get seats — but as we proceeded down the mountain, the van filled up with 15, 20, 25, eventually 30 people, several of whom were hanging outside the door of the speeding vehicle because they couldn’t fit inside. Pretty crazy!

The wild ride down to Moshi took over an hour, but cost us less than $1. We remembered where to get off, and, surprisingly, managed to navigate ourselves around town with very little difficulty. We got off to a somewhat frustrating start — we went to the safari office and were told to come back “in an hour” (which in Tanzania could mean anytime), then went to Union Cafe for brunch and discovered that their wireless Internet (the only source in town) was down. I was about to have a hissy fit at this point — for goodness’ sake, I just wanted to get something, *anything*, accomplished! — but I felt better once we went back to the safari office and officially booked our trip for next weekend. Our next stop was Precision Air, the in-country airline, so that we could book our flight to Zanzibar; that unfortunately also turned into a mission and a half because the office didn’t take credit cards (a common issue here) so we had to go wait (not so patiently) in an extraordinarily long, hot line for the ATM, only to both have credit card issues once it was finally our turn. We managed to procure enough cash to get the tickets, but it was a close shave, and standing around in the heat (Moshi isn’t in the mountains like Machame, so it’s a lot hotter) didn’t do much to improve our mood. I might possibly have snarled to Erin at one point, “Why is it that NOTHING can be simple here?!?”

Fortunately, that was when things started to get fun. With both our weekend trips handled, we finally felt as though we could relax a little, so we wandered back to the tiny dress shop that Vera had shown us when we were in Moshi the previous week. Her friend Irene, the owner, remembered us, and exclaimed, “Karibuni sana!” (“You are both very welcome!”) over and over, with a big smile. We visually browsed the fabrics for over an hour, and I actually tried on two dresses (and ended up wearing one long purple-printed one for the duration of the transaction, to the great amusement of all the African women who stopped by the shop while we were there). Vera had told us that if we wanted to buy clothing in Tanzania, that Irene was a trustworthy person to buy it from, because “her colors don’t run”; not to mention, it was nice to be able to financially support a female vendor. We each bought a couple of skirts ready-made off the shelf (one of mine is printed in green and brown, the other in orange and yellow; I’m so excited to wear them!), and Irene’s tailor actually also came and measured us so that she could make a couple of things specially for us, which we’ll pick up on Wednesday. Prices were more in line with home, but still not expensive; about $18 per garment. We left the shop giggling in disbelief and feeling much better about our day.

We headed back to Union Cafe after that, where, to my great relief, the Internet had been repaired. I checked my email, sent out the first week’s novel ;) and ate a plate of pasta with chicken and cashews in a coconut cream sauce (definitely the biggest meal I’d had in a week). After that, we did some Zanzibar research (we’re planning to spend our last weekend there) and narrowed our potential places to stay down to two; one is at the northern tip of the island and the other is on the eastern coast. We’re leaning toward the latter since (a) it’s a little cheaper, (b) we could each have our own bed, and (c) it’s closer to the airport… but I keep thinking about how beautiful it would be to be able to see the sunrise *and* sunset from the same beach… and that northern hotel is apparently known for cheap yummy cocktails and evening beach campfires, both of which sound pretty awesome. But honestly, anything will be awesome after what will have been three weeks of dirt, mosquitoes, and intermittent electricity and hot water, so I don’t think there’s a bad choice here.

(Speaking of mosquitoes: they suck. My bed net has a couple of holes in it, so prior to drenching it in bug spray yesterday, I would invariably wake up in the middle of the night hyperaware of which part(s) of my body had been hanging outside the covers. Interestingly, the bites that I’m getting don’t get red or swollen, and they don’t even itch that badly, but they do develop odd hypopigmented halos for a few days before they fade away. Not sure what that’s about. Don’t worry, I’m taking my doxy religiously! ;))

Anyway, I bought a few bags of Kilimanjaro coffee beans (which smell AMAZING; I hope they make it home to you guys… :)), and then we headed back to the dusty, noisy, crowded bus station. Amid the melee, we had to ask someone where to find the dalla-dalla to Machame, but once we found it, our timing was good; we pulled out of the station just a minute or two later. Unfortunately, this meant we were some of the last people on board, so we got to stand up! (Though not hanging out the door, fortunately!) The Africans got a big kick out of that; they were all looking up at us and smiling and talking about the “wazungu” (white people), though not unkindly. Anyway, it wasn’t the most comfortable ride I’ve ever had, but we made it back… and tonight’s shower was possibly one of the most rewarding of my entire existence. :)

SUNDAY — Since this was our last ‘free’ day in Machame (read: last day without any work or travel), we decided to hike up to the gates of Kilimanjaro this morning. The sign outside Machame shows that the gates are only 4 km away (about 2 miles), so we packed our waist packs and headed out around 9am.

The first part of the climb was gentle, and the morning air was still pretty cool. We were walking through small, widely spaced houses and shops, as well as a couple of picturesque little wooded groves with streams running through them. There was also a large and very pretty church (that Bob told us later was the first Lutheran church in the area, and the reason why Machame Lutheran Hospital is located here!), which, since it was Sunday, was holding some kind of service outdoors when we passed by. Erin really wanted to go check it out, but we didn’t want to intrude, so we continued on our way.

The climb got steeper as we went, and the sun started to come out, which was nice in a way, but also definitely increased our sweat factor. We huffed and puffed our way upward, passing at one point through what we assume was Machame Village, a small densely-populated area with lots of people milling about and chatting with one another from the backs of parked motorcycles. I think Erin and I both always feel pretty vulnerable when we encounter large numbers of people here — on one hand, we’re fascinated, but on the other hand, our white faces attract so much attention everywhere we go that it’s often unnerving. Realistically, I know that the majority of people likely don’t wish us harm, and yet — especially because we don’t speak the language and thus can’t always get a clear picture of people’s motives — it’s hard not to be just a little afraid, although you obviously can’t show it. We do everything we can to not make ourselves into targets (we didn’t take any pictures until we were on the way back *down* from the gate — and even then, only in fairly deserted areas — so that we didn’t have to pass by those spots again once we’d revealed that we were carrying cameras), but you just can’t predict what desperate people in the middle of nowhere will do — especially desperate people that you can’t speak to.

On the flip side of that coin, it also became amusingly clear to us today that old women in Tanzania are like old women everywhere — they just want to TALK, whether their audience can understand them or not. :) An adorable elderly woman stopped us on the street, threw out several sentences of Swahili, smiled when she saw that we didn’t understand, shook both our hands, repeated our names — then continued to talk! She carried on an entire one-sided conversation — very pleasantly, complete with hand gestures — then gestured up the road, as in, “OK, I’m going now,” and passed on by. We chuckled about that one for several minutes afterward.

After several more beautiful overlooks, countless banana groves, and an infinite number of “Jambo”s exchanged with passersby (mostly giggling children), we made it to the gate. We were able to pass through for free, so we took some pictures beside the warning signs and chatted with a few tourists who were getting ready to make the climb. We weren’t able to see Kilimanjaro itself — as usual, it was swathed in a thick blanket of clouds — but it was neat to know that we were at the spot where so many climbs begin.

The descent was much quicker than the ascent (under an hour, versus 90 minutes), and we stopped several times on the way home to take pictures of particularly scenic views. At one point, while photographing a lush green valley, the minute figures of two young girls, barely visible on the opposing hillside, started waving to us. One called out, “Hello, my friend!”
After a startled pause, we called back, “Hello!”
“What is your name, my friend?”
We told her our names, and asked theirs, which we couldn’t make out due to the distance. One of the girls then asked, “Where are you from?”
We called back, “America!”
She responded in Swahili, which we couldn’t understand, so after a couple more mutually incomprehensible exchanges, we just started walking again, waved, and called, “Bye!”
“Bye!” they answered in unison, and continued waving and calling farewells as we proceeded down the road.
A minute or two later, Erin turned to me, grinned, and said, “…That just happened.”
Such a small thing… but so memorable. How many people can say they’ve had a conversation with a native across a Tanzanian valley? :)

We got back to MLH just in time to beat the rain (which is becoming a daily event). We went to the canteen and got big plates of rice and meat sauce, then sat for a few minutes while the storm let up. Once we were able to get back to our little house, we read (Erin) and napped (me) until 3pm, when it was time to meet Bob in front of the hospital to go to the twice-monthly “hash run”, which is a tradition for many of the “wazungu” here in Tanzania. (Don’t worry, it’s not nearly as illicit as it sounds! ;)) The story of how the name came to be is somewhat convoluted, but basically, a “hash” here in Moshi is like a “hare and hounds” game. A site is identified (in our case, the countryside surrounding a large guest house on the other side of the mountain from Machame, about an hour’s drive), and the “hare” goes through the woods with a bag of flour, leaving little white splotches along the ground at intervals. The “hounds” (the rest of us) then follow this “bread crumb trail” through the forest, along what we were told was a 6 km loop (it felt longer, maybe because it brought our day’s total to 14 km! :)). In theory, everyone is running and trying to be the first to reach the end (there are all kinds of other rules, too; for example, when you’re at a fork in the trail and you spot the flour to identify which path the hare has taken, you’re supposed to call, “On, on!”… the equivalent of hounds baying, I suppose), but in reality, most people just kind of walk along at a reasonable clip, getting further and further spaced out as the afternoon rolls on. That was fortunate for us, because it would have been hard to put forth more of an effort than that after our morning exercise — and parts of this course were even more strenuous than our morning hike, because we were still in the mountains, but with no roads involved, only narrow dirt paths, which at times were so steep that we had to use our hands to help ourselves up. A few people, like Bob, take the hash very seriously and jog much of the way to try to be first (think Garmin wristbands!), but most of the rest of us were just in it for the exercise (intense), the socialization (I got to talk to an American woman who runs a local orphanage, and also spoke Dutch with a professor from Nijmegen!), the food at the end (rice with tuna, fresh guacamole with tomatoes, and even — from one of the Indian participants — homemade samosas!), and the incredible views.

And boy, were there views! The standard red dirt paths and banana groves, of course, but more than that, we eventually climbed up high enough to be able to see what seemed like all of Tanzania. The landscape is so flat here that our view didn’t peter out at some unnamable point behind the trees, the way it always seems to do at home — at the risk of sounding like Taio Cruz, “it goes on and on and on!” Layers upon layers of red dirt and green trees and narrow vertical threads of smoke from cooking fires… and off to one side, not just one, but *both* peaks of Kilimanjaro, now perfectly visible. So incredibly beautiful. Erin and I both took about a million pictures, but we both remarked with dismay on how limited the flat LCD of the camera seemed, definitely not capturing the thousands of subtleties in the shades of purple and gray and blue and green. “I wish everyone from back home could see this the way *we’re* seeing it!” I said a little wistfully to Erin.

MONDAY — Amusing moment of the morning: one of the things that is *exactly* like home is that at least one cell phone always rings in the middle of devotions. Today, the phone that rang belonged not to a student, but to the deacon! :)

Our goal for today was to get into the OBGYN clinic, since it’s only held once a week (though there are obviously deliveries every day), and we did eventually succeed, although it took a little longer than planned. Tanzanians seem to drag their feet with regard to getting started in the morning — devotions are at 7:45, with morning report shortly thereafter, but we’re discovering that most of the clinicians don’t actually start seeing patients until around 10am. This morning, we finished morning report (which was great; we got pimped for ten minutes straight on the major and minor Jones criteria for rheumatic fever, which is something we don’t see all that often in the States, so it was a great refresher) at around 9am, and bounced around trying to figure out who to follow. We were eventually told that all four of us (Erin and me plus the Nebraskans) could tag along for OB rounds, but that they weren’t starting yet, so we should come back at ten. We showed up on the maternity ward promptly at ten — and stood around the hallway until eleven. (The nurses kept telling us that the doctors were “taking their tea.” Must be nice…:))

One doctor — the same surgeon Erin and I had shadowed on our first day, in GYN surgery — finally materialized, held up two fingers, and said, “Two, come with me to clinic. Two, stay here for rounds.” Well, that wasn’t what we’d expected. After some shuffling. I ended up going to clinic with one of the Nebraskans (the PA-C, who left after the first few patients, so I got to be the only student). I wasn’t sure at first how it was going to be — this particular physician is fairly brusque (and said a couple of things early on that didn’t jive with my own experience, such as that it’s proper technique to palpate the abdomen before auscultating, and that plain amoxicillin is an adequate treatment for a UTI in a pregnant woman), so I withheld judgment at first, but my experience with him actually turned out to be pretty great. We saw around 20 patients, most of whom had uterine myomas, ovarian cysts, or pelvic inflammatory disease (which they treat differently than we do — amoxicillin and Flagyl), but we also ruled out preeclampsia, measured fundal heights (with finger widths — no tape measures needed here!), saw some PCOS (they tend to only give 2-3 months of OCPs at a time here, just long enough to stabilize the hormone levels, since most of these women want to get pregnant as soon as possible), and tried to puzzle out a couple of cases of reported infertility. I also got pimped — quite a lot — and loved it. I didn’t do so well with the first couple questions, but with the 3rd patient, the doctor wrote the date of the woman’s last period on a piece of paper, showed it to me, and said, “What’s her estimated date of delivery?” No pregnancy wheels, no ultrasound dating, just our brains. I paused blankly for a second, fully expecting to miss another one, then suddenly remembered Nagele’s rule and got the answer right, which started to turn the tide; I did much better after that. I didn’t get to do too much hands-on activity, just a few blood pressures and a couple of Leopold maneuvers (which is pretty much the only method they use for fetal position here, though they do do ultrasounds to check for placental position if the woman plans to have a c-section), but it was more than I’d done anywhere else thus far, and in one of my favorite areas. Erin had a good day too; she went on rounds with another OB doctor and then got to observe her first c-section. She remarked afterward that her doctor had mentioned that the most common causes of anemia here are malaria and worms. (“…Neither of which appear anywhere on my differential!” she exclaimed.)

We also did ultrasounds on about half of today’s patients, which may actually have been the area where I learned the most new information. (It helped that we were in the quiet ultrasound room, where I could decipher the doctor’s accent more readily!) The way patients are scheduled here, they all see the physician first; then, those who need additional testing (usually x-rays, ultrasounds, or urinalyses) go receive it before reporting back to the provider’s clinic office to hear the results. The patients bring their own x-ray films or UA slips back to the clinic physician, but in the case of ultrasounds, the scans are actually *performed* by the clinic physician — all in one chunk, to keep him from having to run across the hospital with every patient. This meant that we saw our full schedule of 20 patients, then ultrasounded the 10 or so who needed it (plus a few extras from other clinics) all in a row, then brought the scanned patients back to the office to give them their results. This didn’t seem like a particularly efficient system (and the Tanzanian capacity to wait patiently literally all day without complaint amazes me), but, granted, it eliminates the need to pay an ultrasound tech or print out images for physician review — and doing a dozen ultrasounds in the span of 40 minutes really helped me see differences in patient anatomy. Near the end, we visualized one woman’s gallbladder — no stones, but fluid-filled with a thickened lining — and she had a clearly positive Murphy’s sign, which was actually the first definitive one I’d ever seen (go figure!). We also saw an elderly woman with a round cystic abdominal mass plus an irregular mass on her liver. I immediately jumped to “metastasis,” but, like with the morning’s rheumatic fever questions, I was again reminded of the necessary breadth of the Tanzanian differential; the doctor’s first move was to order a course of Flagyl in case we were dealing with amoebic liver abscesses.

After work, we briefly begged the use of Bob’s computer to book our Zanzibar accommodations (at the cheaper place), then got back to the guest house around 5pm. The Swedes and Nebraskans were already there, sitting on the porch having a drink and watching the trees rustle with monkey activity, so we joined them. Asha found an old banana that she tossed out into the yard, and I got a great video clip of a large monkey descending a tree, crossing to within 15 feet of where we sat, snatching the fruit, and hightailing it out of range. We chatted, took photos, tasted the Swedes’ interesting snacks (caviar in a tube, like toothpaste!), and just relaxed. Mr. Mushi actually joined us for a drink as twilight started to descend. It was very peaceful; I think we all finally felt familiar enough with one another to be a little more relaxed as a group. Around 6:30, Asha and Maria came with us to the canteen, and we had rice, meat sauce, cabbage, and bananas for dinner. It was a great evening. Even better, Asha, who speaks Swahili, was able to arrange with the very sweet cook to have eggs, potatoes, and fried bananas made for all six of us for dinner tomorrow night, which will be a nice break from the usual fare.

The power (and, thus, the hot water) has been flickering on and off tonight, as usual, but we managed to both get showers. We’re still trying to figure out how to do laundry this week; the trick isn’t going to be the washing (there’s a big plastic tub in the bathroom), but the drying. Things don’t really ever get truly ‘dry’ indoors during the rainy season, but we can’t hang things outside in the sun to dry due to blowflies laying eggs on them (you think I’m kidding). I’m sure we’ll work something out.

We also spoke with Nick (our DPAP clinical coordinator, for those not in the know) tonight, just to touch base, and it was surprisingly great to hear a little piece of home. (Hi Nick! ;)) We spoke with Lisa’s friend Meshack via phone today too, and are going to try to meet him in Moshi on Wednesday or Thursday, depending on when we make it back into town.

TUESDAY — Erin and I worked together in the internal medicine clinic today, and we lucked out again — we ended up getting another great teacher as our attending. This clinic was made up mostly of hypertension and diabetes, and most of the visits were quite brief (mostly just for med refills), but Erin and I checked the blood pressures and pulses on every patient (the highest of which I believe was 200/120!) and got to listen to a few hearts and lungs. The one I think we’re both going to remember the most was an elderly man, so thin that we could count every rib and visualize his xiphoid process. As he reclined on the table, we both saw a tubular section of upper abdomen pulsating with every heartbeat, and Erin and I locked eyes and agreed nearly wordlessly that he had to have a triple A. However, when we brought this up to the attending, he backed us up a step.
“What do you hear over an aneurysm?” he asked.
“…A bruit,” we responded, a bit uncertainly.
“And do you hear one?”
We each listened again, and concurred that we heard *something*, albeit faint.
The doctor listened, then smiled as he moved his stethoscope to listen to the man’s heart. “What you are hearing,” he said, “is a referred murmur.” Sure enough, the man had a heart murmur (as well as a displaced apical impulse). He was sent for an abdominal ultrasound, and we were told that the pulsations we were seeing were actually the result of an abnormally enlarged liver… in other words, portal hypertension from heart failure. Fascinating. Admittedly, I haven’t had my internal medicine rotation yet, so this might have been a relatively simple case to someone else, but I certainly won’t ever forget him.

On a somewhat different note, I think we’re both surprised by how widespread hypertension and diabetes are — even here. The reason this is confusing is that, in the U.S., we chalk so much of this stuff up to lifestyle — obesity, inactivity, horrible diets, and so forth. But how can you possibly counsel someone on lifestyle modification in the middle of the African wilderness? These patients aren’t exactly cruising through the McDonald’s drive-thru. I mean, some people are certainly overweight (mostly the older women who have borne multiple children), but nobody is “inactive” by any stretch of the imagination, and I have yet to see true obesity of the kind that we see in the States. Granted, a certain amount of high blood pressure goes with the territory as one gets older, and I know we’ve been taught that African-Americans in the U.S. often have inherently crappier kidneys than other races, which could also be contributing to the hypertension — but I still wonder if there isn’t some kind of different pathophysiology in this population. Or could it be that their diet, albeit healthy, is fairly high on the glycemic index? (Lots of fruit, rice, and fried bread; comparatively little protein.) Hmm. Things to think about.

I did get to ask my sickle-cell question today — I’ve been wondering how widespread it is here — and was told that it’s actually pretty rare at the altitude where we are, but is more prevalent in the lower areas (as is malaria, so I guess that makes sense). “If you see sickle-cell at this hospital,” the doctor said, “it is guaranteed that that patient comes from somewhere else originally.” I didn’t get a chance to ask how the disease is managed here (somehow I don’t think there’s a ton of hydroxyurea floating around), but I’ll save that question for another day.

Oh, and this was amusing: another doctor came into the office at one point and showed our preceptor a slip of paper, on which were written four science and math grades. Chemistry was a C; the other three were Ds. The two men had a short conversation in Swahili, which I couldn’t understand, and the other doctor eventually left. And then, a few minutes later… an older woman (not a patient) came into the office, sat down, and started speaking persuasively to our attending. I couldn’t catch many of her words, but I could get a few of the doctor’s, and what I gleaned was that this was the mother of the young man who had earned the aforementioned grades, and that she was here going to bat for him! Unsuccessfully, of course; she eventually left, and the doctor confirmed that the woman’s son had been hoping to gain admittance into Machame’s Clinical Officer training program (the closest thing they have to PA school). I found it pretty funny that a dynamic I associate with middle school “helicopter parents” in the States should transfer to an upper-level medical program in Tanzania!

Erin and I were dismissed a little after 1pm, which worked out great, since it turned out that Mr. Mushi had called down the road to the local orphanage to get clearance for us to go down and see the children at 2pm. Erin elected to stay at the hospital and try to get into another hour or two of clinic (which ended up not happening — again, typical Tanzania!), but the two Nebraskans and I walked down the mountain and introduced ourselves at the orphanage gate. We were escorted onto the grounds, and were pleasantly surprised to find the buildings to be fairly new-appearing and the surrounding area in good repair. A nurse (who apparently visits the orphanage daily to help care for the children and assess any who are sick) gave us a little background: the orphanage has 34 children at the moment, mostly gleaned from mothers who die in childbirth, parents who die of HIV-related complications, and unwed mothers who abandon their babies. Children go first to one of the country’s many social services bureaus to get established within the system, then are placed in orphanages (the one here in Machame is quite respected) starting at three months of age. Family members always have the option to come reclaim their children at a later date, and, interestingly, this apparently happens quite frequently.

We spent over an hour with the babies (under a year old) and then 45 minutes or so with the one- and two-year-olds. By and large, we had a really great time. There were a few moments where we were acutely aware of the poverty — the toddlers don’t wear diapers (outside, at least), so they walk around in wet clothes, and the orphanage doesn’t seem to use bottles, so the babies are all given their formula from lidless cups, even the very youngest ones. (Side note: the littlest ones also don’t seem to tolerate the odd formula very well; there was a lot of spitting up, and good grief, did it smell terrible — definitely unlike any form of infant nutrition I’ve ever experienced!) However, the babies who were old enough to interact and crawl around seemed to be happy, inquisitive, and reasonably well cared for. They were like babies everywhere, snatching one another’s toys and getting into everything — none of the horror stories you sometimes hear about orphanage babies lying inert in their cribs 23 hours per day. They didn’t demonstrate any stranger anxiety, even with our “unusual” white faces — on the contrary, as we walked up to the porch where the one- and two-year-olds were playing, one tiny girl in yellow-checked shorts came scurrying over as fast as her little legs could carry her, arms extended up in a “hold me!” pose. (That was how we figured out the no-diaper situation — she was halfway up into our arms when we realized she was soaking wet, but “oh well, no turning back now!”) I was also extremely impressed by how well-behaved those little ones were, even at so young an age — they were barely even speaking yet, but when one of the nuns told the gaggle of kids to come over to her and sit down on the step, every single one of them obeyed instantly. We’ve got a great photo of them sitting there all lined up. As we left, the whole group started to cry, which was simultaneously adorable and sad; our last glimpse of them as we disappeared down the path was of one of the sisters giving them bits of candy to encourage them to quiet down. For whatever reason, visiting an orphanage was one of the things I’ve always most wanted to do in Africa — one of those “pipe dreams” that you never really think will happen — so I’m really glad we got the chance to go and see the place.

WEDNESDAY — In morning report today, a patient was discussed who had been in a motorcycle accident (which is extraordinarily common here) two weeks ago and sustained a laceration behind his ear. The wound is apparently healing well, but the man is now suffering from severe muscle spasms and is presumed to have tetanus. His CSF was normal (which is apparently what you would expect with tetanus infection), but he’s being fed through an NG tube because his spasms are too severe to allow him to eat normally. He’s receiving antibiotics, but his prognosis isn’t good at all; one doctor paused to reflect on the case, then said, “This is a very serious patient. Maybe the most severe patient in this hospital.” We weren’t clear on whether or not the man had ever been immunized in the past or whether he had received tetanus toxoid here at the hospital (report is conducted in English, but it’s usually so severely accented that it might as well be in Swahili), but there was definitely no mention of tetanus immune globulin — which gives us one more thing to add to the list of questions… (a) is that available here, and (b) would it even have any effect at the two-week mark? Questions like that, about things that seem so basic, come up all the time here, and we feel utterly incompetent for not knowing the answers… but honestly, in the States, we wouldn’t generally *need* to know that information in order to provide quality care. Immunization rates are high, for one thing, and if for some reason there were any doubt as to someone’s status, you’d just give both tetanus toxoid *and* TIG right away, end of discussion. It’s truly mind-blowing to realize all the relatively simple things that we just don’t know, because we just don’t ever see them… whereas the differential here is so drastically different that I think some of these African doctors must think we fancy Americans are first-class idiots. Maybe we are. :)

Anyway, we’ve now officially been through one full cycle of clinics here at the hospital — every weekday brings something different — so we ended up back in GYN surgery today. (Erin was supposed to go to HIV clinic, but a German student who’s only here for one day got priority, so she’s shooting for next week.) We worked with the same doctor I’d been with in OB clinic on Monday, and saw him perform a c-section on one of the patients I’d seen that day. Things got a bit exciting for a moment, because the surgeons ended up cutting into the placenta when they incised the uterus, so there were gushes of blood exiting the abdomen along with the waterfall of amniotic fluid, and there was more haste than usual to get the baby — a girl — out. (Though I must say, I didn’t really like the way they just plopped the baby onto a metal cart, one wet blanket beneath her, no lights or warmers, barely any suction, scarcely any encouragement to cry…) The other interesting thing about this particular woman was that she had multiple uterine myomas, so as they were sewing up her uterus, a number of irregular nodularities were clearly visible on the surface. I wondered why they weren’t just going ahead and taking off the biggest ones “while they were at it,” but the surgeon, as if reading my mind, explained that he would go back in through the same incision in a couple months’ time and fix the myomas, but that doing it today carried too high of a bleeding risk.

We also observed another hysterectomy (not much different from the two we’d already seen), and then the last case of the day was supposed to be an ovarian cystectomy on an eleven-year-old girl, but it was postponed due to a power failure (yup). Erin and I didn’t feel like we should be “allowed” to be done yet, so we went to the brighter, newer, cleaner ortho surgery unit, which, unlike the regular surgery unit, has a backup generator for when the power fails. We were in time to see the last case: the removal of some ankle hardware that had been placed after a prior fracture. Nothing earth-shattering, but it was nice to get to experience the flow of things on the ortho side of the fence; it was definitely much more modern (despite the omnipresent open windows and flip-flops :)), so I felt considerably more comfortable there.

Side note: we’ve both noticed that the Tanzanian medical staff all seem to have an oddly dichotomous attitude toward blood. HIV/AIDS awareness is obviously very high, and yet when the anesthesiologist cut herself (fairly significantly) during surgery today, she continued working — adjusting the patient’s IV and so forth — for several minutes before finally putting a dressing on the wound. The orthopedic surgeon cut himself today too, and all he did was smear a little Betadine on it before putting on a new pair of gloves. No workplace needle stick hotline, no Combivir prophylaxis, just ho-hum, all in a day’s work. And yet the stigma of HIV is still so high here that families regularly bribe physicians to not include HIV/AIDS on their loved one’s death certificate (so how in the world can we ever get any kind of accurate statistics?!?). Taken in the context of some of the things I’ve mentioned before — putting tape on bloody bandages without gloves, moving trays of dirty instruments without gloves — the whole thing seems oddly contradictory. Then again, I have to wonder how many of the medical staff are themselves HIV-positive, and thus might not care as much about exposures? Sigh. We live in a complicated world.

The other noteworthy activity today was dinner at Bob’s. He has a startlingly nice house (replete with mounted animal heads — I felt like I was back in Lumberton!) just up the hill from the hospital, and had been talking for days about cooking dinner for all six of us students. Since the Nebraskans leave tomorrow, tonight was the night. We all sat out on the porch for a while, drinking wine and chatting and listening to the children singing at the English school next door, and then Bob whipped up a proper four-course meal — homemade soup, salad, fajitas, and Hershey Kisses and coffee. The soup was incredible — tomatoes, carrots, onions, and garlic, with two “secret” ingredients that he finally confessed to us: (1) tamarind and (2) lime marmalade! (Neither of which I have ever used in any of my own inexpert cooking endeavors, but that may have to change!) The bread, which was baked locally, was also out of this world, perhaps because it was served with real butter. The salad was our contribution: sliced cucumbers, tomatoes, and avocado, topped with some kind of dressing from Bob. After nearly two weeks of such light meals, I think the six of us could have stopped there and been perfectly full and happy, but then came the main course — fajitas, or, as Bob called them, Tanza-jitas, because they were made with two important substitutions: pan-fried chapati bread (delicious) instead of tortillas, and, get this — WILDEBEEST meat along with the beans, peppers, and onions. Sounds crazy, but it tasted absolutely phenomenal. I’ll never be able to watch that infamous Lion King stampede the same way again! ;)

One odd moment: we’ve certainly had our issues with some of the things the Nebraskans have said and done (to put it as politely as possible, it’s been very obvious on many levels that they were not prepared for the reality of Africa), and we’ve mostly just kept quiet, but really: how many of you would go to someone’s house for dinner and, completely unprovoked, start buying the artwork off the walls?!? They asked Bob how much he wanted for his (beautiful, distinctly African) wall hangings, which he told us came all the way from Zimbabwe — and pushed the issue to the point that they ended up literally giving him a couple of twenties and walking out with several hangings apiece. As fellow Americans, Erin and I were completely humiliated. That is someone’s *home*. Granted, lots of things are a bit different here, but does that grant license to behave like a spoiled child, taking whatever strikes one’s fancy?
…Sorry, I’m done now. :)

THURSDAY — Today was a somewhat frustrating day in terms of medical things — I was so excited to finally participate in pediatric rounds (which are only held on Thursdays), but when we got to the ward, we were told that the doctor had actually been there *yesterday*, and that, therefore, no one would be rounding today except in case of emergency. It continues to boggle my mind how disorganized this hospital (a *hospital*!) can be — Tanzania is such an “oral culture” that very little is ever actually *documented* in terms of provider responsibilities. Nearly every day during morning report, someone is complaining that the physician or clinical officer who “should” have been on night duty at a particular ward never showed up, or that a patient sat around the hospital for two days before the appropriate physician became aware of him, etc. After our strict indoctrination into the Duke universe, this is, in a word, mind-blowing.

Anyway, we left peds and checked with labor and delivery — all quiet on the western front. Checked with ortho clinic — not started yet. Checked with ortho surgery and internal medicine — not being held that day. Checked with the ICU to see if we could peek at the man with tetanus — he had family visiting. We were starting to get pretty frustrated, but we remembered that Bob had told us that some days would be like this — his exact words went something like, “Most people will be happy to have you around, but no one is going to take responsibility for you. So you have to push, but not too hard. Most days, something will work out… but there will also be some days when you just have to go drink tea.” Well, when you put it that way, I suppose we were fortunate — we didn’t hit a tea-drinking day until the two-week mark!

Fortunately, the day did work out okay in terms of getting things done; we’d been planning to go to Moshi in the afternoon to handle some pre-safari money business (daily ATM withdrawal limits are a problem in a country where credit cards are universally NOT accepted!), and had planned to just brave the dalla-dalla again, but it turned out that Bob was taking the Nebraskans (who left for good today) down to Moshi at 10am. Since we weren’t having much luck up at the hospital, we decided to rearrange our day and go ahead and hitch a ride. We dropped the Nebraskans at the cushy hotel they’d booked for their last two nights (situated on a coffee plantation, with a great view of the mountain), then headed into Moshi with Bob. We handled the necessary financial transactions (with much less difficulty than we’d had previously), then picked up our specially-made dresses from Irene (they’re beautiful!). Our efficiency went downhill a bit when we spotted the curio shop next door to Irene’s — I finally found the hand-carved wooden giraffe that a pregnant friend had asked me to pick up for her baby nursery, and a lot more besides, including a couple awesome pieces of jewelry. We managed to do some good Tanzanian bargaining and get out the door before the venture turned into a true shopping spree (no easy task), but we subsequently did even more damage at Union Cafe, where there was a display of shoulder bags and change purses that had been made by a local group of “deaf and disadvantaged” women. Then, after tallying the number of folks who needed coffee, I also had to buy more of that! It turned out to be a good thing that we’d snagged a ride with Bob, since we left Moshi pretty weighted down :) though we did at least (very briefly) meet Lisa’s old friend Meshack and hand off the packet of items she’d sent with us.

When we got back to Machame, we put our white coats back on and traipsed back up to the hospital, determined to find *something* to do. We left our phone number at labor and delivery and asked them to please call us with any impending deliveries, then went back to the ICU for another crack at the tetanus case (because when are we *ever* going to see that in the States?!?). We were fortunate this time; the nurse manning the ICU, Josef, greeted us warmly and spoke enough English to understand what we wanted (which was a far cry from L&D). He offered to take us into the man’s room, and was kind enough to answer all our questions and translate a few things between us and the patient’s wife (who was staying there with him, sleeping in the other bed). We found out that the man is only 37, and that he *was* in fact given tetanus toxoid upon arrival at the hospital; however, unsurprisingly, it doesn’t seem to be having much, if any, effect at this point. (We asked if he had ever been immunized against tetanus before; his wife unfortunately didn’t know the answer to that, though Josef told us that most children do get vaccinated here nowadays.) He was receiving IV antibiotics (ceftriaxone and metronidazole), but when we asked about TIG, Josef shook his head gravely and said, “Yes, this is what he needs, but it is not available here. We have called KCMC, and other places…” he named a few other local hospitals, “…but it’s just not available.”
We all looked down at the patient, whose jaw was locked, with his head twisted back at an odd angle. It was painful to observe.
“What about in Dar es Salaam?” I asked.
“Yes, it’s maybe in Dar es Salaam, but…” Josef made a gesture of futility, which we understood to mean that the capital was simply too far away.
“Is he in any pain?” Erin asked.
Josef looked down at the patient and asked him something in Swahili. He started to respond, then was suddenly seized by a brief and lightning-quick muscle spasm, legs jerking upward and head twitching back. Erin, who was closest to the bed, jumped a mile.
“Do patients ever recover from this?” I asked Josef.
“When he gets like this, I give him the diazepam,” he said vaguely, “and the phenobarbital.”
“So you can treat the symptoms,” I clarified, “but not the disease.” He nodded in agreement. We left shortly thereafter, not wanting to gawk any longer than necessary.

“That might be my presentation topic,” Erin said as we left the ward.
Pause.
“…Darn it. Wish I’d said that before you did,” I responded, only half kidding.

We found out from L&D that there was going to be a cervical check at 8pm, so after packing for tomorrow’s safari and eating a light dinner of bananas and peanut butter, we grabbed Asha and Maria from next door, armed ourselves with flashlights, and headed back up to the hospital at the appointed time. Naturally, there was no cervical check (big surprise number one), but it turned out that a completely different woman had just given birth less than an hour before (we weren’t called; big surprise number two). We cooed over the baby and spoke with the night nurse in both Swahili (Asha) and English (the rest of us); we again pointed to the Post-It note on the wall with our phone numbers and emphasized that the four of us are here for two more weeks and really want to see some deliveries. She was very kind, so hopefully she’ll pass the message along to the day shifts. We huddled briefly in the hallway after leaving the ward and said, “OK, next week we’re all going to come here every day. We have our mission: we are *going* to see a delivery next week!”

…But first… safari! :)

FRIDAY — As promised, our safari crew showed up promptly at 8:30am. One perk of being here is that MLH only requires four workdays per week, so we can be a bit flexible with our schedule; the hospital administrators are proud of their country and strongly encourage their foreign students to experience all sides of the culture. (Based on a few things that have been said, I think some of this may be a ploy to lure some of us back on a more permanent basis, but who am I to argue? ;))

Our driver’s name was Edgar, and our chef was called Boka (yes, oddly enough, travelers who choose the cheaper option of camping in tents, rather than staying in hotel-like lodges, get their own chef!). The vehicle was a tricked-out Jeep, complete with pop-up roof. Erin and I climbed eagerly into the back, and the four of us drove for several hours, heading southwest, deeper into the heart of Tanzania. We passed through Arusha, where we stopped to grab some to-go food for lunch, then continued on our way. The seats were none too comfortable (my rear end was asleep by the time we were halfway there), but the views over the open plains were great. Most of the people we saw were Maasai, and Edgar told us a lot about them as we drove: they’re a nomadic people who move with the weather (meaning, with the water, since their main livelihood is cultivating herds of cattle and goats), they live in round huts with thatched roofs which take only one week to build, and their traditional diet includes no fruits or vegetables — only milk, blood (yep), and meat — yet they routinely live to be 100 years old. Fascinating. They also have a taboo against appearing in photographs, which is a shame, since their style of dress is so distinctive (lots of red and black); also, their women wear some of the most fabulous beaded jewelry I’ve ever seen, with multiple dangling earrings, bracelets extending up to their elbows, and so forth. They’re more likely to seek care from traditional healers than from the hospital, particularly the nomadic groups who live out on the plains, but I’ve definitely seen a few at Machame; one woman in particular was so striking that I don’t think I’ll ever get her image out of my mind. Anyway, we saw a lot of evidence of the Maasai presence as we drove — goat and cattle herds, round thatched mud huts, abandoned market sites, and even a few teenage boys on the side of the road dressed in distinctive black and silver robes and masks, which Edgar said meant they had recently been circumcised in a manhood rite of passage.

Our first destination was Tarangire National Park, but we dropped Boka off before we got there; he was planning to collect the necessary ingredients for dinner and then take the dalla-dalla up the mountain to the campsite. Edgar, Erin, and I arrived at Tarangire, parked the car, and picked a table at which to have lunch… that is, after we chased the utterly fearless monkey out from beneath it! (Yes, our first taste of safari was to chase a monkey away from our lunch table!) Even then, he didn’t go far, but scuttled up a nearby tree to watch us eat and, no doubt, keep a beady eye out for any leftovers. We also had a few interesting birds come and join the party; there are some bright metallic blue birds around here (some sort of starling) that look like nothing I’ve ever seen.

After lunch, we climbed back into the car (after fending off a second monkey, who tried to make off with our plastic bag of trash!), popped the top (which remained horizontal, but simply rose upward, creating a few feet of open space, so that Erin and I could stand up in the back of the vehicle and see out), and headed out into the park.

The first thing we saw was a baobab tree — sparse green leaves on a thick and textured trunk — which Edgar said poachers used to hide inside during the day as they waited for twilight to fall. There were also scores of flat-topped trees like those seen in The Lion King (honestly, it’s a testament to my Disney-era childhood that I had “Circle of Life” running through my head literally all day — occasionally interspersed with the elephant march from The Jungle Book! :)). The first animals we saw were a herd of ostrich, followed by a group of warthogs, complete with several babies. (The refrain in my head took a detour to, “Why, when he was a young warthog…”) We saw some elephants and giraffes from a distance — cameras clicking frantically, since we didn’t know if we’d get a closer look — and then a couple of dik-dik, which are the tiniest variety of antelope (and Edgar’s favorite animal).

And then… ah, we of little faith… our minuscule elephant photos from the previous hour were rendered completely unnecessary as we found ourselves literally surrounded by a peacefully grazing herd! There were about a dozen adults, all munching grass, with three or four babies meandering around the adults’ legs. Edgar told us that an elephant’s gestation period is 23 months, then said, “The lions, they always go for the baby. They cannot bring down an adult — and an adult elephant can kill a lion. But the lion can kill the baby. So the family, they always try to protect the baby.” And sure enough, we never saw the young ones on the fringes of the group; they were always near the middle, where they wouldn’t be easy targets. It was incredible to have such huge, unique animals so close to us! Erin and I both took about a million pictures, and I got a couple of videos, too. I wished my dad could have been there; his favorite Disney movie is The Jungle Book, and those animators got the sassy movement of the baby elephant so exactly right — marching feet, swinging trunk — that I knew he would have appreciated it.

We continued on into the park, seeing water buck, impala (Edgar got a chuckle out of the fact that Impala is the model name of my car back home), a scuttling group of mongooses (mongeese? ;)), a pair of giraffes (my mom’s favorite…), more warthogs, more dik-dik, more distant elephants and beautiful trees and dry riverbeds and classic African landscapes. Apart from slapping away the tsetse flies (which can carry African sleeping sickness, so we did our best not to get bitten, but there’s only so much one can do) every five seconds, it was incredibly peaceful.
“Is there anything else we should be looking for in particular? I mean, is there anything that lives here in Tarangire that we won’t see in the Ngorongoro Crater or at Lake Minyara?” I asked Edgar.
“Yeah, the crater, that is famous for rhino. And Minyara, there you have many flamingoes,” he replied.
“Are there lions here?” I asked.
“Yeah, there is lion in all three. But not many. Maybe we see in one of the three,” he said.
“Yeah, we’ve got three chances,” I agreed.

And then… I swear to you, less than ten minutes later… Erin turned her head sharply to the side and said in a hushed, excited voice, “I think there are lions to the left!”
“What? What?!” Even Edgar, who’d told us he didn’t really get much of a thrill out of the animals anymore after so many years of safaris, sounded excited.
Sure enough, there they came… their tawny coats blending in unbelievably well with the dry grass; they were easy to lose for seconds at a time. First a full-grown lioness, and then — none of us could believe it — scampering behind her, two tiny golden cubs!
Edgar, his eyes wide, was talking quietly, but rapidly. “Those are not more than three months old,” he said with certainty, “maybe only two months. She will be teaching them to hunt soon. She will hunt an impala, and maybe just break one leg, and then let the cubs kill.”
The lioness crossed the road, immediately in front of our parked car, then looked back for the cubs, who were a bit more uncertain, still crouching in the grass. She made a noise in her throat, somewhere between a grunt and a growl, and the pair gathered up their courage and toddled after her. They all headed for a shade tree in the distance to our right, and the lioness suddenly lurched forward, momentarily breaking into an effortless lope. We all caught our breath, thinking we were about to witness a kill, but it turned out she had just spotted a buzzard (that flew off at her approach) and wanted to make sure she didn’t want a piece of whatever he’d found. Apparently deciding that his leftovers weren’t worth it, she lay down in the patch of shade under the tree, and the cubs started rolling around at her feet in mock battle, just their fuzzy ears visible above the long grass. It was a very peaceful scene, and all three of us were a bit in awe to have witnessed it. “You guys are lucky,” Edgar said, a bit incredulously. (Seems like this was a bit of an unusual sighting even for him — several hours later, he would say again, out of the blue, “I’m happy about that lion.”)
“I know, and we were just talking about lions!” I agreed.

We continued through the park, and saw several more groups of animals, but nothing we hadn’t already seen, and certainly nothing that could top the lion. There was one amusing moment when we all got out of the car to use a deserted restroom and realized upon our return that a gaggle of monkeys was trying very determinedly to gain entry to the Jeep! Fortunately, Edgar had had the presence of mind to lower the viewing roof and close the windows before leaving the vehicle, but there was one particularly bullheaded monkey who very nearly pushed his way through a crack. (It made for some great video, until I got worried that he was actually going to get inside, and turned the camera off to yell at him.)

Once we got back into our (monkeyless) car, we turned around and headed slowly back toward the main park entrance. We’d essentially seen all there was to see, but Erin and I stayed standing up, just looking around and taking it all in. I swear the air is different in this country; the breeze is tinged with more shifting subtleties than the air at home — dust, animal, coffee, sweat, flowers, smoke — it smells almost spicy at times. I had that thought when we first arrived two weeks ago (and were practically hanging our heads out the windows of the van on the way to Moshi), and was reminded of it again today, rolling through some of these (nearly) untouched places. It’s not ‘cleaner’ necessarily, but enticing nonetheless; it makes me wish I were a snake so I could taste the air. Like the views of Kilimanjaro, this was another of those experiences where the flat capture of the digital camera just didn’t do justice to the reality of the whole, and I know Erin was thinking the same thing, because she leaned over and said, “I’m so glad we did this together — nobody else will understand!”

On the final drive up to the campsite, I was half asleep when Edgar suddenly pulled over to the side of the road and said, “Look at the zebra.” Well, that was one animal we hadn’t yet seen, and it was made funnier by the fact that he literally trotted across the road right in front of us. (“That’s why they call it a zebra crossing,” Edgar joked, referring to the black-and-white-striped crosswalks.) I grinned and quoted to Erin, “‘When you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not zebras’… unless you happen to be in Tanzania!” :)

We finally made it up to the campsite; we had a delicious dinner of pumpkin soup, salad, tilapia, potatoes, and vegetable sauce, topped off with a dessert of fresh pineapple (another fruit that may officially be ruined for me — it was incredible!). Edgar taught us a few Swahili words over dinner (“chakula kitam” means “delicious food”, and “Ni me shiba, asante” means “I’m full, thank you.”), and then we both braved the disgusting bathroom (complete with multiple cockroaches in every shower stall) to get cleaned up for bed. Our tent, at least, is pretty nice; it’s on a raised concrete platform and actually has two twin beds inside, complete with pillows and sheets. We’d been expecting sleeping bags, so this is pretty awesome.

SATURDAY — Day two of safari was my personal favorite — we went to the Ngorongoro Crater! We drove along the rim first, looking down into thousands of shades of soft green and gray, then slowly descended along the narrow red path. The trees were unbelievably beautiful on the way down, very different from the baobabs we’d seen yesterday — they had slim crooked trunks and broad, flat tops, almost like leafy umbrellas, letting through just enough sunlight to dapple the red earth. I’ve never been in a forest that even remotely resembled that one, yet if I were to describe my mental image of an enchanted wood, it would bear a strong resemblance. I wouldn’t have been surprised if a fairy or two had flown past.

Being on the ground inside the crater felt like being inside a giant green bowl, with mountains on all sides. Everything was shrouded in a faint mist, and the air was much cooler than in Tarangire; I needed my fleece for a good portion of the morning. Because we could see the crater’s mountainous edges on all sides of us, it felt like a relatively small space, but in reality, it took hours to cover the entire territory. We could see other safari vehicles puttering around in the distance at times, but they were too far away to be heard, so it felt as though we were all alone. A small flock of cranes flew overhead at one point, and it was so quiet that I could literally hear the beating of their wings. It’s an overused cliche, but it genuinely felt as though time had stopped, as though the past two dozen centuries had just passed this little piece of land by. I haven’t met too many people who are fans of the Clan of the Cave Bear books, but if anyone out there besides me has read them, the crater is how I imagine Ayla’s prehistoric world: intermingling herds of peacefully grazing animals everywhere you look. Wildebeest, gazelles, buffalo… and I saw more zebras today than I’ve seen in 18 months of PA school (ha ha ;))! At one point, we looked across the crater and saw a massive flock of white birds take off from the ground. They rose and fell, glided and swooped, discrete white specks moving as one cloud. We each whipped out our cameras, but the phenomenon was too far away to be seen on the images, so we just silently watched from afar as the mass of minute white pinpricks swirled and dove. “It’s like something out of a dream,” Erin said softly, and that may well have been the most accurate description.

Other sightings of the day included male and female lions (from a great distance; the Jeep is equipped with binoculars, fortunately) as well as several rhino (also quite a feat, considering there are only about two dozen left in the area). We also saw hyenas, jackals, ostriches, and one small cheetah-like creature that we didn’t catch Edgar’s name for — ‘cevocat’, perhaps? When we drew closer to the wetter areas of the crater, we saw quite a few hippopotamuses, and the largest lake had so many flamingoes that I couldn’t even begin to count them; it was just a giant swath of pink. Many of the animals had young with them, too; the fuzzy baby zebras were my favorites.

Our late afternoon ascent back up to the rim was, well, not for the faint of heart. The path was steep, requiring a certain amount of, ahem, momentum on Edgar’s part, yet also incredibly rocky. The views were incredible, so we remained standing despite the rough terrain, but it felt rather like the ‘runaway minecar’ roller coaster at Disney World — we were being thrown from side to side, smacking our elbows and forearms and ribs into the edges of the popup roof. We debated the wisdom of sitting down and buckling our seat belts, but when were we going to get the chance at a ride like this again?! Although we both had several moments where our hands twitched reflexively toward our cameras, anxious to record the fading soft light of the afternoon sun on the fuzzy green hillsides, removing either hand from our grip on the vehicle’s struts felt like a death wish. “Mental memory!” I said to Erin above the din of the bouncing vehicle; she nodded in agreement as we gazed out over the misty bowl of the crater for the last time.

Another significant piece of excitement occurred near the rim. We’d seen a few elephants during the earliest part of our drive that morning, and they were present again — in spades — during this trip back up. There were about five other safari vehicles parked on the road, everyone’s cameras clicking away. Since we had seen elephants up close and personal at Tarangire yesterday, Edgar paused for only a moment before edging his way around the other vehicles and attempting to continue up the path.

Except.

Around the next bend, standing squarely in front of us, in the middle of the red rutted path, was an elephant. A very large elephant (as if there’s any other kind). Not eating, not milling around, but with his eyes fixed pointedly on our vehicle.

And then… he very deliberately started to walk toward us.

Edgar threw the Jeep into reverse, and we started slowly backing up toward the group of other vehicles, at the same rate that the elephant was moving toward us. I happened to have my camera in my hand, so, for lack of a reason not to, flicked the switch to Video and started narrating, “This guy is trying to play chicken with us… but if he really decides to take us on… uh… we’ll lose.” The thought flashed through my mind that this was the kind of makeshift video capture that routinely ends up on YouTube to explain international tourists’ unfortunate deaths. Edgar maneuvered us around the other Jeeps, into a less direct line of sight, but the elephant didn’t stop moving. The tourists in the now-frontmost vehicle were transfixed at first, murmuring excitedly — but a note of alarm crept into their voices as they realized that this elephant was actually getting *too* close. My video captures them abruptly ducking down into the cabin space of their vehicle, as the elephant seems to briefly contemplate bumping the Jeep. Narrating the video, my voice drops to a whisper, “Oh, oh, please don’t hurt those people!” All it would take is one slight nudge…

Instead, he very deliberately turned his head… and ate some leaves off a bush.
He was king of the road — as if there had been any doubt — and all was right in his world again.

…Every single person on that road burst into relieved laughter. “I thought it was going to push the car!” exclaimed Edgar. Us too! Whew.

We made it to the rim without (further) incident, exited the park, and headed back down the mountain toward the campsite. We stopped at a couple of shops on the way back; the first one was incredibly uncomfortable because the shopkeepers were so desperate to make a sale that they followed us step by step around the shop like a parade, assuring us that everything was “lovely price” and that they would “make bargain — good for you, good for me.” At the next one, Edgar spoke to the shopkeepers and asked them to please leave us be; as a result, we did a lot more actual shopping, although we still had to bargain pretty hardcore to get even close to a fair price on anything. Among other purchases, I got a very pretty Maasai-style beaded bracelet; I actually wanted to buy several of those, but couldn’t talk the guy down any lower than 15,000 shillings apiece (about $10), so I only got one. I might be able to find them for cheaper in Moshi at some point, but even if I can’t, just the one will still be a sufficient reminder of my beautiful Maasai patient from last week. Let’s face it: my white self wouldn’t be able to pull the style off the way she did, anyway, even if I bought a whole armful of bracelets. :)

Dinner was carrot soup, rice, vegetables, and… finally… ugali! Ugali is the national dish of Tanzania, and we’d been wanting to try it for a while. It’s basically a cornmeal mush, served with some kind of sauce (tonight’s was lovely, with lots of tender meat). Edgar showed us how to eat ugali properly — it’s a sticky doughlike mass, and you’re supposed to pinch off a bit with your right hand, squeeze it into a ball, make an indentation with your thumbnail, then stuff a bit of the sauce into the crevice. All with just your hand, of course. I told Edgar, “I think this would be a very popular meal with children — you get to eat with your fingers!”

SUNDAY — Our last day on safari (last half day, really) was spent at Lake Minyara. There isn’t really a whole lot to report — we saw so many things on Friday and Saturday that today was mostly more of the same — impala, zebras, a few amusing groups of baboons running down the road. We did see a cheetah from an incredible distance away; the binoculars barely reached, so there was no hope of getting photos, but it was neat to see. The (massive) lake was pretty, but we couldn’t get especially close to it; we did see the huge groups of flamingoes, but again, they were too far away for pictures; like yesterday, they just looked like a faint, glittering swath of salmon pink along the water’s edge. The morning’s highlight was a pair of giraffes, mother and baby; I think Erin and I each took about eighty pictures of them. :) If you’ve never seen a giraffe drinking water, it’s quite a sight; they’re usually such sinuous, graceful creatures, but their long necks require them to drop down into a sort of ungainly squat in order to be able to put their mouths to the water. This made everyone giggle, including Edgar.

Around noon, we’d seen about all there was to see, so we headed back out to a campground along the main road where Boka had been hard at work preparing our lunch: salad, French fries, cabbage, fruit, and an incredible masterpiece of a meat pie that must have taken him all morning. It was like a quiche, but with ground meat instead of egg, plus onions, tomatoes, peppers, and a flaky crust. Definitely one of the most delicious things I’ve had in Tanzania. After we ate, we all piled back into the Jeep for the last time (which is saying something!) and drove the long three hours back to Machame… and now Erin and I are safely home and each engaged in our own quiet pursuits, alternately reading and journaling. A storm is brewing outside, so it’s getting dark earlier than usual, and a stiff breeze is blowing through the house. It’s sort of pleasantly creepy, and promises to be a quiet, cozy evening — as long as the power stays on…!

Tanzania — Week 1

26 Feb

How in the world does one begin a narrative that describes something — all things, really — so incredibly different from one’s comfortable, accepted, day-to-day reality? I’m not sure, but I’m going to try.

SATURDAY — Raleigh to Detroit to Amsterdam to Kilimanjaro…

SUNDAY — 26 hours, 8 time zones, 7840 miles, and an uncountable number of airplane meals later, we disembarked onto the tarmac in the dark (out of what turned out to be the most *massive* plane I’d ever stood beside!). We spent a few minutes in an extremely hot, crowded customs line, followed by a lovely, cool, breezy (and extraordinarily dark — no streetlights here!) van ride to our hotel. Our driver, Carol, is from Moshi and works for Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center (henceforth to be known as KCMC), which is the ‘hub’ connecting all the smaller hospitals (like Machame Lutheran Hospital, which is where we are); he’s seen lots of Duke-affiliated folk come through the area and speaks excellent English, so he was able to answer a lot of our preliminary questions. I asked about a runners’ sign hanging over the road — turned out the Kilimanjaro Marathon had been run just that morning. (I asked who won — even here, it was a Kenyan! :))

Carol dropped us off at our hotel, which was called Midlands. We were told to be ready for pickup at 7:50 the next morning to go to KCMC and meet Vera, one of our primary contacts here in Tanzania who has been ‘smoothing the way’ for us on this end during our various preparations.

MONDAY — We pulled our groggy selves out of our mosquito-net-draped beds in time for the hotel staff to serve us a 7am breakfast on the porch — typical light Tanzanian breakfast fare of hard-boiled eggs, oranges, and bread with butter and marmalade. It was lovely to sit there in the cool morning breeze, seeing the country in the daylight for the first time, staring wide-eyed at all the unusual plants and colorful flowers that covered the property. We got really excited when we realized that we could even see the peak of Mt. Kilimanjaro, which is apparently pretty unusual, since it’s normally behind a cloud cover. We snapped pictures, finished eating, and waited for Carol.

And waited.
And waited.

Turned out that this was to be our first lesson in “Tanzanian time”, the concept of which is very “loose”, in sharp contrast to American culture. In short, very little is done on a fixed schedule here; nothing is set in stone. We’d been warned that this would be the case, but hadn’t expected to be introduced to the phenomenon quite so soon. We read our Kindles on the porch, exchanged a comment or two about how we could have stayed in bed, giggled when we overheard Chris Brown blasting from a nearby home — “Not exactly what I expected to hear in Africa!” said Erin — and kept waiting.

We waited for nearly three hours (which is long even by Tanzania standards), when Vera finally called the hotel and instructed the owner to just put us in a taxi to KCMC, which he did. We couldn’t stop grinning as we bumped and bounced our way along the rutted red roads on this first morning — I can’t speak for Erin, but it was *exactly* how I’d imagined Africa to be. Dark-faced women in colorful clothing balancing bundles of bananas on their heads, men riding bicycles or walking along the side of the road, wide-eyed children with school uniforms and close-cropped hair staring at our white faces in the backseat. So different from anything I’d ever seen, and yet exactly like my mind’s eye — as if we’d been dropped into the middle of my imagination.

We arrived at KCMC, met Vera, paid our registration fees, and met most of the Duke affiliates who are currently working at KCMC. “When you walk down this hallway, you’ll feel at home,” Vera said with a grin, and right she was; the Duke offices were lined up all in a row. The hospital had a very open design, with open breezeways at the ends of the hallways so that air could circulate freely; despite the lack of air conditioning, it was quite cool inside. Then she took us out into the town of Moshi to get some necessary errands accomplished — we both needed Tanzanian shillings ($1 = 1500 TZS, more or less) and Tanzanian cell phones, and we also needed to go to the immigration office to get our passports endorsed. We stopped by a store owned by a friend of Vera’s, a woman named Irene who makes skirts and dresses from good-quality fabric (we plan to buy a few… :)) as well as the office of the company that we’re hoping to use for a safari — they don’t have any groups signed up for any of our potential weekends yet, but we’re hoping they get one, because it would make the venture considerably cheaper!

We insisted on buying Vera lunch — she was an absolute lifesaver during this first hectic day. Erin and I had been half-hoping to try some local food — ‘ugali’ (a doughy substance dipped in sauce) or ‘palau’ (rice with a sauce of chicken and spices) — so we had to hold back giggles when Vera enthusiastically suggested, “How about pizza and French fries?!” So that was what we had, at a large restaurant called Union Cafe — prices are more in line with what we’d expect to pay at home, but it was a nice quiet place where we could sit and rest and talk. You can buy fresh local coffee beans there (um, yes please), and I also noticed that they have wireless Internet, albeit not free, so I suspect that I’ll be back in the not-too-distant future.

Coincidentally, Erin and I did get our ‘palau’ and chicken and rice that night when we had dinner at the hotel — seriously some of the most delicious food I have ever had, and capped off by a mango that I swear to goodness must have dropped from the tree five minutes before we ate it. I’m still dreaming about that mango. Definitely never going to be be able to eat them the same way again at home.

TUESDAY — Vera and Carol picked us up (on time!) and we rode up to Machame, which is where our rotation site, Machame Lutheran Hospital (MLH), is. The drive was stunningly picturesque; the rainy season is just beginning here, so a lot of farmers were out hand-planting their maize and beans. Those gigantic fields, dotted with bent-over workers, backlit by mountain ranges and Kilimanjaro… it was like something off a postcard. Machame is at the base of Kilimanjaro (the park gate is just 4 km from the hospital), so we had to climb a long steep grade in the van, and the higher we got, the denser the foliage became. I’ve never seen so many banana trees, interspersed with smaller coffee plants and other random flowering trees and shrubs that added bursts of red, pink, yellow, and purple to the general splendor.

And then… we entered the gates of MLH. It was late morning, so there were a lot of people milling about the entrance. Everyone stared as our Duke-labeled van approached, and more than one person called us ‘mzungu’ (“white people”). This is a common label here — even the children will invariably shout “Mzungu, mzungu,” when they see us — and I have to continually remind myself that Africans don’t have the same historical concept of racism that we do in the States and that they genuinely don’t mean to offend.

Our first stop was “Mushi Patron”‘s office; Mr. Mushi is one of our ‘bosses’ while we’re here. We met Asha and Maria, the Swedish students who are sharing the other half of our guest house (technically, there are six of us here right now, since there are two more Americans from Nebraska in the other side, too; Erin and I have our half to ourselves so far), and the four of us followed Mr. Mushi on a tour of the hospital. It’s designed similarly to KCMC, with open breezeways, but much smaller, and laid out in a figure-eight pattern. The two inner courtyards are filled with red-flowering trees, and the men and women of the Maasai tribe tend to sit there on the grass in the sun with their colorful robes and dramatic piercings, which adds to the overall picture. As far as facilities, there’s a busy HIV clinic, a maternal/child health unit, a labor & delivery unit, a pediatric unit, an ICU (with eight beds), separate surgical wards for men and women, and a new orthopedic wing that the administrators are exceptionally proud of (the hospital performs quite a bit of orthopedic surgery).

After the tour, Erin and I moved our luggage into our half of the guest house and went down to the hospital canteen for lunch with Vera and Carol before they left. Meals are a flat rate of 1500 TZS (about $1-1.50), which is hard to beat. We ate a sort of banana stew, which I probably wouldn’t order again if I had another option, but which wasn’t too bad; boiled bananas, some lumps of meat, a bit of sauce, and some greens and beans to add to the plate at one’s discretion. Definitely a ‘local’ food native to the Kilimanjaro area; Vera says it would be hard to find even just up the road in Moshi or Arusha.

We took a couple of pictures with Vera and Carol in front of the hospital (apparently these photos are a tradition with Carol since one of them made it on the cover of a Duke publication; he was pretty happy about that and joked with us that we needed to “make him famous” again), and then they left. We did some organizational work on the apartment (no easy task, let me tell you — this place is pretty filthy), then bought bottled water at the canteen shop (confession: I’ve drunk from the tap several times with no ill effects, but when it’s this cheap, why not be safe?) and went for a walk up the road to a fruit stand and bought a whole pile of fruits and vegetables — four bananas, four mangoes, four tomatoes, two oranges, and the biggest, ripest avocado I’d ever seen in my life. Grand total: $2. I couldn’t believe it. We ate at the canteen again for dinner (potatoes in some kind of meat sauce), and experienced our first power outage; apparently they’re a regular occurrence in the evenings. We’ve been warned that “it always happens right when you’re trying to do something, like cook a meal or take a shower!”, and that’s been true so far; the power has gone out every night we’ve been here. The level of blackness that happens when the lights go out in Africa is so deep and impenetrable as to be almost frightening; fortunately, we’ve never been caught without our flashlights. (Of course, then you have the insects to deal with — but, yeah, pick your poison…)

WEDNESDAY — Our first full day at the hospital! Days here begin with devotions at 7:45, which students are expected to attend. The service is mostly in Swahili, so we can’t glean much, but the singing is absolutely magical. I’m going to do my best to get an audio recording of some of it, because I honestly don’t know how they do it — they sing various harmonies and rounds without seeming to even try. One woman will echo a line alone, or a whole group of deep-voiced men will carry a melody… the variations are always unexpected, and always perfect. On this first day, Erin and I had to go up front and introduce ourselves; the pastor then led the group in rubbing their hands together to warm them. He counted, “Moja, mbili, tatu!” and the whole group clapped their hands slowly three times. This is apparently their ‘welcome’ procedure, rather like how we in the States might applaud. It was unfamiliar to me, but I think both of us felt very special. :)

After devotions, we had morning rounds, which on this particular day turned into more of a discussion-slash-argument between two of the higher-ups over a case from the day before that hadn’t gone well. The other two Americans were assigned to work in the HIV clinic with a German physician that Erin and I knew by reputation (we’re already looking forward to our turn), and the two of us were assigned to GYN surgery. Admittedly, I was sort of disappointed by this; I know we’re here long enough that we’ll get a chance to do everything eventually, but (a) I’d just finished a surgery rotation and was looking forward to doing something different, and (b) there are so many things here that I *am* intensely excited about (labor & delivery, pediatrics, HIV clinic, maternal/child clinic, palliative care home visits, etc.) that I was a little bummed to be assigned to surgery again on the first day.

However, the silver lining was that the States version of the OR was fresh in my mind, so comparisons were more jarring than they might otherwise have been. On the surface, things look much the same in a Tanzanian OR — a surgeon, a first assistant, an anesthetist, a scrub nurse, and a circulating nurse. However… then you look a little deeper and realize that the suction apparatus is a simple rubber hose (no tip) attached to a glass canister, which is switched on and off at the surgeon’s command. (The hose actually came apart at one point and sprayed blood on the floor, causing both Erin and me to nearly hyperventilate.) Nothing is disposable — the gowns, caps, and masks are made of regular fabric (and thus all swelteringly hot). Instead of normal shoes with shoe covers, the staff changes into either flip-flops or tall rubber boots (the kind NCers wear on rainy days). There’s often a fly or two lazily circling the room. No one wears eye protection, and gloves are frequently ignored (which becomes uncomfortable when they expect *us* to do something without putting on gloves first, because they just don’t understand why in the world one would need gloves to stick tape onto a patient’s bandaged incision or move a tray of used instruments into the autoclave room…). Sharps containers consist of cardboard boxes inside plastic garbage pails. Patients are extubated extremely quickly (Erin saw one patient who was swiftly extubated and disengaged from all monitors, then couldn’t be roused; the anesthetist was literally slapping the woman in the face and suffocating her with a towel in an attempt to get a response). And, one of the most disturbing things: the anesthetist has to *manually* ventilate the patient throughout the entire operation (!), and she doesn’t always do this consistently; we actually saw her briefly walk out of the room a couple of times (then come back and give the patient several quick breaths… um, for good measure…???)

I’m a little embarrassed to admit it, but I actually came perilously close to passing out (sweating, shaking, tunnel vision) during the second case, and had to make a hasty exit. That has never, *ever* happened to me in the OR, not even during my pre-PA shadowing days — but I suppose a suffocating fabric face mask, tall sweltering rubber boots, and no air conditioning, combined with too light of a breakfast (that mango and banana seemed like such a delicious idea at the time…) could reasonably be expected to do me in. We’re going to try to hunt down some eggs this weekend and make a big batch of hard-boiled eggs for our breakfasts so that we’re not stuck with fruit and oily bread.

We got lucky with food tonight; a sympathetic canteen employee apparently decided that the two ‘mzungu’ girls should get a full meal, so instead of the plate of plain rice and unappetizing lumps of meat that we were expecting, we got something called ‘nyama’ — white rice with a meat-based sauce containing onions and tomatoes — as well as a plate of salted tomatoes and cucumbers, a plate of pickled cabbage, and bananas for dessert. We went for a walk afterward to buy more bottled water and to try to find our way to the market, but had no luck with the latter; still, it was a good workout, especially the steep uphill climb back to the hospital.

THURSDAY — After devotions and morning report today, the director of the hospital started pimping the nursing students with a relatively easy question — “Where does the upper respiratory tract begin and end?” After a few misses, someone finally gave the correct answer of “nostrils” for the beginning, but nobody could get the other answer. The director eventually turned to me and Erin with raised eyebrows and said, “PA students? From Duke University? Where does the upper respiratory tract end?” Well, way to bring the pressure by attaching the Duke name! (We correctly answered “at the carina”, but I’m curious what kind of precedent this is setting — he smilingly warned us that there would likely be more questions tomorrow…)

We were assigned to spend today in the orthopedic clinic, which was pretty interesting. The doctor who runs the clinic is a slightly stooped, gray-haired, jolly spitfire of an orthopedic surgeon who is thrilled to be at Machame in the new ortho wing after spending many years at the overcrowded, undersupplied KCMC. We saw a lot of fractures that were weeks old and had never been properly set — the two that stick out in my mind were a four-year-old boy and sixteen-year-old girl, both of whom had had forearm fractures weeks ago and were just presenting to clinic for the first time today. Fortunately, the prognosis was fairly good for both of them; their range of motion was only partially limited, and the surgeon was optimistic about their bones’ ability to remodel. There was also an eleven-year-old boy with flat feet and malrotation of both taluses (tali?) about whom the surgeon couldn’t be quite so optimistic; he said that this deformity could have been easily repaired in infancy, but not in a child this age. His English is just as heavily accented as everyone else’s, and he was flying from patient to patient so quickly that we didn’t get much information about the treatments he was using, but he was a great teacher on the things he did take the time to show us, particularly when it came to interpreting x-rays. (And they do a LOT of x-rays, because it’s just about the only imaging tool they have besides ultrasound. One patient got sent for an MRI, and he’s going to have to go all the way to Dar es Salaam for it.)

Another interesting thing today: our first experience with displays of grief in this culture. While we were in the ortho clinic, someone outside must have gotten bad news about a family member. I wish I could use the more romantic word ‘keening’, but I can’t; this was screaming, plain and simple, and it went on for over ten minutes. I heard the word ‘baba’, so my guess is that it was someone’s father who died. Everyone continued about their business — no hasty shuttling of the family members into private rooms, as would likely have happened in the States — but there were a number of sad glances exchanged among those of us in the room; there was no doubt that everyone knew what had happened. My question to Erin was whether the grieving process perhaps takes a different trajectory here — “get it all out up front”, as it were, and then get on with life a little more rapidly? I don’t know enough about this culture to know the answer to that question, but I can see how such a tradition might have evolved; simply put, these people can’t *afford* to be paralyzed with grief for days or weeks, because they have to take care of their families. This is pure speculation on my part, but I did wonder.

On a happier note, I finally met the two young boys who continually prowl the hallways; one looks to be about six years old and is in a wheelchair (he’s a regular speed demon with it, too), while the other is slightly older and uses a walker. They told me their names are Erikson and Solomon. I’d seen them around a few times and had tried to introduce myself, but they speak very little English; still, they’re friendly as can be, constantly shouting, “Come, come!” and beckoning to us whenever they catch sight of us. I remembered to slip one of my packets of stickers into my white coat pocket today, so we had a good time putting stickers on their wheelchair, walker, and so forth. I seriously can’t wait until I get to do some work with the children and babies here! There’s also an orphanage that we’ve been told we can visit; I’m excited about that, too.

Also, the local market days are Monday and Thursday, so Erin and I walked down the hill to the Machame market site today. It rained this afternoon, so we were slip-sliding over a slick uneven red dirt path that has clearly been traveled by many hundreds of feet — but once we got there, our senses were dazzled. People packed tightly together, interspersed by heaps of red tomatoes, green mangoes, colorful fabrics, and all manner of other odds and ends. We heard “mzungu!” exclaimed from all corners as we walked through, so apparently we made quite a scene. :) We also made out like bandits — five bananas, four tomatoes, three mangoes, three cucumbers, and an avocado, for a grand total of 1200 TZS — about one American dollar. I wouldn’t say we felt ‘comfortable’ just yet — we were wearing our backpacks on our fronts and surreptitiously watching our backs — but we interacted a little more than we have up until now, and also understood a little more (hard to say which phenomenon came first). We were able to ask for and comprehend prices in Swahili, and older women called us ‘sister’ in both Swahili and English — and those from whom we bought were so genuinely appreciative. I tried to break a 5000 TZS note (about $5) at the first stall we came to, and was told they couldn’t do it, which was a sobering realization regarding how much money the vendors make in a day.

In keeping with the theme of “things that disturb me a bit” — the two Nebraskan PA girls just got back from their day with the Outreach Program and told us that when they arrived and asked where the doctors were, they were told, “You’re the doctors!” They saw 60 patients completely on their own, made diagnoses, wrote prescriptions, the whole bit, and are pushing us to join them next Thursday… which is causing me to have one of those awkward moments where I feel like the stick-in-the-mud goody-two-shoes, because I’m just not comfortable with that. Fortunately, Erin is on the same page. I mean, you could argue both sides — these people are desperate for medical care, *any* medical care, and in most cases, a little advice is probably better than nothing (and it’s not like we’re very likely to be sued for practicing medicine without a license in the middle of the African bush). But the fact remains that I’m *not* a licensed provider yet. I’m simply not authorized to prescribe medication or treat patients without supervision, even if it is a desperate situation. Erin and I decided we’d go next week if, and only if, there was a Tanzanian-licensed *physician* there to supervise. Granted, one of the Nebraskans is a full-fledged PA-C rather than a student, but she still technically needs a supervising physician — and she obviously isn’t licensed *here* in Tanzania anyway. (She’s actually a high-ranking faculty member, too, which is even more disturbing…)

In light of all this, I will say that whatever negative emotions I occasionally harbor about how intensely ‘professionalism-focused’ our program is, Erin and I agree that the instinct that has been cultivated in us over the past 18 months is really serving us well here. Specifically, when we see certain behaviors on the parts of (ahem) others, we ‘know’ instinctively whether or not they jive with how we should represent ourselves here, and there’s a kind of security in that framework. I think most of the Global Health participants are savvy enough to suss those things out on their own (if none of the local providers wear scrubs, perhaps you shouldn’t, either…), but seeing people who *don’t* have (and, more importantly, don’t care to develop) that instinct does give one a new perspective on (a) why certain pre-travel orientation activities might be necessary, and (b) why Americans have such a poor reputation in so many parts of the world. Sigh.

FRIDAY — Finally, my turn in the HIV clinic! I worked with Enrike, the infamous German MD that previous students had told us to seek out. Every encounter was conducted entirely in Swahili, which was simultaneously a little frustrating and a really good challenge for my language skills, but Enrike was really good about taking a few seconds between patients to explain the situations more fully and answer any questions I had. We saw about 25 patients between 9am and 2pm; they all come to clinic on a monthly basis to get their prescriptions refilled. I’m appalled by the fact that patients aren’t eligible to start antiretroviral therapy here until they meet certain criteria — having a CD4 count of 350 or less, being pregnant, or having some other kind of severe disease manifestation. Healthy patients with good counts who are doing well just get prophylactic antifungals (and kids get multivitamins, “to get them used to taking pills twice a day”, Enrike explained) and treatment of any acute issues that have occurred in the meantime (we saw an eight-year-old today who got an antibiotic for an infected toe — things like that).

There were two particularly sad cases that stand out in my mind. The first was a 37-year-old woman with a CD4 count of 6 (yes, 6! Normal people are in the four digits) who had a raging decubitus ulcer from a recent stint in the hospital. She was in tremendous pain, and as she left with the nurse (to be admitted for IV antibiotics), she reached for Enrike’s hand and asked, “Am I going to get better?” Enrike had to tell her honestly that she didn’t know. Someone with a count that low isn’t likely to be able to heal a wound like that.

The second case was a 19-year-old girl with two HIV+ children (ages 1 and 3) who simply did not have the resources or coping skills to manage her situation. The kids were missing weeks of medicine at a time, and the girl has no relatives to help her; she’s completely on her own. In the clinic, she broke down crying, asking if we knew of a way that she could give one of her kids to someone else, so that she’d only have one to take care of. What an impossible decision to have to make. All we could do was give her three packets of high-calorie food, three free prescriptions, and cross our fingers.

Other “firsts” for today included first monkey sighting (really, first seven or eight monkey sightings :)), first enormous rainstorm (the rainy season is definitely beginning), and first time braving the gas stove, which means I had COFFEE for the first time in over a week. Starbucks Via for the win.

SO FAR… — There have definitely been a few rough patches along the way, but I think it’s safe to say we’re headed upward now. We’ve (mostly…) gotten over the filthiness of the apartment and the moldy-cardboard smell of the bedding, and Erin jury-rigged the showerhead yesterday so that it no longer has to be held in the hand. The street salesmen in Moshi are still annoyingly (ANNOYINGLY) persistent, no matter how many times you say ‘hapana asante’ (no thank you), but I think we just need to get used to not being nice / engaging in conversation. Some of the food has been less than desirable, specifically the lumps of gristly meat and the various forms of oily bread that constitute a canteen breakfast, but we’re quickly learning what to avoid. However, it’s still difficult to not have a day-to-day schedule and expectations as far as what we’ll be doing, because Tanzania just doesn’t work that way. And perhaps hardest of all (for me) has been not knowing the language. I’ve lived abroad before, but never in a country where I couldn’t speak at least a rudimentary version of the native language. I’m picking up Swahili with reasonable facility — I’ve got greetings, numbers, yes/no, please/thank you, sorry, “how much does this cost,” and some other random words (like ‘embe’, which means… ‘mango’! :)) — but the best I can hope for in terms of comprehension is a word here and there. This feels incredibly awkward, not only because of not knowing the WORDS, but because of the attached cultural expectations that I am therefore also completely in the dark about. I think most people feel wrong-footed when they don’t know what’s expected of them, and there’s definitely a hearty helping of that here, although it’s getting better as we go — the Tanzanians are a pretty friendly bunch, so it’s hard not to start to feel a little more at ease after a while.

Aside from the language barrier, though, a lot of things about this experience actually feel a lot like summer camp: scenic mountain views, animal noises serving as an alarm clock, interesting food combinations, rationing your clothes (so as to do laundry as infrequently as possible), no functioning technology, walking home from the canteen at night with only a flashlight to light the way, etc. So I guess it does feel familiar, in a sense… :)

And there’s no denying that there have also been a lot of unforgettable experiences already. The view from our room is beautiful; there’s a banana grove right outside, as well as a red dirt path where children in school uniforms run past at first light. Roosters call back and forth for a majority of the day (you can set your watch by the darn things — 4:53am!), and although we haven’t seen them, we can hear the chuckling cries of bush babies at night. This country is such an odd paradox — there’s trash lying around everywhere, many of the toilets are simply holes in the ground, and most people smell pretty terrible (just being honest… :)). No one thing is terribly beautiful by itself, but taken together… something about the contrast of the natural beauty, colorful clothes, curious eyes and friendly smiles, combined with the overwhelming evidence of the rundown state of humanity… something about it strikes a chord that I can’t call anything other than ‘beautiful’ just yet. Maybe I’ll find a better word as the days roll on.

The next couple of weeks are undoubtedly going to bring more adventures. We’re crossing our fingers that we can arrange a safari group for next weekend, but even if we can’t, we’ll probably just end up paying extra and going as a duo — because we *cannot* go to Africa and not go on safari! We’re also planning to take a weekend trip to Zanzibar (no, not ‘by motor car’, DPAP! ;)) during the third weekend, which both of us are very excited about — just do a Google Image Search for ‘Zanzibar beaches’ to see why. :)

Before I forget, special shout-out to Lisa Shubert for the nice close shave in the DPAP bathroom the day before we flew out — this hair has been absolutely amazing here, in every setting from the crappy shower to being able to cool down more efficiently upon getting out of that sweltering customs line and feeling my first true Tanzanian breeze. Not to mention, the people here LOVE it; I can’t understand what they’re saying for the most part, but they gesture to their heads and point to mine and smile, and I get the drift. :) Also, Asha, one of our Swedish roommates (who actually speaks fluent Swahili), has jokingly nicknamed me the White Maasai; one of the Americans has gone with Jane, as in G.I. Jane. We’ll see what the others come up with.

Anyway, we’re here in Tanzania until the evening of the 21st, which is a Wednesday; then we take an overnight flight to the Netherlands (be still, my heart!) for two precious days. After five years away, I suspect Erin is going to have to physically restrain me from racking up the credit card debt on stroopwafels and patatjes… :)

What happens in Vegas…

13 Jun

There have been three major developments in my life recently that I haven’t yet posted about, so I’m going to try to write a brief update that encompasses all three. Caveat: I managed to trip while running last weekend (caught the toe of one sneaker in the loop of the shoelace on the other) and fell in the exact wrong way to break one of my fingers, so this may not be as detailed of a post as you guys are used to (typing isn’t the easiest thing in the world right now), but I’ll do what I can.

(1) Global Health
Our Global Health electives were announced last week, and I got my first choice — Tanzania!!! I’ll be spending most of the month of March at Machame Lutheran Hospital in Machame, Tanzania, which is on the lower slopes of Mt. Kilamanjaro, right on the Kenya border. I’ll be going with a classmate of mine who is also a good friend, and we’re both incredibly excited. Word on the street is that, because of the language barrier, this rotation is more observational than most of the ones we’ll do here in NC, but we’ve also been told that you can ‘mold’ the experience into whatever you like best — i.e. if you’re a surgical type, you can spend lots of time in the OR, or if you’re like me and more interested in pediatrics, infectious disease, that type of thing, then you can spend more time in the HIV clinic. I also discovered today that this hospital has a palliative care program, so that might be rewarding to be involved with, as well. I’ve wanted to do medical work in Africa for as long as I can remember, and I absolutely cannot wait! I’ve already borrowed a couple of Swahili books from a classmate who’s been to Tanzania before, and I’m planning to study up during the fall and winter. (Foreign language #7! Woohoo!)

The only minor down side is that we’re going in March rather than in January, meaning we won’t have that nice long winter break preceding the international experience (on the contrary, it’s going to be sandwiched between two of the rotations I’m most dreading — surgery and psych!) This is a bummer, partly because there are a ton of cool extracurricular things to do in Africa — safari, the Jane Goodall Institute, etc. — and also because most of the flights to Tanzania go through Amsterdam, which means I could potentially stop and visit friends (and shadow a couple of Dutch PAs at their hospital, as I was recently invited to do, but I’ll get to that in a minute). I was also hoping to spend some time in South Africa with a friend I haven’t seen in nearly a decade. I might still be able to do most of those things, but the timing will be a lot more of an issue than it would be if this were my January rotation. We’ll see. Anyway, I’m still so unbelievably stoked to have gotten this rotation and to be fulfilling a lifelong dream. Can. not. WAIT.

(2) New Apartment
We had a travel snafu on the way home from Vegas last week that resulted in a miserable 24 hours (but netted us a free airfare, so it’s all good), and I really just wanted to come home and crash. However, upon walking in to my apartment office the day I got home, it turned out that my new, permanent apartment was ready two days earlier than I thought it would be. Suddenly, I was no longer tired — I’d been waiting nearly six months for this day! :) I borrowed a hand truck from the office and got busy. Within 24 hours, I had everything moved (and didn’t fall and break my finger until, oh, two or three hours after I was done, so I suppose my timing was decent?!), and I’ve spent this past week slowly getting organized. I bought a TV stand and bookshelf on the cheap from a classmate, finally ordered my IKEA sleeper sofa, which should be here next week, and after lots of looking, finally found and ordered a dining set that I really like. Then I went to IKEA in person this weekend and bought a rug, a paper lamp, a couple of pieces of art, and some other accessories. The place is shaping up to be absolutely beautiful and completely ‘me’, and I’m so excited. I’ve never lived completely on my own before, and I’ve waited a long time for this, so it’s awesome to watch everything coming together. It’s a quirky little apartment — my books are in the highest kitchen cabinets, my pantry food ended up in the linen closet, my silverware is in a lower cabinet — and yet somehow none of this is annoying to me in the least. It’s all part of the charm of the place.

Photos to come, once the sofa and dining set arrive. I really want to have people over for a big brunch once things are completely finished (bought two kinds of scone mix at World Market last week in anticipation of that)… hopefully we can make that happen before the end of the school year on June 30th.

(3) Vegas
What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas… unless you happen to have a website. :) I recently attended my first annual AAPA conference, which was held in Las Vegas. Oddly, this was actually my first time ever traveling west of the Mississippi. I can’t say much good about the city itself — it was like sensory overload 24 hours a day, with the music and lights and cigarette smoke and noise and general level of public inebriation… like a theme park for adults — but the conference itself was utterly AMAZING. Our faculty gave us the week off in hopes that we would use it to attend the conference, and even though I know that was something of a calculated move on their part (X + Y = Z, or “let’s get them to go to this conference so that they’ll get really excited about our profession and hopefully continue to be involved at a high level throughout their careers”), it still worked; I had an incredible time and will definitely continue to attend every year that I can reasonably do so.

Even though I wasn’t eligible to earn credit for them (yet), I still attended a bunch of CMEs, and learned a ton. (CMEs = Continuing Medical Education sessions… I’ll have to complete 100 hours of CME every two years throughout my career once I’m licensed, and this conference is a great opportunity for licensed PAs to earn a big chunk of those hours.) Since I wasn’t shooting for a certain number of credits, I was able to just attend whatever sessions interested me most, and it was amazing. I listened to talks on pediatric palliative care, the hygiene hypothesis, pediatric immunology, maternal/fetal trauma, and pediatric seizure, among others, and scribbled notes the whole time. I was both amused and pleased to see that every CME presentation began with a statement of the learning objectives — that’s something that our every lecture and unit and course is built upon, and it was interesting to see that what we do in the classroom is directly modeled from what happens out in the ‘real’ PA world. One of my faculty members presented a lecture (aimed at preceptors) titled ‘The Unprofessional Student’ — so, of course, a dozen or so of us showed up to be living, breathing examples. :) I knew Duke didn’t employ slackers, but still, I was impressed that this faculty member was enough of a ‘big shot’ to present at a national conference, and told her so; she blew it off and said, “One day this’ll be you up here.” (We’ll see about that, but the comment made me feel good. :))

There was a lot more to the conference besides CMEs, though. There was a huge exposition hall with more free samples than I could count, and we spent a good amount of time in there, which was a great way to meet people and make connections. I met two middle-aged Dutch PA students from Rotterdam, who told me all about their program and even invited me to come shadow them at their hospital. It was great to speak Dutch again and really enlightening to hear details of how other programs are structured. There was a 5k Fun Run one morning, which a few of us ran, and a Duke alumni reception one night, where we got to meet graduates from years past. Also, one of my Challenge Bowl teammates won tickets to the fancy-schmancy conference awards dinner (basically, to honor PAs from across the country who have done amazing things), so we got to sit at a table with the AAPA press, meet all the honorees, eat a delicious free dinner, and basically rub elbows with all the bigwigs in the PA profession. And everybody was so nice! I was amazed at how willing people were to help us, and how enthusiastic they were to hear that we were students. We had business cards shoved into our hands every few minutes, and were repeatedly told, “If you ever need anything, get in touch.” One of the dinner speakers quoted one of his students as having said, “It’s amazing that such a large, fast-growing profession can have such a small-town, family feel to it,” and I found that quote to be right on the money.

The National Medical Challenge Bowl (a.k.a. “Quiz Bowl”), took place at the conference, too, and was an incredibly intense experience that I am so glad to have been able to participate in. I can’t even explain how it felt to see all 30+ of our attending classmates decked out in Duke blue on behalf of the three of us! We ended up coming in second to Yale in the first round, which was something of a letdown — it was hard to have five months of preparation and anticipation be over in five minutes, and I’d be lying if I said there were no tears — but the sadness stemmed more from the fact that something that was such a highlight of the first year for me was suddenly over. I’ve never thought of myself as someone who thinks well on my feet, and as a result, I truly never expected to actually be good at Quiz Bowl — I was just going to the practices for fun, to see if I could learn something — but I surprised myself and turned out to have a real talent for it. I’ll never forget hearing the moderator read our tenth and final question, having that ‘light-bulb’ moment after the first few words, buzzing in before the question was complete, nailing the answer, and hearing my class scream their approval. It’s not likely that I’ll ever be able to use that skill again in that type of setting, which makes me sadder than it probably should. But I’m trying to remind myself that, someday, whether it’s in six months or six years, a patient will benefit because of something I learned through Challenge Bowl. I suppose that’s enough of a reason to be glad about having done it.

Honestly, the predominant emotion throughout the entire conference was, I can’t believe how lucky I am to get to be a part of this! I can remember, before PA school, having some lingering doubts. Despite how much I liked my pediatric job, and how well I’d done in my science classes, I was still really shaken by my 2007 experience of having realized that I both wanted and needed to quit linguistics. On a fundamental level, I’m just not someone who quits things, and so that experience was both unusual and scary for me on a lot of levels. As I went through the PA application and acceptance process and started preparations to come to Duke, a tiny voice inside my head would occasionally whisper, “What if you go through all of this, and devote all this money and time and energy… and then this isn’t it, either?” Thankfully, it became clear almost immediately upon starting school that those fears were unfounded, and the thought of this not being where I belong honestly hasn’t even entered my head once — but it was still wonderful to stand in the middle of a bustling conference center or awards dinner, look around at all the activity, and feel such high levels of interest and motivation and happiness surging through me. It confirmed for me yet again that I am in exactly the right place, in exactly the right profession, with exactly the right people. As nervous as I am about the end of the first year (18 days!) and the start of rotations, I’m excited to see what comes next, and thrilled to be inching ever closer to my life as a licensed professional.

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