ARRIVAL TO ADDIS EVENING OF NOV. 3RD
After our worthwhile introduction to Dr. Boachie's Focos Orthopedic Spine Hospital for just a couple of days, we bid farewell and caught our flight to Addis in the afternoon. Dr. Boachie intended to join us on our flight, but due to a young patient emergency he decided to postpone his trip to Ethiopia by a couple of days.As I still had no real transparency into when I may receive my missing piece of luggage, the clothing items that Dr. Boachie kindly lent me were still coming in handy, though I was looking forward to laundering my own single set of clothing when I get to Addis.
On arriving in Addis the night of Nov. 3rd, I was pleasantly surprised to see that my tour operator friend Million had also brought Tesfaye to the airport to greet me. It was very charming and amusing to see him wearing a t-shirt with my image on it that my son Justin had made a few years ago, together with a small bouquet of lovely roses.
NOV. 4TH CLINIC PATIENT EXAMS WITH DR. RICK
Our first full day in Addis we were spending most of it at one of Rick's spine clinics at his own relatively new JDC clinic, but we first had breakfast at our hotel. Naturally, on his way to meet me and my two spine docs from Vancouver, Chris Reilly and John Street, Rick saw a young man with a severe spine deformity on the street, so he picked him up and brought him to the Sheraton to find out the story. He was told to come to the clinic that afternoon, and we did see him there later.
After coming from seeing Dr. Boachies' surgery setup at Focos hospital in Ghana, this was a good
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Later that evening had a very pleasant dinner joining Rick as a friend, supporter and JDC Board member, with a very nice couple, Nick and Susan, that are supporters of JDC and Rick's work through a Foundation that Nick chairs.
THURSDAY NOV. 5TH was a “no patient” day. First I did some schedule rearranging on the fly for the two doctors Chris and John, and then I caught the tail end of a presentation Rick made to the local French chapter of Rotary International, which included slides of Tesfaye, Fanteye and Justin with the first school he initiated back in 2008. Rick introduced me to the group and I sat through a one hour lunch conducted in French.
Afterwards I sat with Chris and John discussing with Rick the anticipated steps for starting the research project on why there seems to be so much bad spine disease in Ethiopia, utilizing Rick’s 2000 patient records dating back to 2006, but the bulk of them from 2010 onwards. Using a general North American rule of thumb, the docs figure that based on Ethiopia’s population of around 100 million, you might expect at least anywhere from 20,000 to 50,000 spine cases, and Rick and Dr. Boachie have teamed up to fix about 500 of them. We talk about the need to catch the problem spines at an early age, but the challenge is getting to them in the countryside villages where 85% of the population lives. To do this we must train the rural health officers and educate the parents. Many villages don’t deal with bad spines as they feel the person is cursed and should be shunned.
Early evening I went by taxi to see Tesfaye’s new rental place, and when I arrived there the area was experiencing a typical power outage. Tesfaye met me on the street, and after cautiously weaving our way across the street through the dense traffic we walked up the dirt hillside path to his place with me illuminating the way with my phone flashlight app. After entering their place in the compound I was warmly welcomed by Fanteye, Aselefew (another former spine patient they have been sharing a place with for 6 years, and Atsede, a 14 year old girl whom I first met in 2008 after returning from heart surgery in California, followed by spine surgery in Ghana; Atsede recently started living with them as her sponsor from the States could not continue supporting her at this time. They had candles going and made traditional coffee and popcorn, and I looked around their place, which has better features and is more spacious than their last rental I visited.
We had a nice time for a couple of hours until just as the power came back on I was picked up to go to the Airport to finally pick up my missing luggage. After not having my suitcase for the first 5 days of my trip, we were happy to finally be reunited.
FRIDAY NOV.6TH - CURE HOSPITAL PATIENT EXAMS and FRIDAY NIGHT SHABBAT DINNER AT DR. RICK'S
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Chris and John spend the morning at Black Lion Hospital to meet with the surgical group and I went over to join Rick’s patient exams taking place at Cure Hospital, with Dr. Boachie in and out between a few scheduled spine . From time to time I step out and interact with crowd of waiting adults and children, and I seem to be an amusing distraction for them with my repertoire of Amharic phrases and tricks for children.
After
attending so many patient exams over the years with Rick, I feel pretty
accustomed to the various spine issues; as I say to Rick – “variations on a
theme”. Nevertheless, a number of cases
present with extra complications, including polio cases that tend to have
higher associated risks.
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