2 posts tagged “community”
After lunch
I went over to 7-11 to have a cup of coffee.
The afternoon heat was making me sleepy.
I continued reading 1984 at
the edge of my seat but seemingly disinterested with half-closed eyes. Then for a moment there I thought I could do this.
This being I could work in a
sleepy health center in some far-off barangay, see patients in the morning and
read the whole afternoon. In a sense it
was not all that different from my previous work as a research assistant in a
molecular microbiology lab a stone’s throw from the beach.
Looking back, I remember working from 8 to 5, reading novels during the waiting time in between PCR’s, gel electrophoresis and culture preparations. After work I would go straight to the cafeteria and have an early dinner while watching the local news. By 6 pm I was back in my dorm room rekindling my love affair with books. I usually dragged my chair out to the terrace and continued reading while smoking my Camels.
Things have changed a lot since then. I no longer work in research and have not done any molecular biology work in almost 5 years. But like before I have rekindled my love for reading. I have become a polybookist, not content in reading one book at a time but having a specific book to read to complement my different moods. I have long quit smoking and replaced cigarettes with coffee. And with my caffeine dependence I have become a chain reader.
Going back to my present situation at the barangay health center: depending on the day of the week I help immunize 80 or so children, either see around 40 pregnant women for their prenatal check-up or around the same number of patients with various complaints. In the afternoon I read. This morning there were 91 children who came in for immunization. After an early lunch I finished George Orwell’s 1984.
In the
afternoon I was left wondering if I should finish Charles Bukowski’s Factotum which I started yesterday or
plunge deep into Haruki Murakami’s Kafka
on the Shore.
I still
believe what my sister said year’s ago is right. If I had a year off to read I would learn
more and be wiser than if I spent the year studying in school. If I finish my whole TBR pile (130+ good
books – including books on history, travel and philosophy) and barely passed
the med boards it would still be worth it.
I’m back to watching House, MD.
I suppose this is another one of my ploys to get my interest (in medicine) back. It has to work. It should work. I’m still trying to get hold of a DVD player so I can watch ER.
But Community (and Family) Medicine is actually something
I like. Maybe it’ll help that it’s my
last rotation, same as last year as a Junior Intern.
Last Saturday, for my first day in Community
Medicine, we had a medical mission deep into one of the barangay’s we would
have to serve. The smell of tobacco was
unmistakable as we were set up in a covered gym near a tobacco factory. No wonder we get all kinds of respiratory
consults.
A long time ago I always thought medical missions
were the way to go. But as I went
through med school (actually, as I got older) I understood that in the bigger
picture of health care they almost mean nothing. The people who actually seek consult during
med missions are not always that concerned about their health. They’re just there for the freebies. I generally ask patients to follow-up in
their local health centers but I suppose only a small fraction do.
I do understand that however one looks at it medical
missions are still a lot of help. But I
wish I could instill in those patients that health care is not a one way
street. Wellness and Health Care is a
big highway where the input of the patients and their relatives mean as much as
the input of the health care staff. I
want to tell them, I’m giving you this consult not just to give you free
meds. I’m here not to treat your cough/
colds/ headache/ dizziness/ muscle ache/ stomachache or whatever you have. I am here to educate you to take better care
of your health. I am here to tell you
there is much you can do to make things better.
But how exactly can I say so much in a span of a 5-minute consult when all they want is for me to give them a prescription so they can get multivitamins and cough syrup from the pharmacy for free?
There just has to be a better way.