What influenced your decision to work with MSF?
I first came across MSF when I did a Master’s in Public Health and Tropical Medicine at James Cook University in Townsville. This course was previously run in partnership with MSF, so a lot of the lecturers had experiences of working with MSF which was often discussed throughout the course.
I had wanted to work in a humanitarian environment for a while, working in a lab in Australia had become a bit monotonous, and it is easy to lose sight of the impact your work is having on patients. At MSF, you work on a much smaller scale. The samples that you’re responsible for are for patients that your doctor colleagues are working with, so you can understand the whole case. Working with MSF means you get to see more of the medical picture and feel more a part of the medical team.
You’ve just returned from Sierra Leone, tell us about that project.
In Sierra Leone people have limited access to medical care, and the health system is under-resourced, both financially and in terms of skilled human resources. There are very few doctors and lab services regionally, which means that paediatric and maternal healthcare services are basic.
In the city of Kenema, MSF runs paediatric services including an emergency in-patient department, a therapeutic feeding centre to treat malnutrition, and an intensive care unit. MSF also runs a maternity and neonatal centre to support mothers with complications in pregnancy. The purpose of the lab is to support with blood transfusions by managing the blood bank, which is supplied on an exchange program. This means that if a patient needs blood, their family will donate blood to replace the blood that we provide the patient from the bank.