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Update from Lesotho:
Paul Farmer reports as the PIH project celebrates its first anniversary
By Paul Farmer
Valiant is the word that comes to mind when I think of Lesotho. I see courage
and strength manifest in this small country’s people, some of whom PIH
is beginning to serve through clinics and projects. Valiant too are the growing
number of people from the Ministry of Health and its NGO partners, who are
accomplishing these projects in spite of adverse circumstances. Lesotho has
one of the largest burdens of HIV in the world and, consequently, may have
the world’s highest incidence of tuberculosis. (TB epidemics almost invariably
accompany AIDS.)
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Doctors making a home visit in Lesotho |
This beautiful country is called Africa’s “kingdom in the sky” for
good reason. Even the lowlands are 3000 feet above sea level, and far more
striking are the tall ranges of treeless mountains, which in winter (it is
winter now) are covered with snow on their southern faces. The very settlements
we seek to serve are spread out across this forbidding terrain, making travel
to clinic arduous for the patients; home visits by staff, inexperienced unless
they’re mountaineers, are also difficult. These challenges only stiffen
the resolve of PIHers and their local partners, continuing a commitment first
undertaken while PIH co-founder Jim Kim was working at the World Health Organization.
When in 2005 PIH and the Clinton Foundation, along with local partners, launched
a rural AIDS initiative in three African countries, we knew we would have to
do three things at once: take care of the sick; face the “human resources” crisis
through training and working alongside of African colleagues; and rebuild public
infrastructure destroyed (as in the case of Rwanda) or simply not equipped
for the advent of a new disease, AIDS, and the resurgence of an old one, tuberculosis.
We also knew that we’d have to do all of this while attending to the
innumerable other health problems faced by undernourished rural people who
had never had much in the way of primary health care, to say nothing of treatment
for AIDS or, in the case of Lesotho, drug-resistant tuberculosis.
Lesotho, with its terrain, the dimensions of these twinned epidemics, and
the near-total lack of physicians in rural areas (there is not a single medical
school in the country) posed the greatest challenges for the Clinton-PIH Rural
Health Initiative. Within Lesotho, the nine sites in which we are to work are
not contiguous, but rather scattered across the high reaches of the east and
south. Many are accessible only by plane or on horseback. Yet after only a
year of operations, PIH-Lesotho, led by Dr. Jennifer Furin, has attained and
surpassed many of our goals in places where few thought it possible. Spurred
by a deadly outbreak of extensively drug-resistant TB
(XDR-TB) in the neighboring South African province of Kwazulu-Natal, a
second program to treat and prevent drug-resistant TB has also already
begun, funded by the Open Society Institute. A brief July visit to the mountains
and to the capital city of Maseru affords me the chance to update supporters
and friends of PIH-Lesotho.
Baptism by Fire: The New “OR” in Nkau
When Jennifer Furin joined us in Rwanda for a June meeting, she was especially
pleased to give us the news: finally, PIH boasted two young Basotho physicians,
Dr. Nico Lesia and Dr. Limpho Ramangoaela. Having finished their training
at Bethlehem Hospital in Orange Free State, South Africa, both wanted to
return to serve their own people. During a weekend clinicians’ retreat
in the town of Nkau, Dr. Limpho told us how they came to PIH. She went to
see Dr. Mphu Ramatlapeng, who headed the Clinton Foundation’s
work in Lesotho at the time and has since been named the country’s
Minister of Health, and said, “I want to come back home.” With
the frankness for which she is famous, Dr. Ramatlapeng replied, “Are
you serious? If so, do you know any other recent graduates from Lesotho who
wish to return?” Dr. Limpho said she did. Soon both she and Dr. Nico
would find themselves high up in the mountains and grateful for their good
and broad medical educations.
I saw first-hand how effective their education had been, since the clinicians’ retreat
was interrupted by a number of emergencies. During a single afternoon, we saw
more than one type of trauma. A young woman with cerebral palsy who had been
raped was brought in by her mother because the family feared (correctly as
it turned out) that she was pregnant.
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Stitching by candlelight in Nkau |
Shortly thereafter, as the sun was setting,
a young man named Tseliso managed to stagger through the doors hours after
a machete attack. He had serious wounds in his head, back, and wrists; the
lacerations went to the bone. He needed medical care desperately and, as chance
would have it, there were six doctors that day in a village where normally
there are none. A few minutes after their arrival, Tseliso and his brother
(also injured in the attack) were being cleaned and stitched up by Drs. Nico
and Limpho, and also by PIH’s Dr. Mona Haidar. Because Tseliso’s
injuries required careful cleaning and over 200 stitches, the doctors were
soon sewing by candlelight. Without narcotics on hand, the patient received
only local anesthetic, but he made no complaint except to say, even before
the suturing was done, that he was hungry.
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Tseliso after 200 sutures
and multiple
bandages |
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It took a couple of hours to patch Tseliso up, but his injuries would require
further skills, since at least one of his wrists had been broken during the
attack. Jen arranged to have him airlifted on Monday to Queen Elizabeth II
Hospital in Maseru to see one of the two orthopedists in the country. After
the patients were tucked in for the night, Dr. Nico told us what had happened.
At 8 o’clock that morning, the two brothers were attacked by men who
had been grazing cattle on their land without permission. (This made me think
of the nineteenth century Boer incursions into these regions for the same purpose:
to take over Basotho grazing lands.) The usual arrangements stipulated that
the cattleherders go to the chief’s kraal to pay a grazing fee. Instead,Tseliso
and his brother awoke one day to find strangers and cattle on their land, and,
following convention and customary law, asked them to leave. The next day,
Dr. Nico explained, they were attacked at their home by a group of men with
machetes. Left bleeding and in great pain, they had to walk three hours from
their home village to the clinic in Nkau.
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The Nkau operating room team celebrates |
Dr. Mona has been in Lesotho for six months, and has seen plenty of trauma.
This was, she said, a more aggressive assault than any she’d seen, with
the exception of a man killed by an axe blow to the head. High unemployment,
poverty, labor migration back-and-forth to South Africa, and substance abuse
conspire to create an environment in which the PIH doctors expect to see trauma
on a regular basis. Tseliso and his brother were lucky, in a sense. Though
gravely injured, both can expect to recover completely.
Home visits
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An AIDS patient and her accompagnateur near
Nkau |
The next day was dedicated to home visits, an activity conducted at all PIH
sites. While Jen took off on horseback to see a critically ill patient hours
in one direction, I had the privilege of spending the day walking to severely
ill AIDS patients in another. I followed Nico and Mona. Although the patients
we visited were very ill, all were responding to therapy. It was a long and
satisfying hike, despite some haunting scenery of abandoned houses and mission
schools. The population in rural areas of Lesotho is shrinking, as people migrate
to cities in search of work and HIV has reduced life expectancy from 60 years
to less than 40.
Later that day the team celebrated a successful candlelit surgical intervention,
rewarding home visits, and a fruitful retreat. Dr. Limpho revealed that she
had, in addition to her clinical skills, a good deal of talent as a chef. Jen
had bought a sheep for her staff and visitors. As we were enjoying barbecued
mutton, one of the village elders, who told us he was 73 years old, praised
the doctors and nurses in straightforward terms: “Never before have we
had doctors and nurses live among us up in the mountains. You are a gift from
God.”
In Maseru
The next morning, with the help of our friends and partners in Mission Aviation
Fellowship, we were able to airlift Tseliso to the country’s main hospital
(the partnership between PIH and MAF was profiled recently by the Baltimore
Sun. The emergency room was crowded with all sorts of patients,
some of them seeking, I suspect, primary care; others came with wounds. Without
Dr. Nico, it would have been hard to wade through the crowd and find the
right place to wait. After we got
Tseliso settled on a bench, referral letter in hand, Nico went to find a boy
who’d been referred for surgical management of chronic osteomyelitis.
This child had been sent to the hospital from the mountains and was happy to
see his doctor. Every time I heard Nico and Limpho speak to patients and family
without the help of a translator I felt a deep satisfaction. PIH’s efforts
in a country with a handful of doctors could not have been launched without
people like Zanmi Lasante’s Dr. Jonas Rigodon (who
has written in these pages about his work in Nohana). But in addition to the pride we
take in South-South collaborations between Haiti and the African sites in which
we work, there is satisfaction in knowing that we are also able to reverse,
in some measure, the brain drain that has taken so many doctors and nurses
away from Africa’s poorer countries. The rural reaches of these countries
have never had resident medical professionals: this local brain drain, too,
we are seeking to reverse.
Finally, with specimens dropped off in the laboratory for testing, we went
to the new PIH office in Maseru. As Dr. Nico sat down in front of a computer,
he said something I won’t soon forget: “Doing this work as a doctor
up in the mountains makes me feel very lucky. To fight for access to health
care for the rural Basotho seems to me to be the best job a doctor could have.”
Being in Maseru also allowed me to meet other new members of the PIH team
assembled by Jen. Our other major endeavor apart from the rural initiative
has been to introduce to Lesotho a sound prevention and care program for multidrug-resistant
tuberculosis (MDR-TB). Although we still don’t have a good sense of just
how big a problem MDR-TB is in Lesotho, it’s clearly a significant threat
to effective TB control here. And although we’ve had a great deal of
experience treating MDR-TB in Peru, Russia, and Haiti, there’s an enormous
complication in Lesotho: most patients afflicted with MDR-TB, a lethal disease
on its own, also have HIV infection. It’s not possible to tackle one
disease without tackling the other. And handling either MDR-TB or AIDS requires
a mix of clinical acumen and what are termed “programmatic skills,” which
means the ability to strengthen public health programs aimed at both prevention
and care. This is complex and difficult work, quite different from stitching
up an injured patient. Across the world, few people have the sort of training
and experience needed to take on these colliding epidemics.
Spending time seeing MDR-TB patients with PIH doctors Kwon-jeun Seung and
Hind Satti brought these lessons home. We were in Botsebelo, a clean and well-constructed
facility that will soon serve as Lesotho’s national referral center for
MDR-TB and also, we hope, as a national center for training health providers
in the effective prevention and care of this disease. Most of the patients
we saw had been laborers in South Africa, often in the mines; all but one had
both drug-resistant TB and HIV infection. Each of them had been treated previously,
often over the course of years, with regimens that would have cured drug-susceptible
TB. Some had been treated in South Africa. None had been cured.
This reservoir of “chronic” patients in Lesotho will prove daunting,
but the PIH team there, especially Jen, has long experience in seeking to treat
chronic MDR-TB patients at the same time that efforts are made to speed up
diagnosis and proper care of MDR-TB. Proper care, in this setting, means top-of-the-line
regimens that might cure even highly drug-resistant strains, even among patients
also afflicted with HIV disease. At the same time, the MDR-TB project will
seek to help the Ministry of Health to “retrofit” the country’s
network of hospitals and clinics to make them safer for patients and their
families. TB is too often an infection acquired within hospitals, clinics,
and other congregate settings. More South-South collaboration may prove important
in Lesotho: the PIH-Peru team (Socios En Salud) has special expertise in infection
control and will be providing technical assistance here; the PIH-Haiti team,
as noted, has already made an important contribution to PIH-Lesotho in the
person of Dr. Jonas, who in August will celebrate a year in service to the
people living around Nohana. He often reminds me that, on our first day in
the mountains of Lesotho, in the town of Nohana, it began to snow.
All of PIH-Lesotho will be celebrating a birthday on August 22, when co-workers
from Lesotho, Rwanda, Malawi, and Boston join the Minister of Health, Dr. Ramatlapeng,
the Clinton Foundation, the Irish Government (which has
funded much of our work in Lesotho), and many other partners and supporters
in the same town, Nohana. Nohana has been transformed in many ways: the facilities
there have been retrofitted for infection control; a new clinic has been built;
hundreds of patients with AIDS and TB are receiving world-class care; and tens
of thousands have received basic health care services, which in Lesotho often
includes screening for HIV infection. All of this has occurred in Ministry
of Health facilities.
I will be going back to Lesotho from Rwanda in a few weeks, and I can’t
wait to be back here. PIH-Lesotho is in many ways the heart of PIH, no less
than Haiti: the people who live here have struggled for centuries to improve
their lot and the lot of their children. They have sometimes served larger
causes, as have the Haitians: as Haiti supported nineteenth-century struggles
against slavery, so too did Lesotho serve as a place in which the struggle
against apartheid might survive. And at the end of these struggles, both Haiti
and Lesotho have been left with less than was owed them by what should have
been a grateful world. But in Lesotho, as in Haiti, the spirit of resistance
survives and inspires all of us to move forward against all odds.
[published August 2007]
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