Mozambique - 40 Years Later
My First Years in Mozambique - amid the war
Mozambique gained independence from Portuguese colonial rule in 1975. A civil war followed from 1977 to 1992, the impact of which included enormous loss of life and human rights violations, along with the decimation of local infrastructure including health. The war left a legacy of poverty for a large part of the population, along with a lack of health infrastructure and resources and qualified health professionals to meet the needs of individuals and communities. Public health problems, in particular HIV, tuberculosis and malaria, currently have a significant burden of disease with high mortality and morbidity rates.
When I agreed to go off to work in Mozambique, I was in my early thirties and six years into my medical career. The Health Minister of that time sent me to the town of Chokwe, where I served from 1977 until 1981 as Chief Physician of the Limpopo District in the province of Xai-Xai, Mozambique. I was the only doctor and only surgeon responsible for the care of some three hundred thousand people. I was assisted by local nurses of various origins, including two medics from Guinea Conakry and some sisters of the Daughters of Charity of San Vincenzo de Paoli.
When I reached Chokwe, I found that reality was beyond my faintest imagination. A measles epidemic was killing and blinding children under the indifferent eyes of local nurses and nuns. Life had no meaning.
Parts of the hospital were unfinished, most importantly the operating theatre and surgery block. Rooms in the wards were filled with patients. Midwifery assistance to women delivering babies was minimal. Surgery was limited to cesarean sections performed by a medic from Guinea Conakry.
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The Rural Hospital, Chokwe 1977. A Sister accompanying two women and a child to the hospital |
I got to work. I spent much of my first two years reorganizing staff responsibilities, establishing workflows, setting weekly timetables, setting protocols of treatment. At the same time we had to finish the masonry work. All this in addition to the clinical and surgical work.
My leadership style was collegial but firm, and often against the will of several in the hospital who saw their power curtailed. But there were those on my side who had being waiting for change. Among these, there were Felipe, my surgery assistant, Cheli the nurse cum anaesthesiologist, and Sister Maddalena Serra, Italian, a nurse. She was, and still is, dedicated beyond expectations. I thought at that time she could do more, so overtime I gave her more responsibilities.
The Decision
Then in early 1979, I asked Sister Maddalena to reorganize and manage the health unit in the village of Chalucuane. The village was about 60 kilometres away, but in the rainy season it remained isolated due to the lack of a good road.
Unexpectedly, this move led the Sisters to discover cases of HIV/AIDS and to envision systemic changes in district health services to fight the HIV epidemic. The move ultimately led to the rise of the Carmelo Hospital.
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Sister Maddalena and I working inside a building left decaying after the inauguration of a new unit in 2010. Below is a view of the outside. |
While treating tuberculosis patients in Chalucuane, Sister Maddalena and other Daughters of Charity who had come to stay with her, discovered many unjustified therapeutic failures.
It should be emphasized that in those years there was still no talk of AIDS in the country. The epidemic had begun but had not yet been recognized. Taking advantage of a donation of HIV test kits from Spain, the nuns began testing patients. They discovered an HIV sero-prevelance of 30%. The combination of HIV with tuberculosis has a devastating impact on mortality and morbidity, but it also has serious social dimensions, such as the impact on family life and cohesion, economic and food security, disability and stigma. Sister Elisa was telling me "we tried everything ... but they --the AIDS patients-- were just dying."
A New Hospital
In order to deal with the emergence of the epidemic, the Sisters needed an appropriate structure. There was an abandoned convent in Chokwe, built in 1964. The nuns had been forced to leave it in 1976, one year after independence from Portuguese rule. It was returned to the Church in 1993. This building would become what is today the 125 bed Carmelo Hospital, a national reference unit for tuberculosis and HIV.
The hospital opened to its first patients on May 10, 1995. Led by the Daughters of Charity, the hospital now has Mozambican doctors, houses a sophisticated diagnostic and analysis laboratory, a bakery, a center for orphaned AIDS children and a kitchen that serves three meals a day. Hospital social workers regularly fan out to visit the families of patients in their villages to monitor the continuity of treatment and provide health support and guidance.
The Carmelo Hospital is part of the National Health system, but is run by the Daughters of Charity, a community of women who dedicate their lives to serving the poorest and most abandoned in a world fractured by poverty, social iniquity and suffering. The hospital provides care and medical assistance where it is needed. But it also ensures that orphaned children of AIDS get a family, often a grandmother, or a young relative. When needed, the hospital provides a roof, food, school supplies, and financial aid.
Solidarity and mutual assistance underpin local social structures - both within the nuclear family but also within the extended family. Everyone is responsible and cares for those in need. The nuns integrate this cultural principle through a holistic approach to individuals and the well-being of the community, regardless of the origin, religion or faith of each.
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Doctor Edy |
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Medication time |
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Meal, one of three a day, distribution |
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A nurse |
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A detail |
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Carmelo Hospital today |
My Return to Chokwe
After forty years I entered the Carmelo Hospital for the first time, and I discovered a hospital totally dedicated to the treatment of patients with HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis, thus flanking the rural hospital where I had worked more than 40 years before.
It is estimated that 46.3% of children in Mozambique face multi-dimensional poverty, so the approach to the care of patients with HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis by the Daughters of Charity is to follow them from the beginning until recovery, and recognize that treating the disease alone is not enough, but that people also need practical and social support in terms of food, medicine, housing and education.
Let me finish by quoting again The Lancet, "To work in medicine is to be a witness to both the inspiring winds of change and the rubble left behind by those for whom that change came too late."
I personally felt this at the time and still feel it today. For today's oncologists, infectious disease doctors, and neurologists, supporting patients relies on the knowledge that so many treatments are within reach. Medicine needs to acknowledge the wreckage of the past while also looking to the future and progress."
The Sisters saw the beginning of the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the human wreckage it created. But they had faith that treatment would ultimately be found.
I took the following photos on my return to Chokwe and the Carmelo Hospital.
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2019. Grandmother and her granddaughter after receiving financial support and fortified food |
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2023. Same grandmother and girl child as above after four years |
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Wilson's M mother receiving a cash handout |
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Antonio one of social workers assessing living conditions as WIlson's mother look over |
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The hut and Wilson's mother |
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Wilson and his hut where he lives with his mother and another five siblings |
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The back of the hut |
Heart warming to read such a personal account of huge and long lasting benefit produced by your medical training and management and leadership ability.Warmest congratulationsd
ReplyDeleteSuch a delight to read. I thought this was a powerful story, and a true one as well.
ReplyDeleteSuch medical talent wasted on pushing paper for UNICEF
ReplyDelete<3 and :)
ReplyDeleteThank you Gianni for this and for having been a positive force in my life. Bonne continuation. XOX
What amazing and interesting stories. You sure managed incredible challenges.Thank you Gianni.
ReplyDeleteGianni, must have been emotional to return to your hospital after 40 years and witness the improvements you had initiated. - it is wonderful to read about and see the images of the dedicated Sisters of Charity and the staff in a situation of heavy demand for their services/ care and limited resources. Hope your account can be used by them for raising funds for Carmelo and the communities it serves. Sree
ReplyDeleteThanks to Maie, Bill, Steve and the Unknown for your comments. Yes, my Mozambican experience was and still is an emotions stirring one. I was the only fully trained doctor there and did not have the opportunity to do clinical post mortem reviews and talk about the post traumatic stress and feelings I suffered at that time—a burden I carried along with me all these 45 something years. I have plenty of successful stories, but I do have my failures both as a medical doctor as well as a UNICEF staff member. In Mozambique, the Daughters of Charity did all the systemic change we now see in Chokwe working tirelessly from 1981 till now. I was a catalyser.
ReplyDeleteGoing to the comment of the Unknown. I never felt wasted or that I was pushing papers while in UNICEF. On the contrary. I am ready to talk about it. I would put my face to it and not hide under the anonymity blanket. I would not use the blog for this purpose or to be sarcastic about, or criticise, former colleagues.
In fact, I cherish the Blog as it is—a place of unity and sharing, a place where one can find about the beauty of others’ creative talents, travels or art.
Thank you Sree and Horst for your comments. Yes, I am talking to the Sisters, as well as other entities interested in Mozambique and its evolution, and professional photographers about how to best use the material I have been collecting all these years about Mozambique.
ReplyDelete