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ELINE WHIST - AUSTRALIAN MEDICAL DOCTOR IN BURKINA FASO Eline Whist is doctor from Melbourne on her first mission with MSF. Here, she describes her experiences working in a new MSF nutrition project in Burkina Faso. Burkina Faso, meaning ‘the land of upright people’, was a country I had hardly heard of before I received the phone call from MSF, telling me that was were I would spending the next 6 months of my life, my first mission with MSF. Burkina (previously Upper Volta) is a landlocked country with about 15 million inhabitants and one of the poorest countries in West Africa, ranking 172 out of 174 on the United Nations Development Programme’s human development index. The whole country is affected by malnutrition, but worst affected are the south-western and northern regions, with lots of children suffering from severe acute malnutrition, and it is in the north, in the regions surrounding Yako and Titao (where I am based), that MSF has just started a feeding programme to try and combat the crises. Our team here in Titao consists of the team at the therapeutic feeding clinic, where I’m based (an expat nurse and an expat doctor, in addition to local nutritional staff), and a mobile team that goes out to the health centres of the villages of different areas in the northern region, to ‘find’ the severely malnourished kids in need of treatment. As much as possible the kids are treated as ambulatory or ‘remote out-patients’; they are admitted into the program, receive their first dose a specially designed standard treatment (antibiotics, Vitamin A, anti-worming treatment, folic acid and antimalarial treatment if the rapid-test for falciparum malaria (paracheck) is positive); they then receive a week’s supply of plumpynut sachets (a peanut-based paste, filled with calories, vitamins and minerals, that the kids love) and come back for review and re-weighing one week later. Only the kids who are severely ill are transferred to the feeding clinic in Titao for a more intense and supervised treatment. In this way we can reach and treat a much larger number of kids, than if they were all admitted as in-patients! The kids have a surprising fighting capacity though. One little boy who I spent many sleepless nights worrying about, is now, after almost two weeks in intensive care and his second blood transfusion, looking so much better, and yesterday he even started eating plumpynut! He has even started to gain some weight and I think he will be difficult to recognise in a weeks time! Being part of the start-up of a mission has been both rewarding and challenging. The first week of running the feeding clinic we had not yet received the beds for the intensive care part of the clinic, no mosquito nets, electricity only parts of the day, no running water and no rapid tests for malaria. But we are gradually receiving all the essentials to run a successful program. With almost a hundred children admitted into the program, about twenty hospitalised at the clinic, during the first few days only, it’s not hard to realise that this really is a malnutrition crisis! After the first three weeks of the program we are already treating between five hundred and a thousand children. Some of the kids weigh only half of what is normal for their age, and really look like little old people, and it is really amazing to see how a bit of nourishing milk and some basic medications can completely change a child from emaciated, lethargic and anorexic to a little person regaining appetite, weight and will to live over the course of only a week or two! ‘Intensive care’ here has a slightly different meaning to that back home. There are no intubation/ ventilation facilities, no ECG* machine, no fancy monitoring and no routine blood or other laboratory tests. So, with a lack of all the modern investigations one is used to at home, it is all the more about clinical skills, and every single day so far I have learned something new. We will soon also have another doctor here at the feeding centre, a local (Burkinabé), who will be a welcome addition to our little team. Because the locals here really are ‘upright’ and welcoming people and do everything they can to make us feel welcomed; life in this village is definitely one that I will miss when my time here comes to an end. * ECG stands for electrocardiogram. An ECG machine records the electrical activity of the heart. Read other articles on Burkina Faso
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