Wednesday, November 5, 2014

No Ebola Here!

You have to live under a rock not to know that there is an ebola outbreak in West Africa, an outbreak that is leading to tremendous fear and suffering.  By West Africa, I mean in Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea.  When Dr. Falan Mouton gives presentations on Lifebox in Africa, she likes to display an image like this:


In this image, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea are generally in the area of Southern California, and Cameroon is essentially in the area that would be south of eastern Texas.  One concerned colleague pointed out that it is “only a plane ride away.”  This is true, but it is also true that if people from West Africa get in a plane, it is more likely to be going to Europe or the US than to Cameroon.  More importantly, the people who are suffering from Ebola Virus Disease are not very likely to get into a commercial airplane, since most of them are too poor to afford an extravagance such as this.

Nevertheless, ebola fear is in full swing and while the Europeans and Americans that I met during my trip to Cameroon were happy to be there advancing our projects, several groups have also cancelled out of fear of ebola.  I am sorry that children in Cameroon will be dying of cardiac disease because children in Liberia are dying of ebola.

Although Ebola Virus Disease is serious and scary, and should be respected, I submit a few observations for perspective.  While I was in Cameroon, no Americans died from Ebola Virus Disease.  (The only Americans who have acquired EVD are those who have directly cared for victims of EVD.  This is generally true of West Africans as well.)  While I was in Cameroon, several Americans died in school shootings and in apparently random highway shooting violence.  It appears that I am still much more likely to get the flu, and die from it, than to get EVD.  I might point out that I have been vaccinated against the flu, and many people I know refuse this vaccine.  For my part, I would like to strongly recommend that we support those trying to treat this terrible problem in the way that we support people in other natural disasters, and avoid treating victims like criminals.

Doings in the absence of Ebola

I returned from Shisong Saturday evening, and I cannot call this trip anything but resoundingly successful.  I was there for 12 working days, and we completed 10 open heart surgeries and 5 pediatric interventional catheterization cases.  These patients ranged from age 10-49 and all of the cases were double valve repair/replacement except for one that was for replacement of aortic valve and ascending aorta and proximal aortic arch.  As of the time I left, all but one patient had been discharged from the ICU and 2 were preparing for discharge from the hospital.  Almost all of the patients were sponsored, at least to a significant degree, by one of the various organizations that I have discussed here in the past.  In particular, Mi-Do has done a phenomenal job of raising funds for both pediatric and adult patients who need cardiac surgery.


There were a variety of visitors and rotating physicians around the cardiac center.  There is a General Practice physician interested in cardiac surgery, and there were 3 cardiology residents rotating at the center for 2 months.  We were able to discuss cardiac surgical issues as well as increase their experience in transesophageal echocardiography.


In addition to the successful surgical mission, Fr. Herald Brock, CFR, of Franciscan Mission Outreach (https://www.facebook.com/franciscanmissionoutreach - there are pictures) visited the Cardiac Centre to evaluate options for further fundraising to sponsor patients for surgery and connect the Centre with organizations that can help to acquire funds for equipment and supplies such as heart valves.  I do believe that it was providential that the Mi-Do staff were there at the same time.  It was a great thing for Fr. Herald to meet with Andrea Marie and Claudia to discuss opportunities for partnership and allowing the poorest of the poor to have necessary surgical care.  I expect to have further detail on this soon.


Finally, I was blessed to have excellent timing for this trip in another way.  Both Eric and Logan Horne and Tanjong Benson and Emma had their babies (Gabriel and Cindy Trina) just before I left.  Everyone is healthy.



Wednesday, September 17, 2014

News!

So I arrived in Rochester at the end of March and never quite got around to posting at that time.  Now that I am preparing to return, I thought it was time for an update.  Besides there is so much to share!

I knew that leaving Shisong would be difficult, but it is not easy to describe that in a blog post.   The last week there was busy.  We operated on six patients, all of whom were doing well at last report.  One woman came from Nigeria after having been refused surgery in Dubai.  Moving back home and into my job here went fairly smoothly, but processing my time in Shisong was a little more challenging.  My thanks to all who are so supportive both while I am there and while I am here.

Sister Jethro and Doctor Sister Helen were in the US for 3 weeks in July and August to attend the Cameroonian Professional Society annual meeting in Houston on August 1-2.  They spent time in Lacrosse, WI on July 20, spend 2 days in Rochester on July 28 and 29 where they visited the University of Rochester Medical Center and spoke at my home parish of St. Marianne Cope in Rush, NY, then on to Houston and Dallas, and finally to Washington, DC.  Please pray that the many contacts that they made lead to collaborators in advancing cardiac care in Africa and serving the poor.  Unfortunately, I forgot to take any pictures of them speaking in Rochester but here they are at Niagara Falls where we made a brief stop:



In October, I will spend about 2.5 weeks in Shisong giving anesthesia for cardiac surgery.  Fr. Herald Brock, CFR, from the Franciscan Friars of the Renewal, will also visit the Cardiac Centre during this time.  We are hoping that Franciscan Mission Outreach will be able to assist us in fundraising to improve the access of cardiac surgery to the poor in Cameroon and the surrounding area.  Fr. Herald has done much work with the poor in Honduras and in what is now South Sudan, and we are very grateful for his support of this work in Shisong.  You can visit him on Facebook here: https://www.facebook.com/franciscanmissionoutreach.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Lent

Last Wednesday was Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent.  Even non-Catholics, nominal Catholics, and no-longer-Catholics often have some sense or memory of observing this desert period prior to Easter.  Many of us recall as children practicing or still practice “giving something up for Lent.”  Sometimes it is something easy and specific, like chocolate milk.  Sometimes it is more challenging like sweets or television.  More recently, we have been encouraged to adopt a penitential positive practice during Lent.  Often, though, the purpose of such a practice, in combination with other Lenten observances such as abstinence from meat on Fridays, fasting on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday, and receiving ashes on Ash Wednesday, is unclear.  Two goals of the sacrifice are to recall the sacrifice of Christ and to promote holiness in one’s own life.  How, then, does this work?  The practice of asceticism as part of a pathway to holiness is very ancient and found in many cultures.  Detachment from materialism and slavery to our bodies is widely recognized as promoting the spiritual life.  An act of discipline also promotes the spiritual life.  Of course these things can be and have been overdone, but in our culture my impression is that overdoing it is rare and the risk of underdoing is much greater.  This is not to say that a legalistic approach or trivial approach is useful, although I think that any attention to the spiritual life is better than neglect, given the secularism of our age.  The fear of hypocrisy is often used as a rationalization for neglect of one’s interior life or for failure to observe the work of God in our lives.  Another rationalization for refusing to observe Lent is a failure.  It can be easy to forget a Lenten promise, then on remembering, to give up rather than recommitting and moving on.  Obviously this undermines the discipline that was intended by taking on the practice in the first place.

I have found the observance of Lent to be a great spiritual opportunity.  It is long enough to develop a new habit but short enough to maintain discipline if the promise is difficult and not meant to be adopted for life.  The external observances and reminders are supportive of the Lenten practice, and one’s friends can also be supportive during this time.  Some things that I have done over the years as Lenten practices have included: A daily rosary, fasting on Friday mornings, giving up meat and fish for the entire period of Lent, giving up mindless television while not giving up all television, and adding night prayer to my daily routine.  I have not always been successful at my Lenten plan, and sometimes have even abandoned the original idea after realizing that it really was not useful.  Even though I do not eat much meat, giving up meat and fish completely turns out to be difficult to remember, especially when attending meetings where the food is served and on Saturdays following a Friday when abstaining from meat is already required.  Once I tried to give up computer solitaire, and discovered that playing solitaire helped me to think about other things and I was having trouble concentrating.  Night prayer also turned out to be difficult to remember to do since it was not a habit and required on-going reorientation.  On the other hand, some practices have been overwhelmingly successful at revitalizing my interior life.  The year that I pledged to pray the rosary every day kick-started a daily prayer time that I had previously been unable to maintain.  Although I have varied this practice since then, I credit that Lent to the prayer life that I have now and to many decisions that have been made since.  A short period of fasting turns out to be useful at focusing on the poor and at connecting with the ancient spirituality of Christianity.

It took me a while to get this posted, but it is not to late to consider a more serious observance of Lent if you have not already done so.

From Todays Liturgy:
O Lord, you have been our refuge, from generation to generation; from age to age, you are. (Cf. Ps 90:1-2)

Friday, February 28, 2014

True Religion?

The Mass readings these weeks have been from the book of James, who has a lot to say about what it means to live our Christian faith.  One of the things that is inescapable in Shisong is the degree to which religion (not only Catholicism) permeates the culture, and the fervency and apparent joy with which it is observed.  One of the visitors that I have spent time with in Shisong doubted the faith of many of the people here.  This individual felt that much of the fervency and enthusiasm expressed in the Catholic community was based on the culture and behavioral expectations rather than true love of Christ or belief in God.  In her country, the cultural aspects of faith have largely disappeared, but she feels that those that practice their Catholicism are sincere because those without faith simply don’t bother.

Being here for 5 months certainly does not make me an expert on anything, and I am not inclined to judge the faith of individuals or a community in any case.  However, it could be interesting to share a few observations.  I think that nominal faith and participating in a faith community for social reasons exists everywhere and in every faith and philosophy.  Even in countries where there is severe persecution it is possible that people seek martyrdom for the wrong reasons, although you might suspect that there is less “acting” in a community where the faith costs much.  In Shisong, the Catholic community is served by Capuchins (Franciscan friars), as well as diocesan priests from Kumbo.  I have heard teaching at high levels to general audiences (homilies and instructional settings) on Christian living, the differences between superstition and sacramentals, the tension between one’s Christian faith and the traditional practices of one’s community or position, Christian sexual morality, and care for the poor.  The Mass attendance for the hospital weekday Masses on Wednesdays and Fridays is high; for some it is certainly that they are attending to say they have attended because they work in a Catholic hospital.   However, the level of participation within the Mass is high and I think it would be unreasonable to suspect the motives of most of the people.  In any case, it is much easier for people to be exposed to Christ and to come to a true knowledge of Him in this setting than in a secular setting where Christianity is routinely disparaged, misrepresented, or absent.  A tailor I have worked with does not work on Sundays and leaves early on Saturdays to go to Bible study (and yes, she is Catholic).  Some of the nurses in the operating room belong to various men’s groups that study the faith together as well as serve the community; these activities take a great deal of time – more than activities in America usually expect.  Obviously the sisters dedicate significant time to prayer, study, and service, feeding not only their own faith but also the faith of others.

On the downside, one of the most disturbing stories I have heard came out of Central Africa on the BBC.  The BBC has no love for Christianity and may well have been trying to present “Christians” in the worst possible light.  There have been stories of extreme generosity and Christian heroism from the CAR as well.  However, in this story, people identified by the BBC as “Christians” were participating in clearly un-Christian behavior.  All Christians choose wrongly sometimes, but only rarely is the wrong behavior intentionally identified with our Christianity.  I do not know if the men in the news story identified themselves as Christians, or if to the BBC reporter, any non-Muslim could be identified as a Christian.  These men were seeking revenge against a Muslim man for atrocities committed against Christians by other Muslims (not this man).  Not only did they desire revenge, but they identified it as an obligation.  Additionally, they were described as wearing amulets which would protect them from harm.  In no aspect of the story did God or Christ have anything to do with their behavior or their motivations.  It is possible that these people had had some exposure to Christianity, but clearly their behavior in this story was not related to their Christian lives.  It would be better if the BBC would simply describe “ethnic violence” rather than to portray this as a religious war.  There are true Christians suffering in the CAR, and probably there are people of traditional religions suffering in the CAR, and there are a few Muslims remaining who are suffering in the CAR, and many refugees from the CAR in other places.  Please pray for all of them; I see little of this in the American news, although if you are praying for Syria you can just add the CAR.

The press has a tendency to present Catholicism as ridiculous.  If I learned about the Church and her doings from the New York Times I certainly might think that the Catholic Church is ridiculous.  It is important not to learn about Christianity from the mainstream press, which has its own agendae (primarily selling advertising, but there are others).  There is much rich and beautiful writing to help us understand the life Christ offers and the grace found through the Church.  In much of Africa, books and the internet are not readily available, so people learn about and celebrate Christianity in many other ways, including cultural practices and beauty.  It is not easy, or necessary, to judge.







From Today’s Liturgy:
I will recount all your wonders, I will rejoice in you and be glad, and sing psalms to your name, O Most High.  Ps 9:2-3

Monday, February 24, 2014

Cardiac Center vs. the Hospital

Although sometimes this sounds like political infighting, yesterday it referred to a sporting event.  The men of the Cardiac Center took on the men of the Hospital in volleyball and football (soccer), while the women challenged in a handball match.  I had not been asked to play, but on my arrival to watch was informed (begged) that I should go and change since the women’s team for the Cardiac Center did not have enough players.  I agreed to this, since I thought that we were playing volleyball!  I ended up on a handball team – a sport that I had never even heard of, much less played before.  These women were serious, and somehow the Cardiac Center won despite having me on their team (we also had to adopt a couple of hospital staff to make the team complete).  It turns out that handball is quite popular in Africa as well as in eastern countries.  Fortunately, there is a Wikipedia article about it so that after I was finished playing I could find out what I was supposed to be doing.  Actually, the game is not so complicated, but there are rules and it would probably be good to know them ahead of time.  You know, like whether you can run with the ball or not.  You (and Sr. Jethro) will be relieved to know that I suffered no serious injuries.  The men split their games, with the Hospital taking the volleyball tournament (wearing yellow) and the Cardiac Center winning the football game (in white).  As far as I can tell, a good time was had by all.





Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Clinical Judgment

In the beginning of medical school, we learned the scientific and humanistic foundations of medical practice.  It isn’t far into medical school, however, before students are introduced to “clinical judgment.”  I think of this as the decision-making process used to decide on a course of action based on the information available, which is always incomplete.  Even within well-studied conditions, it is not possible to know with certainty to which population of patients the person in front of you belongs, and even if the diagnosis is certain, the response to treatment might not be.  Add to this the necessary cost-analysis and the inherent conflicts of interest, and the practice of medicine can suddenly become quite challenging.  Usually within one’s own practice, a physician becomes accustomed to the various considerations that are required, so that only the rare patient is enough out of the ordinary to require extensive additional concern.  In the US, it is likely that your patient is actually in a population that has been studied, that any relevant guidelines apply to him or her, and that if you are wrong you will have an opportunity to follow through with another decision.

Although western physicians have contributed greatly to the care of the poor in developing countries through mission teams and individual efforts, I have always found this judgment issue to be quite challenging in a new location and culture.  It is difficult on a short-term basis to know what options the patient has available, what the risks are in that patient for the procedure or treatment that you want to give (given the differences in equipment, sterilization, and so forth), and how complications will be addressed.  Here in Shisong, we have the opportunity to provide, in many ways, “first-world” medical care to cardiac patients on a long-term basis; yet the judgment issues remain challenging and the uncertainty, while not paralyzing, is disconcerting at best.  In western countries, rheumatic heart disease is not defeated but it is rare, and to see severe rheumatic disease in a very young person is nearly unheard of.  [This is the point at which the issue of prevention is usually raised.  Everyone who treats advanced rheumatic disease in developing countries is aware that the problem should be preventable.  How to prevent it in this cultural setting is less obvious, and in the meantime it does not seem appropriate to refuse to treat the patients in whom the disease has not been prevented.]
 
Dr. Mve Mvondo and I have written an article for submission to a journal which addresses the issue of repair vs. replacement of diseased mitral valves in sub-Saharan Africa.  Although the article addresses primarily the treatment of mitral valve regurgitation, several of the concerns are general.  I outline a few of them here for your understanding (for my non-medical readers, some of these are not unique to Africa and apply to the decision-making process in our own lives in the US, especially if you have faced a rare disease or a treatment not covered by insurance).  Most of the patients who present for surgery are young (between 10 and 30).  Patients who are young who require valve replacement almost always receive a mechanical valve, because their durability is much better than current tissue valves.  There are several issues associated with living with a mechanical valve, but the most important one is the need for anticoagulation.  Lifelong anticoagulation is necessary to prevent strokes and to maintain valve function.  In the US, this is a burden because of the need for on-going monitoring as well as the risk for bleeding.  Athletes and people with high-risk jobs occasionally refuse this treatment rather than change their lifestyle.  Although there are modern valves which might require less anticoagulation, it is not yet certain that it is safe to forego anticoagulation in most circumstances.  Here in Cameroon, there are numerous additional considerations to subjecting a patient to lifelong coagulation.  First is the understanding of the patient that this is a necessary commitment.  It is not uncommon for a patient to stop their medication because they decided that it was unnecessary.  Another consideration is cost; neither the medication nor the monitoring is free, and most patients do not have insurance or much money.   The need for many patients to travel long distances to get their medication and monitoring also impedes successful therapy for many people.  Even where there are roads, most people do not own cars, and travel is also not free or easy.  Pregnancy is an important issue for many of these patients.  It is possible for many women to safely bear children, but it requires intensive prenatal care, careful drug management, and hospital delivery because of the risk of bleeding as well as the underlying poor cardiac function present in many of these young women.  This is a culture in which bearing several children is desired and expected.  Recommending against this is difficult, and in many cases impractical, so even if a patient agrees with all of the recommendations it is unwise to assume that she will follow through.


The alternative, then, in the case of mitral valve disease, is valve repair.  Although this is not meant to be an extensive discussion on mitral valve therapy, I will point out two important issues.  The best methods of valve repair in the setting of inflammatory disease, especially mitral stenosis, are controversial, and in western countries this is not routinely attempted.  Secondly, a failed valve repair here is even more of a problem than in the west.  Many patients will not return for follow-up, most patients cannot afford a second operation, and the risk of repeat chest surgery in this setting is significant given the limitations and costs of blood products, monitoring, and advanced supportive therapies.

An additional consideration here that is somewhat different than my practice in the US is the advanced stage of disease at which most patients present.  There are evidence—based guidelines in Europe and in the US recommending the stage at which the benefit of surgery will outweigh the risk.  Even if the risk of surgery is slightly higher in this setting (and I am not sure that it is), most patients present well past the recommended time of surgery.  Even if they come for consultation early in their disease, they wait a long time for surgery due to fear, lack of support, and financial considerations.  And of course, the options that Americans and Europeans have of heart transplant or artificial hearts are not available at all without travelling abroad.

One final area that looms large, that I have mentioned above, is cost.  In the US, cost is something of a general issue, and we do not often consider it as a deciding factor in the treatment of individual patients.  At the cardiac center, we can overcome the cost issue for the in-patient care of many patients.  However, this does not make the issue go away.  Some patients have co-morbidities or suspicion of co-morbidities, and additional evaluation could be beneficial.  We do not have a CT scanner in Shisong (although hopefully that is coming), so if a patient has a problem best evaluated by CT scan, they must travel several hours and pay for the CT scan, and bring the results back to us.  There is other testing and treatments for which patients must travel and pay additional fees, and we must decide whether to proceed without the tests or not.  In the US, there is always a point at which further testing is not cost-effective, but that moving target is even more difficult here.  From an anesthesia standpoint, deciding to proceed now versus advocating waiting until different drugs or supplies are available is not something that often applies in my practice in Rochester.




In the US, we often over-test, over-treat, still fail to have optimal outcomes, and assume that someone else will pay for all of it.  Here, the answer is frequently, “you can’t have that,” and we are still left to make decisions with the information that we have based on our discussions with the patients and hope to honor their trust and dignity.  I am confident that we always act with good will and that the personal conflicts of interest are minimized.  The rest remains difficult.


From today’s liturgy:
“They ate and had their fill, and what they craved the Lord gave them; they were not disappointed in what they craved.” (Cf. Ps 78:29-30)

Friday, February 7, 2014

Ending the week with Jesus


So we had a busy (and successful) week with our local team.  The patients are doing well and one has left the ICU.  Unfortunately, they are young patients who required valve replacement for rheumatic heart disease.  Many thanks to the generous sponsors who make it possible to help these young, otherwise healthy people. 
On Monday, the operating theatre staff finally had our Christmas party.  It had been delayed for various reasons.  Each staff member drew a name from a dish of a coworker to pray for during the Christmas season and to give a gift at the party.  Of course, there were speeches before the gifts were presented and food afterwards.  I presented my gift first, so I do not think anyone had started taking pictures yet.  Here is Mr. Benoit receiving his gift from Mr. Ralph:

One of the things I try to do is to attend evening prayer with the sisters (I will write about the community that I spend time with in another post soon), so today we finished in time for me to attend.  As usual, I forgot that it was Friday and that there would be Exposition and Holy Hour, and tonight was a special treat.
Some of the readers of this blog know that one of the central aspects of our Catholic faith is the Eucharist.  We believe that when Jesus said “This is my body” that he meant this and not something else, that he has the power to make it happen, and that the priest at the consecration during Mass makes present the sacrifice of Christ and the body of Christ under the appearance of bread.  This means that later, the body of Christ remains and if reserved in the tabernacle that His sacramental presence is ongoing; it is then appropriate to adore Him in this form.  Usually the host is placed in a monstrance and placed in a prominent location.  This, then, is what was available to me this evening to end my week.  (Well, almost end, anyway.  There are still patients in the ICU.)  Sister Mary Charles, who was assigned to organize the prayer times this week, began with several minutes of reflective praise songs.  Although the community is very small (especially since people are away), there are multi-part harmonies and drums.  A reflective and focused (recollected) atmosphere reigns and it is easy to be aware of the presence of God and the love of the sisters, even with the children of the orphanage in the next room.  Evening prayer consists, of course, of “Evening Prayer” from the Divine Office or Liturgy of the Hours, and also the Angelus, the De Profundis (Psalm 130), a prayer for the sainthood cause of Sr. Maria Huber, the foundress of the TSSF, and sometimes some other prayers.  The holy hour generally concludes with Night Prayer (from the Liturgy of the Hours).
From Evening Prayer:
We ask you to remember tonight those who are in great difficulty:
give new heart to those who have lost their faith in man and in God, to those who seek the truth but cannot find it.



Friday, January 24, 2014

25 Years as Capuchins


Today there was a Jubilee Mass for two Italian Capuchin friars celebrating 25 years of priesthood, most of it in Cameroon.  Brothers Angelo Pagano and Agostino Colli, OFM Cap. were ordained in Italy in 1988.  The Mass was celebrated by the Cardinal Archbishop Emeritus Christian Wiyghan Tumi and also concelebrating were the Archbishop of Bamenda, the representative for the Bishop of Kumbo, and 36 other priests.  On a Friday morning, the parish church was completely full including the altar and the balcony, and the Mass and ceremonies lasted over 3 hours and included the usual processions and speeches.  Of course, feasting followed.  While here in Cameroon, Frs. Angelo and Agostino have developed the Capuchins in Cameroon (there are now 57 Capuchins of whom 48 are Cameroonian).  These Capuchins serve the local parish, Sacred Heart, support the Tertiary Sisters of St. Francis who run the hospital and cardiac center, support the chaplaincy of the hospital, built a school (see below) and several other apostolates, and I am sure perform many other ministries that go unsung.  They sponsor several patients per year for cardiac surgery and interventional care and for this we are specifically grateful.




St. Anthony of Padua School

There are many schools in the Kumbo area.  However, schools in Cameroon, including government schools, charge tuition.  Students must also obtain their own supplies and uniforms.  Textbooks are not common in many places and most learning occurs in their absence.  As far as I can tell, science labs are also uncommon.  The Capuchins who serve this area have built a school oriented toward educating poor children.  For those of us who know of Franciscans, it is no surprise that they named it St. Anthony of Padua.

This school has recently made tremendous progress.  I visited in November of 2012 and again in November 2013, and the transformation was impressive.  The land was donated in 1993 by the Fon (traditional ruler of the region).  It originally served as an school for single mothers and then as an elementary school.  As children completed elementary school, the need for affordable secondary education became evident.  In 2010 the school opened as a secondary school in which many children pay reduced fees.  As it is a boarding school, there are students from all over Cameroon and the school now has more than 500 students.











Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Njinikom


Last week I was able to go to Njinikom for a visit.  Njinikom is near and dear to my heart for several reasons.  Njinikom was the first place that I went to in Africa, and the first place that I was sent by Mission Doctors Association.  When I arrived at the airport in Douala in January of 2010, I was met by Sr. Angeline Wongbi.  Sr. Angeline was a nurse anesthetist at St. Martin de Porres Hospital in Njinikom, having attended nurse anesthesia school in Nigeria 10 years prior, when formally trained nurse anesthetists were even more scarce in Cameroon than they are now.  She was so pleased to have an anesthesiologist visiting (“doctor anaesthetist”), and to consider my ideas in the context of other teaching that she had had.  I spent the entire month with her before I learned that she was 70 years old!  I was blessed to return to Njinikom in January of 2011 while she was still there.  Unfortunately, Sr. Angeline died in the summer of 2012 after a difficult illness.  I miss her dearly but will always be grateful for the time that I spent with her.

  

The anesthetists in Njinikom are now Mr. Julius, Sr. Martha, and Mr. Eric.  Mr. Eric is the newest, having completed his training in Yaounde this past August.  It is always a pleasure to be able to spend time with these anesthetists and to understand their practice patterns, look at their equipment with them in case there is any way to help, and consider options for anesthetics.  This visit, they had received some new equipment, including new anesthesia machines, via a container from Holland.  The current problem faced by all the hospitals that I have visited is that bottled oxygen is very expensive to purchase, and this is required to drive most mechanical ventilators on anesthesia machines.  Supplemental oxygen for spontaneous or manual ventilation can be provided by oxygen concentrators as long as electricity is available, but this will not drive a pressure driven ventilator.  Some new options for pressurized medical gases may be available soon; another option is electrically driven ventilators (useful when there is electricity!).


The matron at St. Martin de Porres Hospital, for a few more months, is Sr. Xaveria.  Sr. Xaveria is one of these people that just makes everyone feel needed and wanted, and exudes energy and organization.  She has worked with Mission Doctors for many years and shepherded many missionaries through their assignments in Cameroon.  All of the sisters in Njinikom, like the sisters in Shisong, are friendly and welcoming and greet me like I have been there forever even though I only spent 2 months there.

While I was in Njinikom I was able to attend the festival for the 20th anniversary of the reign of the Fon.  A Fon is a traditional ruler and the Fon of Njinikom is in Fundong and is Fon Vincent Yuh II.  The celebration consisted of Mass, speeches, and some traditional celebrations including a “fantasia” in which men on horses approach the Fon in formation and the horses dance and “bow”.
  

Currently serving a 3-year term in Njinikom are Drs. Jennifer Thoene and Brent Burket, there with their four children.  I had not met them before and so it was a joy to spend the weekend with them.  Since I do not cook here (and do not cook all that much anyway), it was a great treat to have Jennifer’s cooking for a few days.  It turned out that most of the Lay Mission Helpers from the region (the Hornes, who I have shown here before, and the Martins and the Newburns all serving in Bamenda) were also visiting Njinikom for the weekend, along with a family medicine resident (Connie Leeper) from Ventura, California there for a rotation, and a guest of the Hornes, Sara Tuzel. All told, there were 15 American children and 11 American adults in Njinikom last weekend.  St. Martin de Porres has a lovely guest house for the visiting medical teams as well as space for missionaries, and the views are spectacular.  Sunday morning we all attended Mass at St. Anthony parish, and I am sure we made quite a sight.  You can find all of the blogs at www.MissionDoctors.org and at www.LayMissionHelpers.org.  Of course, you can also find information there about serving as a missionary.
 



On Monday I was able to visit Mbingo Baptist Hospital.  This is one of the hospitals run in partnership with the Cameroon Baptist Convention.  They have a nurse anesthesia training program, an Australian anesthesiologist there until July, and a number of ex-pat physicians there for various periods of time.  Mbingo is one of the PAACS sites (https://paacs.net), whose purpose is to help address the need for well-trained surgeons at mission hospitals in Africa.  They have made great progress in their new ICU and recovery areas, which will hopefully open within the year.  One of the realities in mission service is the “siloes”.  There are many reasons for this, but I feel like keeping the lines of communication open can help to advance the goals that we all have to share the love of Christ and to grow medicine in Cameroon.  It is exciting to see these hospitals working so hard with their donors to upgrade both equipment and training.  Additionally I was able to hear resoundingly positive feedback about the Northwest Region Anesthesia Conference held here in Shisong on December 7.  The anesthetists were pleased to have had an English language conference and to be able to discuss issues of interest to them.  They, along with the anesthetists in Njinikom were very much looking forward to the next conference.



One of the most exciting parts of the trip was the progress made on the roads.  The trip from Shisong to Njinikom, which used to take 5-6 hours can now be made in about 3 hours.  This is also better for my neck, but not as good for the workout of my core muscles.

For those of you awaiting spring, I saw this blooming today.  It reminds me of forsythia which is beautiful in Rochester in the spring.
 


From todays’ liturgy (Feast of St. Hilary):
January 13, 2014
“It was not you who chose me, says the Lord, but I who chose you and appointed you to go and bear fruit, fruit that will last.” (Cf. Jn 15:16)