Today I am sharing an article culled from the BBC News website.
It is the extraordinary and inspiring story of a British Doctors Without Borders volunteer, Cokie van der Velde, who looks after Ebola patients in Sierra Leone. It is entitled: "Why I'll risk my life for Ebola patients".
It is the extraordinary and inspiring story of a British Doctors Without Borders volunteer, Cokie van der Velde, who looks after Ebola patients in Sierra Leone. It is entitled: "Why I'll risk my life for Ebola patients".
One hopes it will inspire healthcare professionals in Ghana - and make them more willing to help those unfortunate enough to contract the Ebola fever virus in Ghana: should it ever appear here too (God forbid).
Above all, one hopes that it will make our healthcare professionals more compassionate and considerate in the way they treat poor people.
To begin with, it is important to make the point that there is no question that many Ghanaian healthcare professionals are compassionate individuals - who remember the Hippocratic oath they've taken: and are obviously guided by it daily in their work.
However, there is a significant number of them, who alas appear to despise the poor - and treat them with obvious contempt. Refusing to see the sick and abandoning patients to die as a result of strike action over pay is an obvious example, in my view.
Years ago, I was told by one of her colleagues at the time she was doing her orientation at a public-sector healthcare facility to which she had been attached - prior to taking the pre-registration Medical and Dental Council examination for foreign doctors wanting to work in Ghana - that there was a marked difference between the kind and gentle way my German medical doctor wife, Birgit, interacted with sick poor people - and the abrupt way that some of her colleague Ghanaian healthcare professionals treated them.
Indeed, the unfortunate truth, is that it is hard not to be appalled by the stories that are recounted to one by affected individuals, and the reports one reads and hears in the Ghanaian media, about the callous attitude shown by many Ghanaian healthcare professionals, to the poor, in healthcare facilities across the country.
Alas, in my own case, I did observe that there was indeed a difference between my wife's egalitarian approach to poor people wherever she encountered them - which struck me as contrasting sharply with the shabby way that many poor people are treated in public-sector healthcare facilities, by the selfsame professionals who toady up to the wealthy, on a daily basis, when on duty in private hospitals across the country.
Ghanaian healthcare professionals need to be more compassionate of the poor - especially at a time when we are all threatened by the Ebola fever outbreak in the west African sub-region. Please read on:
"19 September 2014 Last updated at 23:05 GMT
Why I'll risk my life for Ebola patients
Hundreds
of foreign aid workers are in West Africa treating people with Ebola.
One of them is Cokie van der Velde who has just flown from the UK to
Liberia. She explains why she has left the safety of her home to face
the deadly virus.
I was first in Liberia five weeks ago and I believe the situation is now much worse. Back then, our treatment centres had already run out of room and we were starting to put people in corridors.
In the centre, people groan and cry out - the smell of blood, diarrhoea and vomit is awful - unfortunately there is also a very pervading smell of dead bodies.
I can only leave it to your imagination to understand what a pile of bodies smells like after a week in very hot, moist surroundings - it makes you feel sick quite a lot of the time.
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Nobody else has been near them for days. They must feel very lonely and very frightened”
I am responsible for infection
control which means that my first job is to ensure the safety of the
people I work with and of myself. We have to wear our scrubs, then two
or three pairs of gloves, a completely waterproof suit and a head
covering, a mask, goggles and a big apron over the top.
It's incredibly hot and humid - when you undress back to the scrubs afterwards it looks like someone has just poured a bucket of water over you.
I try to go round the patients and help where I can and give them some water. I'll change and wash patients and just try and give some physical contact to each person because nobody else will touch them, nobody else has been near them for days. They must feel very lonely and very frightened.
I don't know how much comfort I am bringing to people when I'm dressed in a mask and goggles and completely covered from head to foot. If we have children at the treatment centre, which we quite often do, I'll try to bring them some toys and have a little game with them if I can.
Depending on how many people have died, I'll then start the very unpleasant job of moving the bodies. We put people in body bags, we write the names on the body bags and we move them to the morgue.
If the relatives want to come and see the body and say goodbye, we set up a viewing and I try to make that as pleasant as I can - if that's at all possible. I'll put flowers round the body bag and if it's a child I'll put some toys around them. I'll also put the toys in the body bag with them when we seal it up.
You can't let the relatives touch the body - they are just allowed to view it and then we seal it up forever. It's a very sad moment.
I do feel fear, I can't deny that.
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Find out more
Cokie van der Velde spoke to World Update and The Why Factor on the BBC World Service
Last time I was in Liberia,
sometimes I'd think, "I feel a bit feverish", or I'd wake up during the
night and take my temperature. If I had a slight sore throat - one of
the first signs of Ebola - I'd start to worry I had the virus.
There is always an element of risk when I work for MSF - I could be caught in crossfire, I could always pick up a nasty disease and there's the small chance of kidnap. And normally I would put that risk at about one in 1,000. So it's not that high. But I must admit, when I sat down and thought about it, I would say the risk for me now is about one in 10.
I've made sure that my will and my house and everything are in order so that if for some reason I don't come back at least it will be easy for my relatives to carry on. I have had my children, I've had my grandchildren and of course I still want to be part of their lives but it's not like I'm leaving small children behind. I think it's ok for me to go and risk my life and my family understands.
I've been doing this type of work for 12 years and they are used to the fact that I go away but this time it is more concerning for them.
If they don't hear from me for a while they do start to get very worried but they accept this is something I feel that I have to do and I think in a way they are a little bit proud that I'm willing to risk my own life to help others.
One of the reasons I enjoy working for MSF is the challenge. Before I started working for them, one of my passions was rock climbing. So it is probably something in my personality that makes me accept these challenges.
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It's made me think about my own death and what will happen when I die”
I go partly because of my belief
that there should be social justice in the world - that there should be
some sort of equality. The people I'm helping are part of the human
race, part of humanity - in that respect, all people for me are the
same. I feel I have as much obligation to help a stranger as I do to
help someone I know.
That last time I was in Liberia I must have moved hundreds of bodies but only three people survived during the month that I was there. I don't think you can see that many bodies without viewing death in a different way.
I try to always make sure that the team I'm working with stops for a moment to say goodbye to the person before we put them in the body bag. We still try to keep a reverence for the dead. Even though I'm not religious, I hope I can bring some sort of spirituality to that moment and some respect to the grieving of the relatives.
Putting all these bodies into body bags, I sometimes can't help imagining my own body being put into one - I especially think about that in the middle of the night. It's made me think about my own death and what will happen when I die. But when you see so much death, you accept that this is really just part of life - that we live and die.
That doesn't cheapen people's lives but I think it brings home to me the reality of death, whereas in our society, or at least in my life, death is sort of ignored. It's something that happens but you keep it in the back of your mind. Now it's very much in the front of my mind and I accept that it will eventually happen, sooner or later.
I do enjoy my job, I don't think you could do what I do if you didn't enjoy your work. I can't say I particularly enjoy working with dead bodies but there's a lot of camaraderie - there's a satisfaction when you do get it right and eventually we will get this epidemic under control.
When that happens there will be great elation and the satisfaction of knowing I did a job that maybe not everyone could have done and that I played a small part in helping to overcome this.
End of culled article from the BBC News website.
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