My last week at PMGH was very nice. I spent a day in the outpatient clinic- antenatal in the AM and gynecology in the afternoon. Similar to the labor ward, the clinics are extremely busy providing care to well over 100 patients per day. For the remainder of the week I split my time between the labor ward and the operating theatre. I was able to see an obstetric fistula repair, do another term breech delivery, and several routine deliveries. Prior to leaving I was able to thank the faculty and registrars for their assistance during the stay and exchange contact information with several of them.
Arranging travel in PNG can be a bit difficult but Maureen and I really lucked out!! While there are several private tour groups in PNG they are outrageously expensive for a developing country and were out of the question for us. Due to safety concerns, just showing up to a new city, using public transport, and traveling like backpackers is not advised (especially for two women). Fortunately, I was able to make contact with an Australian, Jane, who is teaching midwifery at the University of Goroka through one of the midwives at PMGH (Florence who I mentioned earlier). Jane got us connected with Samuel, a local who arranges tours and is based in Goroka (much more reasonably priced). Jane also offered us a place to stay on the university campus… free of charge.
Maureen and I flew to Goroka (in the Highlands) last Friday with the hope of a cooler climate, beautiful scenery, and a climb up Mt Wilhelm (the highest peak in Oceania- 4,509 meters). We were not disappointed… just required a sense of adventure. Samuel met us at the airport and accompanied us on the PMVs (public motorized vehicle) to Jane’s house on the university campus. Jane lives in a beautiful 4 bedroom home by herself so often hosts travelers or expats new to Goroka (while they make arrangements). Aaron, an Australian documentary film maker is currently living with her.
We dropped our luggage there, finalized plans for our trip up Mt Wilhelm, and made arrangements to see the Asaro Mud Men that afternoon. PNG is home to hundreds of tribes/clans many which still live/celebrate traditional village life. The Asaro Mud Men are one such group. Asaro village is northwest of Goroka and is famous for its mud men- warriors who covered themselves with mud and wore mud masks before heading off on raids. The village people now recreate this for tourists… a bit of a tourist trap but still interesting to see and the pictures are pretty priceless (Maureen and I even modeled the mud masks). We also had the village people teach us how to chew betel nut- a seed which is chewed with mustard and lime powder to obtain a stimulant effect. We weren’t much good at it and spit it out before any real effect. It was a good laugh though.
Friday evening Jane, Aaron, Maureen, and I went to dinner at 1 of the 4 restaurants in Goroka… we were joined by what must be most of the Goroka expat community. There were about 20 of us in total… people from all over the world who have been in PNG for varying lengths of time working for many different organizations. Dinner conversation was spirited to say the least. Saturday morning we met Samuel downtown to begin our trip up Mt Wilhelm. We traveled first by bus (PMV) for several hours along the Highlands Highway (another pot hole ridden road) through beautiful mountains to Kundiawa. In Kundiawa, we loaded into the back of a Toyota 4WD pick-up truck with locals (men, women, children, and 1 baby) and headed to the guest house in Kegsugl. The poor condition of the road was quite unbelievable but luckily was matched by breath taking scenery. Maureen and I bounced around together for several hours and ended at the East Kegsugl Guesthouse with sore bottoms.
The East Kegsugl Guesthouse is owned by Josephine and Arnold and is just down the road from the trail head. We slept there Saturday night after enjoying a home cooked meal (Josephine prepared over a fire) of veggies, rice, sweet potato, and fresh strawberries. Sunday morning with our packs on our backs we met our guides (Michael and John- two locals) and headed for base camp. Along the way we admired incredible gardens (the climate in the highlands provides plenty of rain and spring like conditions year round), purchased the veggies we would eat while hiking, and headed into what looked like a jungle with occasional pine trees. We hiked for about 5-6 hours (though the jungle and grasslands, passing waterfalls and interesting plant life) reaching base camp (called the A-frame) mid afternoon. We dried out our socks/shoes (Maureen and I only had running shoes…) and enjoyed the weather/scenery. The base camp is just next to one of two lakes found part way up Mt Wilhelm.
Sunday evening we ate dinner by candle light (veggies, rice, and potatoes) and went to bed early as the plan is to wake up at 1 AM, begin hiking at 2 AM, in order to summit early morning and be off the mountain by midday. After about 3-4 hours of sleep we were up, dressed, and ready to go. From 2 AM till sunrise we hiked with flashlights… a bit eerie as I had the feeling we were going straight up and was apprehensive about the trek back down. However, after a bit of reassurance and the assistance of our amazing guides (could not have done it without them) Maureen and I made it to the top!! We saw the most amazing star filled sky, the moon rise, the sun rise, the southern coast line of PNG, cities and rivers in the distance, several mountain ranges, rainbows through the mountain mist, the site of a WWII plane crash, and several mountain lakes. The trip was 6 hours of hiking up and about 5 back down to base camp. We both agree it was worth every bit of effort, wet feet, cold hands, bruised shins, and sore muscles. We rested at base camp for an hour or so, packed up our stuff, ate some lunch, and then walked the rest of the way down to the Guest House. After 15 hours of hiking we had dinner with Josephine, a cold shower, and went to sleep.
Tuesday morning, around 6 AM, we loaded into the back of a truck for the trip from Kegsugl to Kundiawa to Goroka (and the hope of a hot shower). As we traveled down out of the mountains the truck, which started with Maureen, Samuel, and I, slowly filled up. We stopped frequently picking up people and produce as they were headed to Kundiawa (they were headed for the market). Eventually, Maureen and I, deemed as taking up too much space in the truck bed, were told to sit in the cab of the truck. Although this afforded much less fresh air my sore body welcomed the padded seat. Once in Kundiawa, we boarded a bus to Goroka and arrived at Jane’s house by noon. After hot showers, laundry, and lunch we enjoyed an afternoon on reading on Jane’s deck overlooking the mountains we had just come from.
Tuesday evening we treated Jane to dinner at a second of the four restaurants in Goroka to thank her for her hospitality. As I said before Jane is currently teaching midwifery at the University of Goroka. She is a fascinating woman who has spent her entire life traveling. She has done 9 missions with Doctors Without Borders (MSF)- taking her to several parts of Africa, China, and the Middle East. I think both Maureen and I were in awe of her experiences. On Wednesday morning, Jane took us to the airport for our return flight to Port Moresby (it took us a bit to get checked in for a flight as the ticketing counter was basically in a shed and was not clearly marked).
As I type now, we are on Loloata Island just off the southern coast on Port Moresby. The idea being Highlands to Islands as Maureen has dubbed it. Loloata Island is located in Bootless Bay and is home to a small resort- currently we are 2 of 6 total guests. We will spend two nights here admiring our ocean view. The plan is to relax, read, reflect, and catch some rays before the return to reality. Maureen plans to do some scuba diving as well. Both of our flights leave early Friday AM.
Overall, my trip to PNG was not what I expected (I suppose this is the trend when traveling to a developing country). I greatly enjoyed my time in the hospital, the people I met there, and am thankful for the experience. Hope you have enjoyed reading/following along. All for now.
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
4/1/13: I have a roommate!
The remainder of last week went quickly. I was in the operating room
on Thursday and then Maureen arrived on Friday. The case list for
Thursday included a cesarean section with tubal ligation, four tubal
ligations, a vaginal hysterectomy for prolapse, and a few dilation and
curettages. Friday was a public holiday (Good Friday) and Maureen was
scheduled to arrive midday. Skanda picked me up after completing AM
ward rounds and we were off to the airport.
We met Maureen in the international terminal. I am very glad she is
here to join me and I anticipate we will have some great memories at
the end of this trip. For those who don’t know, Maureen is an OB/GYN
who was in my residency program at Ohio State. She is two years ahead
of me so is now an attending physician. She and her husband, Dave,
live in Columbus, as he is completing a chief year in
medicine/pediatrics. Maureen and Dave have done a fair amount of
traveling together (both on medicine related trips and for pleasure).
They will be spending next year in Tanzania working for the medical
division of the Peace Corps. Maureen had quite the experience
traveling- she was kicked off a flight, re routed on two different
airlines, and arrived with no luggage…
Regardless, we went back to the hostel from the airport so she could
shower and have a rest (luckily we wear the same size cloths). As
Maureen adjusted to the time change I relaxed, did some reading, and
writing. We contacted Dave through Matt to work on the luggage
situation.
On Saturday morning, we went with Delly and her family to the Ela
Beach Craft Market. It is a market put on the last Saturday of every
month in Town. There are daily markets all over Port Moresby but most
on not safe for foreigners to wander around. The Ela Beach Craft
Market is hosted on a fenced off school yard. We wander around and
purchased a few things. Mostly it was just fun to look at all of the
paintings, carvings, woven bags, and jewelry. After we had our fill
we walked down Ela Beach to the nicest hotel in Port Moresby for some
breakfast.
Port Moresby is on the southern coast of PNG and has really lovely
scenery- green hills/mountains abutting blue/green ocean. That being
said it is not safe to walk the beaches alone or in the evening/night.
There are always a fair number of locals hanging around selling
things, swimming in the ocean, and playing volleyball. Given we were
a large group and it was midday we decided to wander around. Ela
Beach Hotel is just across the street from the beach behind a large
security fence and guards We went into the restaurant and air
conditioning for a quick bite. Maureen and I shared a plate of fresh
fruit and cream… the mangos were so delicious. After breakfast we
said goodbye to Delly and her family. Skanda, Maureen, and I did a
quick tour of the city by car and then a walking tour of the hospital.
In the afternoon we went to Skanda’s place for WiFi to make some
travel bookings for next week as Maureen and I plan to go to the
Highlands of PNG and Loloata Island. Saturday night the three of us
went to an Asian Fusion Restaurant which was quite good. Like I have
mentioned earlier the restaurant/grocery store scene has a lot to
offer. It primarily caters to the large number of expats living in
PNG as the prices tend to be relatively high. Expats have come to PNG
for mainly 1 of two reasons- to get rich off of the natural resources
(oil and minerals primarily) or to provide aid to a developing
country. In many ways these two are related… if industrialized
nations are going to come in to exploit local resources they often
feel the need to give some level of support to the people. It is an
interesting system… for better or worse.
On Easter Sunday we woke up early to go to the fruit/veg market put on
by a local university (Pacific Adventist University). The market is
run by the students and is very nice. We also sampled some local
foods which are sold outside- Maureen had a sausage, I had a large
piece of chocolate cake, we shared a chicken roti, and we purchased
iger to have for dinner later on. Iger is a local dish which usually
includes potatoes, cooking bananas (think plantains), greens, chicken,
and spices all wrapped in large green leaves and cooked in a pit of
hot stones.
After the market we went by the airport to see if Maureen’s bag had
arrived. The attendant at Air Niugini was very helpful and said it
should be arriving on the afternoon flight from Brisbane- we were just
to come back around 5 PM. We were both a bit skeptical given the
overall efficiency of this place and the jumbled up manner in which
Maureen got to PNG (there was also no tracking number involved… just
Maureen’s name). However, sure enough, when we returned at 5 PM
Maureen’s luggage had arrived!!! Maureen and I decided it was an
Easter miracle. We played some cards in the evening and for our
Easter Dinner heated up the iger on the stove and made a monster fruit
salad with our purchases from the AM (mangos, papaya, oranges, banana,
grapes, and sugar fruit).
Today, Monday, is also considered a holiday but we decided to come to
the hospital for awhile. I tried to photo document this place as
there are fewer patients around given the holiday (I will post them on
FaceBook when I return to the US and have good internet access). I
have not entirely decided what I will do this week- likely spend a day
or two in the outpatient setting, round on the gynecology service, or
maybe return to the OR/labor ward.
As of now, Maureen and I, are flying out of Port Moresby on Friday to
go to Goroka in the Highlands. We hope to hike near Mt Wilhem and
maybe see some birds of paradise. We return to Moresby on the
following Wednesday and will then go to Loloata Island for two nights.
On the follow Friday (April 12th) we leave on separate flights back
to Australia. I will try and write more about this as we are going if
I can get internet to post again.
on Thursday and then Maureen arrived on Friday. The case list for
Thursday included a cesarean section with tubal ligation, four tubal
ligations, a vaginal hysterectomy for prolapse, and a few dilation and
curettages. Friday was a public holiday (Good Friday) and Maureen was
scheduled to arrive midday. Skanda picked me up after completing AM
ward rounds and we were off to the airport.
We met Maureen in the international terminal. I am very glad she is
here to join me and I anticipate we will have some great memories at
the end of this trip. For those who don’t know, Maureen is an OB/GYN
who was in my residency program at Ohio State. She is two years ahead
of me so is now an attending physician. She and her husband, Dave,
live in Columbus, as he is completing a chief year in
medicine/pediatrics. Maureen and Dave have done a fair amount of
traveling together (both on medicine related trips and for pleasure).
They will be spending next year in Tanzania working for the medical
division of the Peace Corps. Maureen had quite the experience
traveling- she was kicked off a flight, re routed on two different
airlines, and arrived with no luggage…
Regardless, we went back to the hostel from the airport so she could
shower and have a rest (luckily we wear the same size cloths). As
Maureen adjusted to the time change I relaxed, did some reading, and
writing. We contacted Dave through Matt to work on the luggage
situation.
On Saturday morning, we went with Delly and her family to the Ela
Beach Craft Market. It is a market put on the last Saturday of every
month in Town. There are daily markets all over Port Moresby but most
on not safe for foreigners to wander around. The Ela Beach Craft
Market is hosted on a fenced off school yard. We wander around and
purchased a few things. Mostly it was just fun to look at all of the
paintings, carvings, woven bags, and jewelry. After we had our fill
we walked down Ela Beach to the nicest hotel in Port Moresby for some
breakfast.
Port Moresby is on the southern coast of PNG and has really lovely
scenery- green hills/mountains abutting blue/green ocean. That being
said it is not safe to walk the beaches alone or in the evening/night.
There are always a fair number of locals hanging around selling
things, swimming in the ocean, and playing volleyball. Given we were
a large group and it was midday we decided to wander around. Ela
Beach Hotel is just across the street from the beach behind a large
security fence and guards We went into the restaurant and air
conditioning for a quick bite. Maureen and I shared a plate of fresh
fruit and cream… the mangos were so delicious. After breakfast we
said goodbye to Delly and her family. Skanda, Maureen, and I did a
quick tour of the city by car and then a walking tour of the hospital.
In the afternoon we went to Skanda’s place for WiFi to make some
travel bookings for next week as Maureen and I plan to go to the
Highlands of PNG and Loloata Island. Saturday night the three of us
went to an Asian Fusion Restaurant which was quite good. Like I have
mentioned earlier the restaurant/grocery store scene has a lot to
offer. It primarily caters to the large number of expats living in
PNG as the prices tend to be relatively high. Expats have come to PNG
for mainly 1 of two reasons- to get rich off of the natural resources
(oil and minerals primarily) or to provide aid to a developing
country. In many ways these two are related… if industrialized
nations are going to come in to exploit local resources they often
feel the need to give some level of support to the people. It is an
interesting system… for better or worse.
On Easter Sunday we woke up early to go to the fruit/veg market put on
by a local university (Pacific Adventist University). The market is
run by the students and is very nice. We also sampled some local
foods which are sold outside- Maureen had a sausage, I had a large
piece of chocolate cake, we shared a chicken roti, and we purchased
iger to have for dinner later on. Iger is a local dish which usually
includes potatoes, cooking bananas (think plantains), greens, chicken,
and spices all wrapped in large green leaves and cooked in a pit of
hot stones.
After the market we went by the airport to see if Maureen’s bag had
arrived. The attendant at Air Niugini was very helpful and said it
should be arriving on the afternoon flight from Brisbane- we were just
to come back around 5 PM. We were both a bit skeptical given the
overall efficiency of this place and the jumbled up manner in which
Maureen got to PNG (there was also no tracking number involved… just
Maureen’s name). However, sure enough, when we returned at 5 PM
Maureen’s luggage had arrived!!! Maureen and I decided it was an
Easter miracle. We played some cards in the evening and for our
Easter Dinner heated up the iger on the stove and made a monster fruit
salad with our purchases from the AM (mangos, papaya, oranges, banana,
grapes, and sugar fruit).
Today, Monday, is also considered a holiday but we decided to come to
the hospital for awhile. I tried to photo document this place as
there are fewer patients around given the holiday (I will post them on
FaceBook when I return to the US and have good internet access). I
have not entirely decided what I will do this week- likely spend a day
or two in the outpatient setting, round on the gynecology service, or
maybe return to the OR/labor ward.
As of now, Maureen and I, are flying out of Port Moresby on Friday to
go to Goroka in the Highlands. We hope to hike near Mt Wilhem and
maybe see some birds of paradise. We return to Moresby on the
following Wednesday and will then go to Loloata Island for two nights.
On the follow Friday (April 12th) we leave on separate flights back
to Australia. I will try and write more about this as we are going if
I can get internet to post again.
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Update on 3/27/13
Update on 3/27/13:
Overall I had a pretty good birthday weekend. On Saturday, Delly (one
of the registrars), along with her husband and daughter- Evelyn, came
to pick me up. Our plan had been to go to the craft market but turns
out it isn’t till next weekend. Instead we went to the “mall” which
consists of a few shops and a grocery store primarily catering to
expats living in Port Moresby. The grocery store, Food World, was
actually quite extensive (compared to my time in other countries you
really can buy most anything here… just have to do a bit of looking).
I was able to find an ATM, drink a coffee, and get a SIM card with the
hope of WIFI. Evelyn was very entertaining and I am quite envious of
her energy.
Delly is considered a senior registrar here which is about equivalent
to my level of training. We spent my entire first week on labor ward
together. She is a very skilled physician and delightful person. The
training system in PNG is a bit different than the States- it actually
takes longer!! After secondary school (high school), trainees enter
directly into medical school for 6 years, then they become a resident
for 2 years (this involves rotating on all services, similar to a
general intern year in the US), then on to service years (which from
what I can tell involves 1-2 years working in an undesirable location
as a generalist), and then onto specialty training where one is called
a registrar- OB/GYN here is 6 years. After completion you are called
a consultant (equivalent to an attending physician in the US). I
still haven’t entirely ironed out whether everybody has to do service
years. Most of the registrars are married and the majority of them
start their families during training. Delly said that on average
physicians are in their early to mid thirties when they have completed
their training.
On Saturday night, Skanda and I were invited to dinner at Florence’s
home. Florence is a midwife working for the WHO teaching midwifery at
a local university. She is from Australia. Along with her husband
Filipe (who is French) and son Archer, Florence has lived in several
different places doing humanitarian work. The evening starting with a
riveting game of Go Fish (Archer is 5) and ended with a conversation
about Florence’s work in Darfur. I really enjoy talking with her and
feel as though we are kindred spirits. She and Filipe were actually
in Timor-Leste at the same time as me in 2010… she too got dengue.
Sunday morning (my 29th birthday) Florence and Archer came to pick me
up for a swim at the Aviat Club. Archer surprised me with balloons, a
birthday horn, and a present… I pretty sure it’s because I’m such a
good Go Fish player. At the Aviat, I was able to do some lap swimming
(which felt great as I haven’t exactly been able to go out for a run
here) and play with Archer. We then went back to Florence’s place for
lunch and so I could use the internet (I was able to get Wifi working
at my hostel for a short period of time but it is very spotty… and
slow). For those that were able to get through- I appreciate the
birthday calls, text messages, and emails from home!! Sunday evening
Skanda, Professor Mola, 2 of the registrars, and I went out for a
birthday dinner (and Mom don’t worry I was even able to have birthday
cake). I hope being 29 is as good as being 28… and that it lasts
awhile… 30 doesn’t seem possible.
I decided to spend my second week in the operating theatre… which to
this point I am happy to say has been an excellent idea. There is one
registrar assigned to the operating theatre (which is Frank currently)
and a different attending physician each day. There is supposed to be
a resident as well… but they haven’t seemed to show up… lucky me .
The operating theatre handles all of the obstetric and gynecology
cases. There are 2 operating rooms, each with a dedicated anesthesia
and nursing staff (however… they don’t show up till 10 AM sometimes).
Anyways, overall the facilities are basic but serve their purpose. I
have never seen supplies conserved to this extreme- who knew 1 piece
of suture could be used to do an entire tubal ligation from start to
finish.
Each day’s case list is quite long… Frank and I start at the top and
just power through. The consultants are present- sometimes scrubbing
in to help and sometimes not. The most common procedure done is tubal
ligation… I think we are single handedly sterilizing PNG. No, in all
seriousness, there is a huge push for family planning here given the
poverty, lack of education, and overcrowding. Most days there are
6-10 tubal ligations completed under local anesthesia with a bit of
sedation. The remainder of the case list so far this week has
consisted of several dilation and curettage, several exams under
anesthesia (primary for advanced stage cervical cancer), a few
cesarean sections, several exploratory laps for ovarian cysts (think
the size of a watermelon), and a few hysterectomies. (and it is only
Wednesday!) The registrars have great autonomy here and are very
competent. The general principals in the OR are similar to home… with
a few modifications (the most drastic- there are no emergent, or even
urgent, cesarean sections- but with no fetal monitoring I’m not sure
what I was expecting). Today a cesarean section which was being done
for “fetal distress” was postponed till after a hysterectomy (I was a
bit anxious to say the least… but in the end the baby was ok…
luckily).
Regardless, I am looking forward to the rest of my week. Oh and
Maureen arrives not tomorrow but the next day (Friday March 29th)… I
had the hostel attendants make up her bed and bring in extra towels
Yah to not living alone anymore.
Overall I had a pretty good birthday weekend. On Saturday, Delly (one
of the registrars), along with her husband and daughter- Evelyn, came
to pick me up. Our plan had been to go to the craft market but turns
out it isn’t till next weekend. Instead we went to the “mall” which
consists of a few shops and a grocery store primarily catering to
expats living in Port Moresby. The grocery store, Food World, was
actually quite extensive (compared to my time in other countries you
really can buy most anything here… just have to do a bit of looking).
I was able to find an ATM, drink a coffee, and get a SIM card with the
hope of WIFI. Evelyn was very entertaining and I am quite envious of
her energy.
Delly is considered a senior registrar here which is about equivalent
to my level of training. We spent my entire first week on labor ward
together. She is a very skilled physician and delightful person. The
training system in PNG is a bit different than the States- it actually
takes longer!! After secondary school (high school), trainees enter
directly into medical school for 6 years, then they become a resident
for 2 years (this involves rotating on all services, similar to a
general intern year in the US), then on to service years (which from
what I can tell involves 1-2 years working in an undesirable location
as a generalist), and then onto specialty training where one is called
a registrar- OB/GYN here is 6 years. After completion you are called
a consultant (equivalent to an attending physician in the US). I
still haven’t entirely ironed out whether everybody has to do service
years. Most of the registrars are married and the majority of them
start their families during training. Delly said that on average
physicians are in their early to mid thirties when they have completed
their training.
On Saturday night, Skanda and I were invited to dinner at Florence’s
home. Florence is a midwife working for the WHO teaching midwifery at
a local university. She is from Australia. Along with her husband
Filipe (who is French) and son Archer, Florence has lived in several
different places doing humanitarian work. The evening starting with a
riveting game of Go Fish (Archer is 5) and ended with a conversation
about Florence’s work in Darfur. I really enjoy talking with her and
feel as though we are kindred spirits. She and Filipe were actually
in Timor-Leste at the same time as me in 2010… she too got dengue.
Sunday morning (my 29th birthday) Florence and Archer came to pick me
up for a swim at the Aviat Club. Archer surprised me with balloons, a
birthday horn, and a present… I pretty sure it’s because I’m such a
good Go Fish player. At the Aviat, I was able to do some lap swimming
(which felt great as I haven’t exactly been able to go out for a run
here) and play with Archer. We then went back to Florence’s place for
lunch and so I could use the internet (I was able to get Wifi working
at my hostel for a short period of time but it is very spotty… and
slow). For those that were able to get through- I appreciate the
birthday calls, text messages, and emails from home!! Sunday evening
Skanda, Professor Mola, 2 of the registrars, and I went out for a
birthday dinner (and Mom don’t worry I was even able to have birthday
cake). I hope being 29 is as good as being 28… and that it lasts
awhile… 30 doesn’t seem possible.
I decided to spend my second week in the operating theatre… which to
this point I am happy to say has been an excellent idea. There is one
registrar assigned to the operating theatre (which is Frank currently)
and a different attending physician each day. There is supposed to be
a resident as well… but they haven’t seemed to show up… lucky me .
The operating theatre handles all of the obstetric and gynecology
cases. There are 2 operating rooms, each with a dedicated anesthesia
and nursing staff (however… they don’t show up till 10 AM sometimes).
Anyways, overall the facilities are basic but serve their purpose. I
have never seen supplies conserved to this extreme- who knew 1 piece
of suture could be used to do an entire tubal ligation from start to
finish.
Each day’s case list is quite long… Frank and I start at the top and
just power through. The consultants are present- sometimes scrubbing
in to help and sometimes not. The most common procedure done is tubal
ligation… I think we are single handedly sterilizing PNG. No, in all
seriousness, there is a huge push for family planning here given the
poverty, lack of education, and overcrowding. Most days there are
6-10 tubal ligations completed under local anesthesia with a bit of
sedation. The remainder of the case list so far this week has
consisted of several dilation and curettage, several exams under
anesthesia (primary for advanced stage cervical cancer), a few
cesarean sections, several exploratory laps for ovarian cysts (think
the size of a watermelon), and a few hysterectomies. (and it is only
Wednesday!) The registrars have great autonomy here and are very
competent. The general principals in the OR are similar to home… with
a few modifications (the most drastic- there are no emergent, or even
urgent, cesarean sections- but with no fetal monitoring I’m not sure
what I was expecting). Today a cesarean section which was being done
for “fetal distress” was postponed till after a hysterectomy (I was a
bit anxious to say the least… but in the end the baby was ok…
luckily).
Regardless, I am looking forward to the rest of my week. Oh and
Maureen arrives not tomorrow but the next day (Friday March 29th)… I
had the hostel attendants make up her bed and bring in extra towels
Yah to not living alone anymore.
Friday, March 22, 2013
Week 1- 3/23/13
Sorry for the delay in posting… the internet situation around here is a bit ridiculous… no internet at my hostel (not surprised) and no internet at the hospital (surprised). Can you imagine no internet at OSUMC?? Anyways, I have arrived safely in Port Moresby, PNG and have completed my first week at the hospital… which has been interesting to say the least. I will try and hit on the high points.
I left LAX Tuesday, March 12th after a very informative 4 day conference on gynecologic cancer. I flew overnight on Virgin Australia to Sydney and then on to Cairns. I’m happy to say my 15hr trip from LAX to SYD involved having an entire row of seats on which I stretched out and slept soundly for 10 hours (may have been a bit behind). When I arrived in Cairns I was greeted by a dear friend, Dan Foster, who I worked with in Dili, Timor-Leste in 2010. Dan is currently a resident in Australia and lives with his girlfriend Lani in Cairns. I stayed with them for an evening and had some time to catch up/reminisce about our time in Timor-Leste. Dan took me to the airport Friday, March 15th for my flight to Port Moresby. Much like my flight to Timor 3 years ago, after just 1.5 hours in the air I went from the western world to a developing nation.
It took a bit to obtain a visa and get through customs at Port Moresby Airport… and then there was no one there (I was expecting Professor Glen Mola to pick me up). Having read heaps of things about how public transportation is not the safest for expats in PNG I surely wasn’t about the hail a cab or take a bus. I sauntered over to the Digicel stand and while purchasing a SIM card for my cell phone (not that I had any numbers to call once my phone was working) was approached by a man in a hotel uniform. Clearly he could tell I was a bit out of place. I told him I was just waiting from Prof Mola to pick me up. Now Port Moresby is a city of about 300,000 people so I did not expect this man to know who I was speaking of. However, he quickly explained the Prof Mola had done surgery on his mother, how he was a great doctor, and he would just give him a call. Shortly after Prof Mola and Skanda (an Australian OB/GYN who is working at Port Moresby General Hospital, PMGH, for about 6 months) arrived to pick me up. Sigh of relief.
From the airport we drove down pot hole ridden streets to my accommodations. I am staying in a hostel across the street from the hospital called the CWA. I have a private room with two single beds (one for Maureen when she arrives), a private bathroom, and shared kitchen facilities. When I arrived there were two ladies from Australia in one room, a Timorese doctor in another, a PNG doctor in another, and a biologist from Finland in another. The room is clean and very comfortable aside from the lack of AC. Just a bit hot/humid for this Midwest girl… but I am able to sleep at night with the ceiling fan on.
I dropped my bags and proceeded to PMGH for a tour of the OB/GYN department with Skanda. The department is set to the back of the hospital facilities. Overall, I would say the facilities are adequate and serve their purpose… nothing fancy. There are 4 wards- Ward 9 is the gynecology ward, Ward 10 is the antenatal ward, Ward 11 is the postnatal ward, and of course the labor ward. The operating theater and special care nursery are attached to labor ward. Each ward is open (Florence Nightingale style- no private rooms) with curtains between beds.
The remainder of my first weekend involved dinner with a group of expats (primarily nurse midwives from Malawi, Australia, and several European countries all working for the WHO teaching local midwives), some grocery shopping, visiting a local fruit/veg market, a swim at the Aviat Club (think country club pool with no golf course- Aafke, an OB/GYN from Finland who has worked at PMGH for 6 years and her husband took me), and trying to adjust to the time change.
I decided to spend my first week on labor ward (with plans to do GYN/OR and outpatient work the next two weeks). Every day begins with morning report (generally involves some sort of didactics for the residents, registrars, and medical students) and then ward round. Labor ward at PMGH has 24 beds, a small waiting room, and a triage room with 2 beds (although I have not really seen this triage room used- mostly mothers just labor on a bench until a bed becomes available). PMGH does about 12,500 deliveries a year… that breaks down to about 35 deliveries a day. It is an extremely busy unit staffed by residents/registrars and midwives with one attending (called a consultant here) overseeing.
Women labor without epidurals and without fetal monitoring. Some have IV access some don’t. There is one external fetal monitoring machine for the entire unit which is wheeled from bed to bed when there is concern for fetal distress (I won’t get into the nitty gritty details of L&D as this blog is for a diverse audience… but for those interested we can talk more later). Week one involved several cases of pre eclampsia, 2 cases of eclampsia, 3 vacuum deliveries, 3 twin deliveries (2 of which were undiagnosed and came from the antenatal unit- ultrasounds are not done routinely), 2 breech deliveries, only 1 cesarean section, and a few post partum hemorrhages. Antenatal care is spotty at best and doesn’t include things like accurate dating, determination of blood type, or determination of GBS status… just to name a few things. Doctors, nurses, and midwives all do each others’ jobs- everyone delivers babies, everyone starts IVs/draws blood, and everyone administers medications. To give some idea here are a couple stats for the month of December- there were 1066 deliveries, 11 of which were breech, 70 of which were vacuum assisted (really no forceps), and only 42 cesarean sections (rate of 3.8%). So yah… all in all it is an interesting place.
The staff at the hospital are lovely people and very helpful. Overall, everyone I have met is very kind and anxious to go out of their way to make me feel welcome. In the evenings I have been reading, writing, and wishing I had internet. I do have a cell phone (# 70596397) so feel free to call or text… it is a bit lonely- given concern for petty crime it sort of feels like I am on house arrest. I go from my hostel to the hospital (generally accompanied by someone) and back again. I look forward to Maureen’s company in less than 1 week.
I spent my Friday night having dinner with Aafke and her husband at their home. As I mentioned before Aafke is an OB/GYN who has been living in PNG and working at PMGH for about 6 years. Her husband (I can’t spell his name) is a professor of political science and works at the university. They are originally from Finland but have worked all over the world… primarily spending 20 some years in Africa. Aafke completed her training in England but has not worked in the western world at any point in her career. Needless to say they have great stories. Her husband is the first person I have met since leaving that knows exactly where Iowa and Ohio are (due to holding the first primary and being a swing state, respectively). It is always interesting to hear what others think of the States... Regardless we had a very nice meal and I appreciate their company.
As for the rest of my weekend… I plan to go to the craft market with Delly (one of the residents I worked with in labor ward) and hopefully buy a SIM card to set up WIFI at my hostel. A group of us may go to the fruit/veg market on Sunday morning to buy groceries for the week. Oh and I will turn 29 tomorrow… bummer. All for now.
I left LAX Tuesday, March 12th after a very informative 4 day conference on gynecologic cancer. I flew overnight on Virgin Australia to Sydney and then on to Cairns. I’m happy to say my 15hr trip from LAX to SYD involved having an entire row of seats on which I stretched out and slept soundly for 10 hours (may have been a bit behind). When I arrived in Cairns I was greeted by a dear friend, Dan Foster, who I worked with in Dili, Timor-Leste in 2010. Dan is currently a resident in Australia and lives with his girlfriend Lani in Cairns. I stayed with them for an evening and had some time to catch up/reminisce about our time in Timor-Leste. Dan took me to the airport Friday, March 15th for my flight to Port Moresby. Much like my flight to Timor 3 years ago, after just 1.5 hours in the air I went from the western world to a developing nation.
It took a bit to obtain a visa and get through customs at Port Moresby Airport… and then there was no one there (I was expecting Professor Glen Mola to pick me up). Having read heaps of things about how public transportation is not the safest for expats in PNG I surely wasn’t about the hail a cab or take a bus. I sauntered over to the Digicel stand and while purchasing a SIM card for my cell phone (not that I had any numbers to call once my phone was working) was approached by a man in a hotel uniform. Clearly he could tell I was a bit out of place. I told him I was just waiting from Prof Mola to pick me up. Now Port Moresby is a city of about 300,000 people so I did not expect this man to know who I was speaking of. However, he quickly explained the Prof Mola had done surgery on his mother, how he was a great doctor, and he would just give him a call. Shortly after Prof Mola and Skanda (an Australian OB/GYN who is working at Port Moresby General Hospital, PMGH, for about 6 months) arrived to pick me up. Sigh of relief.
From the airport we drove down pot hole ridden streets to my accommodations. I am staying in a hostel across the street from the hospital called the CWA. I have a private room with two single beds (one for Maureen when she arrives), a private bathroom, and shared kitchen facilities. When I arrived there were two ladies from Australia in one room, a Timorese doctor in another, a PNG doctor in another, and a biologist from Finland in another. The room is clean and very comfortable aside from the lack of AC. Just a bit hot/humid for this Midwest girl… but I am able to sleep at night with the ceiling fan on.
I dropped my bags and proceeded to PMGH for a tour of the OB/GYN department with Skanda. The department is set to the back of the hospital facilities. Overall, I would say the facilities are adequate and serve their purpose… nothing fancy. There are 4 wards- Ward 9 is the gynecology ward, Ward 10 is the antenatal ward, Ward 11 is the postnatal ward, and of course the labor ward. The operating theater and special care nursery are attached to labor ward. Each ward is open (Florence Nightingale style- no private rooms) with curtains between beds.
The remainder of my first weekend involved dinner with a group of expats (primarily nurse midwives from Malawi, Australia, and several European countries all working for the WHO teaching local midwives), some grocery shopping, visiting a local fruit/veg market, a swim at the Aviat Club (think country club pool with no golf course- Aafke, an OB/GYN from Finland who has worked at PMGH for 6 years and her husband took me), and trying to adjust to the time change.
I decided to spend my first week on labor ward (with plans to do GYN/OR and outpatient work the next two weeks). Every day begins with morning report (generally involves some sort of didactics for the residents, registrars, and medical students) and then ward round. Labor ward at PMGH has 24 beds, a small waiting room, and a triage room with 2 beds (although I have not really seen this triage room used- mostly mothers just labor on a bench until a bed becomes available). PMGH does about 12,500 deliveries a year… that breaks down to about 35 deliveries a day. It is an extremely busy unit staffed by residents/registrars and midwives with one attending (called a consultant here) overseeing.
Women labor without epidurals and without fetal monitoring. Some have IV access some don’t. There is one external fetal monitoring machine for the entire unit which is wheeled from bed to bed when there is concern for fetal distress (I won’t get into the nitty gritty details of L&D as this blog is for a diverse audience… but for those interested we can talk more later). Week one involved several cases of pre eclampsia, 2 cases of eclampsia, 3 vacuum deliveries, 3 twin deliveries (2 of which were undiagnosed and came from the antenatal unit- ultrasounds are not done routinely), 2 breech deliveries, only 1 cesarean section, and a few post partum hemorrhages. Antenatal care is spotty at best and doesn’t include things like accurate dating, determination of blood type, or determination of GBS status… just to name a few things. Doctors, nurses, and midwives all do each others’ jobs- everyone delivers babies, everyone starts IVs/draws blood, and everyone administers medications. To give some idea here are a couple stats for the month of December- there were 1066 deliveries, 11 of which were breech, 70 of which were vacuum assisted (really no forceps), and only 42 cesarean sections (rate of 3.8%). So yah… all in all it is an interesting place.
The staff at the hospital are lovely people and very helpful. Overall, everyone I have met is very kind and anxious to go out of their way to make me feel welcome. In the evenings I have been reading, writing, and wishing I had internet. I do have a cell phone (# 70596397) so feel free to call or text… it is a bit lonely- given concern for petty crime it sort of feels like I am on house arrest. I go from my hostel to the hospital (generally accompanied by someone) and back again. I look forward to Maureen’s company in less than 1 week.
I spent my Friday night having dinner with Aafke and her husband at their home. As I mentioned before Aafke is an OB/GYN who has been living in PNG and working at PMGH for about 6 years. Her husband (I can’t spell his name) is a professor of political science and works at the university. They are originally from Finland but have worked all over the world… primarily spending 20 some years in Africa. Aafke completed her training in England but has not worked in the western world at any point in her career. Needless to say they have great stories. Her husband is the first person I have met since leaving that knows exactly where Iowa and Ohio are (due to holding the first primary and being a swing state, respectively). It is always interesting to hear what others think of the States... Regardless we had a very nice meal and I appreciate their company.
As for the rest of my weekend… I plan to go to the craft market with Delly (one of the residents I worked with in labor ward) and hopefully buy a SIM card to set up WIFI at my hostel. A group of us may go to the fruit/veg market on Sunday morning to buy groceries for the week. Oh and I will turn 29 tomorrow… bummer. All for now.
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Finishing Up…
5/3/2010-
I have only two days left at Hvidovre University Hospital here in Copenhagen. The four weeks went by fast… it was a great review of some basic OB/GYN (which will be helpful starting residency in the near future), the staff/students have been very helpful and friendly, and most of all the work hours have been more than reasonable. I am trying to savor every moment of free time here (there are plenty of them) with the knowledge that my life is about to change drastically to 80 hour work weeks and only 2 weeks of vacation all year. Scary! I have read a couple of books, been running and biking, and spending time with Rebecca around Copenhagen.
Two weekends ago Rebecca and I did some shopping, wandered through the palace/royal church, enjoyed ice cream, saw Alice In Wonderland in 3D (AWESOME), and went to a ballet titled Shakespeare in Motion. Rebecca flew straight from Africa (where she was completing another medical elective) to Copenhagen… needless to say her bags did not follow her here. Then the volcano erupted… so about 2 weeks later Rebecca finally got her luggage. However… there is a silver lining. She had travel insurance which will cover $500 worth of expenses per 24 hours you are without your luggage up to $1500. This translated into shopping spree to both Rebecca and I. I helped her pick out some cute clothes from the shops downtown!! (I refrained however seeing as the exchange rate is no good… I did not lose my luggage… and everything is expensive anyway) The movie and ballet were both entertaining. Rebecca and I had to do a bit of research after the ballet was over as we were totally lost as to which Shakespearian story involves a dancing bear… I was made very aware of my lack of cultural exposure (it is a stage direction in A Winter’s Tale). Oh well… we still had a wonderful time.
This past weekend we had big plans of a picnic/afternoon of reading in the park and a day at Tivoli (amusement park in Copenhagen). But… plans change. It rained almost all weekend. Instead of a picnic Rebecca and I went to our local bakery and each got 3 pastries for 25 kroner (about $5). What a deal. So we ate pastries for lunch and watched My Girl on TV while it poured down rain. Friday night we met up with some friends for drinks downtown… a very nice evening. On our Tivoli day we ended up going to a park where all of the political parties of Denmark gathered for a 1st of May celebration… basically looked like any city fair (tents, music, food/drink). Since we didn’t understand any of the political speeches (they were in Danish) and it was raining we didn’t stay too long…. well we stayed long enough to partake in lunch. Crepes with ice cream anyone??? Sunday… it was finally SUNNY! Rebecca and I went down to the waterfront near our apartments and spent the day reading in the grass. The wind was a bit chilly but the sun warmed us. There were a few crazy Danes swimming… it is not warm enough to go swimming here.
For my last week in Copenhagen I have big plans. I have finished up the requirements to get credit for this elective… so I am technically done with medical school!! How exciting is that? Thought the day would never come. So now for celebration... on Wednesday a group of us are going to a soccer game… if I understand correctly it is the club championship for Demark. One of the teams is from Copenhagen and the other from just outside the city. It should be a fun evening. On Thursday I have to return my bike (sad) and then Rebecca and I are going to attempt an afternoon at Tivoli. Fingers crossed for good weather. Friday Matt is coming to Copenhagen!!! He is in Europe for work right now and is coming to visit me for my last weekend here. Andres, Anne, Matt, and I will travel to Aarhus on Friday to see Matt’s former foreign exchange student (and Andres’ sister) Mette defend her PhD thesis. It will be a great chance for Matt to see Mette again and for me to meet her/the rest of the Larsen family. We plan on returning to Copenhagen on Friday evening. Matt and I will be going to a play in Copenhagen on Saturday night and then meeting with one of the actors for a beer afterwards (Matt’s Aunt Laura is an actress and while studying in Denmark in the past met an actor here… we will be seeing his play and meeting up with him afterwards). Sunday… hopefully Matt and I can have a quiet day together before the craziness of graduation/moving/residency starts. Monday morning Matt will head to Italy for work and I will head home. Graduation is Friday.
I have had a great time here in Copenhagen but am ready to be home with family and friends for a bit before the next step. Given the restrictiveness of residency I will likely not be traveling/blogging for a bit… so for those how have been reading thanks and I hope you have enjoyed it. Until the next adventure.
I have only two days left at Hvidovre University Hospital here in Copenhagen. The four weeks went by fast… it was a great review of some basic OB/GYN (which will be helpful starting residency in the near future), the staff/students have been very helpful and friendly, and most of all the work hours have been more than reasonable. I am trying to savor every moment of free time here (there are plenty of them) with the knowledge that my life is about to change drastically to 80 hour work weeks and only 2 weeks of vacation all year. Scary! I have read a couple of books, been running and biking, and spending time with Rebecca around Copenhagen.
Two weekends ago Rebecca and I did some shopping, wandered through the palace/royal church, enjoyed ice cream, saw Alice In Wonderland in 3D (AWESOME), and went to a ballet titled Shakespeare in Motion. Rebecca flew straight from Africa (where she was completing another medical elective) to Copenhagen… needless to say her bags did not follow her here. Then the volcano erupted… so about 2 weeks later Rebecca finally got her luggage. However… there is a silver lining. She had travel insurance which will cover $500 worth of expenses per 24 hours you are without your luggage up to $1500. This translated into shopping spree to both Rebecca and I. I helped her pick out some cute clothes from the shops downtown!! (I refrained however seeing as the exchange rate is no good… I did not lose my luggage… and everything is expensive anyway) The movie and ballet were both entertaining. Rebecca and I had to do a bit of research after the ballet was over as we were totally lost as to which Shakespearian story involves a dancing bear… I was made very aware of my lack of cultural exposure (it is a stage direction in A Winter’s Tale). Oh well… we still had a wonderful time.
This past weekend we had big plans of a picnic/afternoon of reading in the park and a day at Tivoli (amusement park in Copenhagen). But… plans change. It rained almost all weekend. Instead of a picnic Rebecca and I went to our local bakery and each got 3 pastries for 25 kroner (about $5). What a deal. So we ate pastries for lunch and watched My Girl on TV while it poured down rain. Friday night we met up with some friends for drinks downtown… a very nice evening. On our Tivoli day we ended up going to a park where all of the political parties of Denmark gathered for a 1st of May celebration… basically looked like any city fair (tents, music, food/drink). Since we didn’t understand any of the political speeches (they were in Danish) and it was raining we didn’t stay too long…. well we stayed long enough to partake in lunch. Crepes with ice cream anyone??? Sunday… it was finally SUNNY! Rebecca and I went down to the waterfront near our apartments and spent the day reading in the grass. The wind was a bit chilly but the sun warmed us. There were a few crazy Danes swimming… it is not warm enough to go swimming here.
For my last week in Copenhagen I have big plans. I have finished up the requirements to get credit for this elective… so I am technically done with medical school!! How exciting is that? Thought the day would never come. So now for celebration... on Wednesday a group of us are going to a soccer game… if I understand correctly it is the club championship for Demark. One of the teams is from Copenhagen and the other from just outside the city. It should be a fun evening. On Thursday I have to return my bike (sad) and then Rebecca and I are going to attempt an afternoon at Tivoli. Fingers crossed for good weather. Friday Matt is coming to Copenhagen!!! He is in Europe for work right now and is coming to visit me for my last weekend here. Andres, Anne, Matt, and I will travel to Aarhus on Friday to see Matt’s former foreign exchange student (and Andres’ sister) Mette defend her PhD thesis. It will be a great chance for Matt to see Mette again and for me to meet her/the rest of the Larsen family. We plan on returning to Copenhagen on Friday evening. Matt and I will be going to a play in Copenhagen on Saturday night and then meeting with one of the actors for a beer afterwards (Matt’s Aunt Laura is an actress and while studying in Denmark in the past met an actor here… we will be seeing his play and meeting up with him afterwards). Sunday… hopefully Matt and I can have a quiet day together before the craziness of graduation/moving/residency starts. Monday morning Matt will head to Italy for work and I will head home. Graduation is Friday.
I have had a great time here in Copenhagen but am ready to be home with family and friends for a bit before the next step. Given the restrictiveness of residency I will likely not be traveling/blogging for a bit… so for those how have been reading thanks and I hope you have enjoyed it. Until the next adventure.
Friday, April 23, 2010
Two weeks almost over already...
4/23/2010-
So… I have now been in Copenhagen for almost 2 weeks (1/2 of my time) and I haven’t blogged since I arrived… where has the time gone? Okay, here is an abbreviated update. I started at Hvidorve Hospital in the Ob/Gyn department and so far my time there has been great. I am on a rotation with about 12 Danish students and one other foreigner, Rebecca, from New Zealand (my new best friend). The hospital is a relatively large teaching facility associated with the University of Copenhagen. The level of care available is very similar to the US- which has been nice after spending time in an area with limited resources. It feels good to be able to offer patients optimal services. So far I have been rotating through the gynecology department (I will do obstetrics at the end of my time here). I have spent days on the inpatient ward, the operating theatre, the same day procedure room, and the outpatient clinic. Our mornings start at 8 AM with general rounds and then we go with our assigned physician for the day. Things tend to wrap up around 3 PM…. that’s right… the day last from 8 AM till 3 PM (Danes have a great appreciation for quality of life which means work hours are extremely reasonable). I have been biking to and from the hospital with Rebecca (who is basically my neighbor… so convenient) and it has been great. The trip is about 12 km one way and is a nice start and finish to the day- especially when you have time (minus getting stuck in the rain the other day). I have also been running by the water almost daily… the trails through the city are extremely well kept.
With spending comparatively few hours at the hospital, Rebecca and I have had ample time to explore the city. Copenhagen is beautiful, clean, organized, and just all around pleasant. Only drawback… it has been a bit chilly and windy here (a result of being so close to the ocean). So what have we done in the city to far….
Last Friday was the Queen of Denmark’s 70th Birthday. It was a great celebration. Rebecca and I were wondering downtown and before we knew it people were handing out Danish flags and lining up for a parade. Shortly after a small band, lots of uniformed Danes riding horses, and the Queen waving in a carriage passed by. We followed the parade and group of people to the City Square where she went to the balcony of City Hall to wave at her adoring people. After her appearance there was cake… that’s right… in the middle of City Square there were several large tables set up covered with free birthday cake for the people who had gathered. It was delicious! Rebecca and I spent the remainder of the day strolling around the city.
On Saturday… Rebecca and I took a canal tour which was a great way to get the lay of the land. We found a pizza buffet near the Central Station and enjoyed pizza and a beer for dinner. Rebecca is also a final year medical student interested in Ob/Gyn. She recently spent 6 weeks in Africa on placement at an HIV/AIDS clinic. We have many similarities and I am so thankful she is here. It is always more fun exploring with a friend. After dinner we met with Tobias, my mentor, and some of his friends for a few beers. The evening was very nice… except my phone was stolen out of my coat pocket at one of the pubs… bummer. So I now have a new number (Andres and Anne had an extra phone I will be using… just had to get another SIM card) +45 71 14 57 18.
Sunday, Andres and Anne picked me up at 10:00 AM and we drove north of Copenhagen to a castle (Kronborg), the oldest amusement park in Denmark (Andres and I took a trip on the wooden rollercoaster), and to the royal forest/hunting ground. It was a truly great day and I so appreciate their hospitality. Upon returning to Copenhagen we went over to Andres’ brother Soren’s house for dinner. Soren and his wife Anya have two beautiful children, Camilla and Mickel. Dinner was a delicious traditional Danish meal complete with crepes and ice cream for dessert. YUM!! Andres’ sister, Mette, was an exchange student of Matt’s family when he was in high school. Their mother, Bodil, was an exchange student of Matt’s mom when she was in high school. Mette is a physician in Denmark and will be defending her PhD thesis on my last Friday here. I hope to travel with Andres and Anne to see the defense and finally meet Mette (and the rest of the Larsen family).
Week two at the hospital was as enjoyable as the first. Rebecca and I went in on Wednesday when all of the other students had classes in Danish. Being the only students there… the head of the department was so pleased to see us at morning rounds he did part of them in English in our honor (it was so nice to be able to understand). I also got to be first assist in 3 urogyn. surgeries which was great. That evening we went to a movie at the Cinema with Tobias and his friend Frederick. In Denmark all films are shown in the original language with subtitles… so Rebecca and I could understand!!! Yeah. The theatre is in the newer part of Copenhagen… basically a large shopping center and apartments very similar to what you would see in the US.
This weekend Rebecca and I have more big plans of exploring the city… maybe some shopping, touring a few museums, wandering around the palace/royal cathedral, and possibly seeing a ballet. We have a list of things we would like to do before our time in Copenhagen is over…. So we just keep moving.
Side note- an obligatory part of exploring any new city/country is partaking in the local cuisine. In case there was any concern… Rebecca and I are doing a wonderful job of this… pastries, lattes and cake, ice cream, sea food, fresh salads w/ amazing bread. It is all sooo delicious. I am trying to exercise some self control. That is all for now. Hope all is well on the other side of the pond.
So… I have now been in Copenhagen for almost 2 weeks (1/2 of my time) and I haven’t blogged since I arrived… where has the time gone? Okay, here is an abbreviated update. I started at Hvidorve Hospital in the Ob/Gyn department and so far my time there has been great. I am on a rotation with about 12 Danish students and one other foreigner, Rebecca, from New Zealand (my new best friend). The hospital is a relatively large teaching facility associated with the University of Copenhagen. The level of care available is very similar to the US- which has been nice after spending time in an area with limited resources. It feels good to be able to offer patients optimal services. So far I have been rotating through the gynecology department (I will do obstetrics at the end of my time here). I have spent days on the inpatient ward, the operating theatre, the same day procedure room, and the outpatient clinic. Our mornings start at 8 AM with general rounds and then we go with our assigned physician for the day. Things tend to wrap up around 3 PM…. that’s right… the day last from 8 AM till 3 PM (Danes have a great appreciation for quality of life which means work hours are extremely reasonable). I have been biking to and from the hospital with Rebecca (who is basically my neighbor… so convenient) and it has been great. The trip is about 12 km one way and is a nice start and finish to the day- especially when you have time (minus getting stuck in the rain the other day). I have also been running by the water almost daily… the trails through the city are extremely well kept.
With spending comparatively few hours at the hospital, Rebecca and I have had ample time to explore the city. Copenhagen is beautiful, clean, organized, and just all around pleasant. Only drawback… it has been a bit chilly and windy here (a result of being so close to the ocean). So what have we done in the city to far….
Last Friday was the Queen of Denmark’s 70th Birthday. It was a great celebration. Rebecca and I were wondering downtown and before we knew it people were handing out Danish flags and lining up for a parade. Shortly after a small band, lots of uniformed Danes riding horses, and the Queen waving in a carriage passed by. We followed the parade and group of people to the City Square where she went to the balcony of City Hall to wave at her adoring people. After her appearance there was cake… that’s right… in the middle of City Square there were several large tables set up covered with free birthday cake for the people who had gathered. It was delicious! Rebecca and I spent the remainder of the day strolling around the city.
On Saturday… Rebecca and I took a canal tour which was a great way to get the lay of the land. We found a pizza buffet near the Central Station and enjoyed pizza and a beer for dinner. Rebecca is also a final year medical student interested in Ob/Gyn. She recently spent 6 weeks in Africa on placement at an HIV/AIDS clinic. We have many similarities and I am so thankful she is here. It is always more fun exploring with a friend. After dinner we met with Tobias, my mentor, and some of his friends for a few beers. The evening was very nice… except my phone was stolen out of my coat pocket at one of the pubs… bummer. So I now have a new number (Andres and Anne had an extra phone I will be using… just had to get another SIM card) +45 71 14 57 18.
Sunday, Andres and Anne picked me up at 10:00 AM and we drove north of Copenhagen to a castle (Kronborg), the oldest amusement park in Denmark (Andres and I took a trip on the wooden rollercoaster), and to the royal forest/hunting ground. It was a truly great day and I so appreciate their hospitality. Upon returning to Copenhagen we went over to Andres’ brother Soren’s house for dinner. Soren and his wife Anya have two beautiful children, Camilla and Mickel. Dinner was a delicious traditional Danish meal complete with crepes and ice cream for dessert. YUM!! Andres’ sister, Mette, was an exchange student of Matt’s family when he was in high school. Their mother, Bodil, was an exchange student of Matt’s mom when she was in high school. Mette is a physician in Denmark and will be defending her PhD thesis on my last Friday here. I hope to travel with Andres and Anne to see the defense and finally meet Mette (and the rest of the Larsen family).
Week two at the hospital was as enjoyable as the first. Rebecca and I went in on Wednesday when all of the other students had classes in Danish. Being the only students there… the head of the department was so pleased to see us at morning rounds he did part of them in English in our honor (it was so nice to be able to understand). I also got to be first assist in 3 urogyn. surgeries which was great. That evening we went to a movie at the Cinema with Tobias and his friend Frederick. In Denmark all films are shown in the original language with subtitles… so Rebecca and I could understand!!! Yeah. The theatre is in the newer part of Copenhagen… basically a large shopping center and apartments very similar to what you would see in the US.
This weekend Rebecca and I have more big plans of exploring the city… maybe some shopping, touring a few museums, wandering around the palace/royal cathedral, and possibly seeing a ballet. We have a list of things we would like to do before our time in Copenhagen is over…. So we just keep moving.
Side note- an obligatory part of exploring any new city/country is partaking in the local cuisine. In case there was any concern… Rebecca and I are doing a wonderful job of this… pastries, lattes and cake, ice cream, sea food, fresh salads w/ amazing bread. It is all sooo delicious. I am trying to exercise some self control. That is all for now. Hope all is well on the other side of the pond.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Welcome to Copenhagen...
4/13/10-
Just a short note to let you know I have arrived safely in Copenhagen and am settling in well. I landed on Sunday around noon and was met at the airport by my mentor, Tobias. He is a final year medical student at the University of Copenhagen. We will both be spending the next month at Hvidovre Hospital in the OB/GYN department. Tobias spent some time at the University of Iowa last summer/fall working in cardiology. He was kind enough to meet me at the airport and help me navigate public transportation to the apartment I will be renting for the next month. I am staying in a two bedroom unit in Amagar, which is just south of the city. The accommodations are very nice… complete with kitchen, bathroom, internet, and cable. What more could a girl want? I will be here alone till the beginning of May when an Italian engineering student will move into the other bedroom.
After dropping my bags off Tobias and I had lunch and saw a bit of the city. I returned to my apartment, went for a run, and tried to stay awake as long as possible… attempting to adjust to the new time zone. I made it till 9 PM… and awoke at 8 AM Monday morning feeling refreshed. I explored my neighborhood, found the local Aldi grocery store, and then jumped on the metro to the city. I activated my cell phone… so feel free to call +45 50 17 58 66. Tobias and I again met for lunch. And… I got a bicycle!!! Everyone gets around Copenhagen on bicycles… so now I fit in. Tobias looked a bit concerned about my cycling abilities (I don’t have a bike in IC so it has been several years since I have ridden). I said “No worries Tobias…” and rode to the grocery store and then home. This morning (Tuesday) I went for a run along the water and will be heading into the city shortly. I am meeting up with Andres and Anne (friends of Matt and I’s who live in Denmark- we stayed with them in Jamaica three years ago over a spring break) this evening for dinner. My placement at the hospital begins on Wednesday which should be interesting. All I know so far is we work from 8 AM-3 PM Monday-Friday… pretty nice!
Just a short note to let you know I have arrived safely in Copenhagen and am settling in well. I landed on Sunday around noon and was met at the airport by my mentor, Tobias. He is a final year medical student at the University of Copenhagen. We will both be spending the next month at Hvidovre Hospital in the OB/GYN department. Tobias spent some time at the University of Iowa last summer/fall working in cardiology. He was kind enough to meet me at the airport and help me navigate public transportation to the apartment I will be renting for the next month. I am staying in a two bedroom unit in Amagar, which is just south of the city. The accommodations are very nice… complete with kitchen, bathroom, internet, and cable. What more could a girl want? I will be here alone till the beginning of May when an Italian engineering student will move into the other bedroom.
After dropping my bags off Tobias and I had lunch and saw a bit of the city. I returned to my apartment, went for a run, and tried to stay awake as long as possible… attempting to adjust to the new time zone. I made it till 9 PM… and awoke at 8 AM Monday morning feeling refreshed. I explored my neighborhood, found the local Aldi grocery store, and then jumped on the metro to the city. I activated my cell phone… so feel free to call +45 50 17 58 66. Tobias and I again met for lunch. And… I got a bicycle!!! Everyone gets around Copenhagen on bicycles… so now I fit in. Tobias looked a bit concerned about my cycling abilities (I don’t have a bike in IC so it has been several years since I have ridden). I said “No worries Tobias…” and rode to the grocery store and then home. This morning (Tuesday) I went for a run along the water and will be heading into the city shortly. I am meeting up with Andres and Anne (friends of Matt and I’s who live in Denmark- we stayed with them in Jamaica three years ago over a spring break) this evening for dinner. My placement at the hospital begins on Wednesday which should be interesting. All I know so far is we work from 8 AM-3 PM Monday-Friday… pretty nice!
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