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The day I did surgery dressed like a priest

I remember that fateful Friday as if it was yesterday. I had been on call for two days, and I left the hospital at 7.50 am to dash home to grab a shower before going back to the district hospital where I was working as an intern. No sooner had I gotten home than my phone rang. It was maternity, and anyone who has been there knows how the story goes…. You know, rifaroos and emergencies as the sisters like calling them. I dashed into the bathroom and showered as fast as I could. There was no time to eat breakfast, for the ambulance was waiting outside. I got to the hospital, and there was an emergency for real. She was a primigravida, who had been draining liquor for more than 3 days in a certain dispensary which did not deem it appropriate to refer a patient who was clearly having obstructed labor. Somehow the fetus was still fighting, but the distress was obvious. A foul smell was emanating from the birth canal and the fetal heart rate was misbehaving. For once I heard those acceleration and decelerations that they describe in obstetric books.
I quickly prescribed a caesarian section, and not long afterwards, the patient was wheeled to theatre as evidenced by the meticulous nursing cardex. Nurses love to cover their asses. As the anesthetist was receiving the patient, I scanned through the cardex. It had all the details anyone wishing to crucify you would look for, including the time when the ambulance came for me and when I arrived at the hospital. These things are recorded in real time.
I rushed to the changing room to put on my scrubs in readiness for the operation. My fellow intern, Dr. Doreen, had just arrived. I welcomed her to theatre. The anesthetist was ready and the nurse was busy setting for us. Dr. Doreen and I had scrubbed, and we were waiting for gowns to be placed on the cart. Then something unexpected happened. The nurse announced that there were no gowns. I was furious. It was true that we had done a couple of caesarian sections the previous night, but that was no excuse as to why there were no gowns. The nurse explained that the autoclave machine had broken down in the wee hours of the night, and the maintenance guys could not figure out what was wrong with it. In short, the gowns were stuck in the damn machine.
We stared at each other as we pondered our next move. In our naivety, we thought of referring until one of the nurses suggested that we improvise. Believe it or not, she got two abdominal sheets for us, and we put them on. The sides were clipped with artery forceps. One nurse walked into theatre as we just about to start operating and her words echo in my ears up to date. She joked about it. “Dr. Mburu and Dr. Doreen, have you changed professions? The place of priests is in the altar where they consecrate bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus Christ, not theatre, where blood is the order of the day.”
As the anesthetist gave us the go ahead to cut through the skin, another nurse joked. “Mass is about to begin! In the name of the Father, Son and the Holy Spirit.” We literally waded through the operation, and our encounters in there are events that made me very sad. As we made a smile incision in the lower uterine segment of the uterus overt chorioamnionitis was staring at us. A foul irritating smell that is similar to that of pungent chlorine hit our nasal cavities, but then we were keener on extracting the fetus. It could not get worse. As I handed over the kid to the receiving nurse, I saw her face drop. I could tell it was a fresh still birth. They tried resuscitating to no avail as I battled with bleeders. Streaks of blood were dripping to the floor as if it was a stream. I tried packing, but the bleeding was still torrential. I requested the anesthetist to pump more oxytocin for the uterus to contract more, but that did not help either. I requested the sister to call the lab to get blood for the dying mother but as it is in our labs, there was no blood. It was only when I clumped the uterine arteries that the bleeding stopped. I asked for plasma expanders, only to be shocked that a whole district hospital did not know what those were. At that moment the MO called the consultant to bail us out. Our woes were far from over. Long before we knew it the anesthetist mumbled something that I did not quite get. I watched as his instincts swung into action. The patient was still lying supine on the table with an open abdomen as the consultant scrubbed when the anesthetist did something unexpected. He reversed the general anesthesia he had administered to the patient. We stared at him in shock. I could not understand why he would do such a thing given that our patient had almost gone into shock. Then he explained. “The cylinder that supplies oxygen is out of gas, and there is no reserve. I had to reverse GA so that she can breathe for herself.”
As I paved way for the consultant to proceed with the operation, I felt a wave of sadness sweep through me. My heart was hollow. I chose to become a doctor so that I can help the suffering, but how do I do that if I do not have equipments and drugs to do achieve my goals? The consultant, just like us, was dressed in an abdominal sheet, which served as a substitute to a gown.
To bring this story to a culmination, I wish to state that the mother eventually left the operating table stable, without a child and without a uterus. Please bear in mind that the child she was carrying was her first, and sadly, her last.

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38 thoughts on “The day I did surgery dressed like a priest

  1. this should find its way to peremendemovement or KMPDU site

  2. Allan Gohole on said:

    At least the abdominal sheets were sterile and you did what you could. We all have our hard-times internshit stories like doing five C/sections through the night on New years eve and not even remembering which mama was which when I came to review later the following day.

  3. KMPDU had a right to strike then pole boss . i had missed ua writtings

  4. chemtai on said:

    We should get this published in one of the dailies, have a reporter pick up this story… Kenyan’s need to know the details of the price they are paying

  5. Makanga on said:

    Happened to me as well, Used a center ‘O’ drape to fit my head through it and voila I had a gown 9this was in a major referral Hospital BTW…

  6. So I see these things are all over Kenya. It is such a shame. In this century, time and age some things should not be happening.

  7. Zachariah abina on said:

    When i look at the facts in this story i wonder why should be paying taxes at all

    • I am not a politician, but you have the right to hold people accountable. Next time there is an election we have to ask them what agenda they have as far as health is concerned.

  8. afrimagnate on said:

    I honestly have no words to say. I could die of depression if i had to go through this as a routine.

  9. karimi on said:

    U guy u have a blog! Just seen the link on twitter…

  10. brenda lisa on said:

    could not have put it better i thought that stuff only happened at our hospital. gosh,do people know that its their right to get proper health care?.
    you really should have this put in the newspapers.superbly written.very,very sad story though

    • It is sad indeed. Thanks for appreciating my writing. I hope that one day, God willing, I will be writing for some paper, a column similar to Surgeon’s Diary.

  11. John Moindi on said:

    As a priest, i know hw spiritual and prayerful u were as u performed the suggery!

  12. Pingback: The day I did surgery dressed like a priest « Peremende

  13. What on Earth is happening in our public hospitals?

  14. Its only God can really pay u for what u do. no amount of cash can do.

    • Believe me, there is nothing that is more fulfilling than seeing people who came to the hospital on the verge of death walking out of the same hospital on their own feet. We treat, God cures.

  15. Ladylizbizz on said:

    This is really sad, shocking and trully unacceptable. Where is this country going to?

  16. Mwangs on said:

    It is terribly sad to see such things happen in our public hospitals. Quick question though, why is it that only young doctors are protesting on the streets and being vocal about changing the health care system. Does it mean that your older colleagues are too busy with their clinics or they are used to the system hence no need to whine about it…..

    • Our colleagues who have been in the system for a while have suffered, but have accepted the status quo. In addition, as one advances, you become senior, and the number of working hours reduces. The more junior one is, the more the work, and the more time one spends in the deplorable hospitals. Younger doctors see where they are going and have refused to suffer in silence.

  17. hausofjoy on said:

    God bless the work you do Doc. still cannot come to terms with what I’ve just read. we have no government in place to say the least. n what do they do with all NHIF contributions they collect? shame!

  18. Kerubo on said:

    My goodness! I am so sorry that you had to go through this – and you’re brave! My heart goes out to this woman who will never be a mother. We live in a dark world.

    • Kerubo, there are many more. If all doctors were to recount their ordeals you would be in tears. Behind those smiles are untold stories that sadden the heart.

  19. I hate this! And it happens over and over again and nothing is done no matter how hard you complain. I had to quit my job because of this! I was tired of crying every day!

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