- Australian Doctors International
Transcription
- Australian Doctors International
RD. J UNE 1 1 . P G0 2 0 . p d f Pa ge 2 0 1 8 / 5 / 1 1 , 1 : 1 6 PM Northern exposure After the tough arena of state politics, Dr Peter Macdonald is using his negotiating skills to bring primary health care to remote parts of Papua New Guinea. A group of volunteer doctors is helping him tackle the appalling state of health just beyond our border, and more volunteers are needed, as HEATHER WISEMAN reports. I It’s a place where eyes and limbs are still lost to leprosy. It has the world’s highest rate of elephantiasis. Babies born there are 10 times as likely to die in their first year as those born in Australia, yet it’s just 150km from the Australian mainland. “In Papua New Guinea, health is in a crisis,” says Dr Peter Macdonald, a GP who is president of Australian Doctors International (ADI), an organisation bringing primary care to remote parts of PNG. “All the indicators are appalling, from infant mortality 20 | Australian Rural Doctor | June 2011 through to maternal mortality. Malaria is rife. TB is out of control and HIV is the highest rate in the Pacific.” Dr Macdonald is chipping away at the base of this colossal problem. The former state government politician relies on a special breed of GP to help him; the kind who can fix a broken generator, distinguish between lepromatour and paucibacillary leprosy, cross rickety bridges and doesn’t mind sleeping rough. Usually, they’re GPs who have worked in remote Aboriginal communities or studied tropical medicine – and often they’re women. “Probably 75% of our doctors are women,” Dr Macdonald says. “I can’t tell you why that is.” After four months working across the Torres Strait, volunteers return a few kilos lighter, with riveting stories and a disdain for sago. ADI is a not-for-profit medicalaid organisation which, despite its title, focuses exclusively on PNG. Eight directors, including Dr Macdonald, made personal contributions to kick-start it nine Continued page 22 Pa ge 2 1 1 8 / 5 / 1 1 , 1 : 1 7 PM ADI volunteer Dr Denise Wild transporting a patient in the Western Province. June 2011 | Australian Rural Doctor | All photos courtesy of ADI RD. J UNE 1 1 . P G0 2 1 . p d f 21 RD. J UNE 1 1 . P G0 2 2 . p d f Pa ge 2 2 1 8 / 5 / 1 1 , 1 : 1 8 PM Continued from page 20 Rewarding but confronting: Melbourne GP plans next trip r Denise Wild vividly recalls the emotional impact of watching a young woman walk away to die. The woman, in her mid-20s, had end-stage renal failure and was dehydrated and uremic, having spent 12 hours travelling by boat to access care. “We threw around options, like transferring her to a major hospital, but she chose to go back to her village and we knew that’s where she would die. She didn’t want any more intervention,” Dr Wild says. “We come from a system where we put all our resources into managing patients, so that was a confronting situation for me. “It hit home, that so many young people are faced with these chronic conditions that could be managed with good access to medical care.” Dr Wild and her husband, Marco Sartori, a carpenter, spent three-and-a-half months working in Western Province last year. She went to PNG as a medical student in 1995 and decided then she would return when she had better skills. In 2008 she studied a diploma of tropical medicine in the UK, which gave her “the extra push to get out there and do it”. Dr Wild, who works in a group practice in the Melbourne, has done many locums in rural WA and far north Queensland. “I worked in Aboriginal communities, which was really helpful for setting me up to work in remote parts of PNG,” she says. On patrols, her team usually stayed in a small house with a priest or nun. “We were sleeping in basic houses, like tin sheds, on camping mats. It was a bit rough, but we are hikers and campers so it wasn’t a huge deal,” she says. “But the food got to us. Sago is the most boring food I’ve ever encountered.” Dr Wild says she’ll work in PNG again. “I think I’m still recovering, so I’m not sure when that would be,” she says. “It will be rewarding to see the work ADI has done that has been continued.” D 22 | Australian Rural Doctor | June 2011 years ago, before receiving support from Rotary, Ok Tedi Mining and Roche. At the time of going to press, ADI had not received any government funding, but Dr Macdonald was optimistic it would soon achieve AusAID accreditation and receive $150,000 for each of five years. Dr Macdonald’s interest in PNG was sparked after he was contacted by a Catholic bishop who was concerned about the welfare of 10,000 West Papuan refugees who had fled Indonesian authorities. In January 2002, Dr Macdonald visited and saw the desperate need to improve health services across the province. He signed a partnership agreement with the Diocese of DaruKiunga, the most effective health services provider in the region, and with the provincial government. “To work in any developing country you need a local partner to make things happen,” Dr Macdonald says. Earlier this year, he travelled to Port Moresby to sign an agreement with former PNG prime minster Sir Julius Chan, who is now governor of New Ireland Province. Despite a population of about 200,000, the province has no doctors dedicated to primary care. The agreement will allow ADI to provide health services to 62 rural clinics. ADI deploys health managers, as well as GPs. The “doctor-supervised integrated health patrols” head out for four weeks at a time, treating patients, providing health education and training clinic staff. Dr Macdonald says that over the years, the organisation realised there was a lack of good management in the health centres. “If we’re going to leave a lasting benefit, management of the health centres is crucial,” he says. While clinic staff are now better at getting medical supplies and monitoring cold chains, corruption at all levels of government draws from limited funds directed to health. Dr Macdonald says PNG governments are indifferent to the appalling state of the country’s health services. Above (left): a child with grille, a common skin condition in the Western Province, and (right), leprosy is highly treatable but needs 6-12 months of continuous medication. RD. J UNE 1 1 . P G0 2 3 . p d f Pa ge 2 3 1 8 / 5 / 1 1 , 1 : 1 9 PM Former MP drawn to trouble spots Dr Peter Macdonald says his experience as a state and local politician has helped him achieve what he has for ADI. The former mayor of Manly Council, who still serves as a councillor, says his profile in Sydney’s northern suburbs had helped open doors to fundraising and sponsorship successes. “When negotiating with authorities and senior officials in Port Moresby or going to Canberra and negotiating with AusAID, those skills that come from years in political spheres are helpful for sure,” he says. Dr Macdonald, a GP anaesthetist, was born in Scotland and moved to Australia in 1972. In 2007 his passion for politics was declining and he yearned to push himself further, clinically. Since then, he has spent 4-5 months a year doing locums in the NT, in challenging communities such as Wadeye. “I thought, ‘This will put me outside my comfort zone’. And it does, really. Clinically the demands and responsibilities are very high compared with having worked mainly in general practice settings in the city.” His commitment to PNG remains strong, but his focus there is on logistics, developing busi- “We’re very careful to try to work within the current system. Doctors might carry starter packs, but we have to remedy proper supply lines.” DR PETER MACDONALD d Dr Peter Macdonald ... his political experience has served him well in Papua New Guinea. ness plans, action plans and patrol plans and having them endorsed and supported by local authorities. His lobbying efforts have extended to highlighting what impact he thinks PNG’s TB crisis will have in Australia, as patients with drugresistant TB travel seeking health services. “Many health facilities have no power, no water, no fridges, so there are no cold chains and staff morale is at rock bottom because they don’t very often get paid. “We are constantly badgering provincial and local governments to bring about an improvement.” When ADI discovered cases of leprosy in remote areas of Western Province, provincial and national departments of health denied the disease existed. Finally they admitted it but then it took up to two years to get leprosy medications released from Port Moresby. “It will come into northern Queensland. Already there is evidence of that happening,” he says. “It’s a no-brainer. The Australian Government should be improving health services in the southern region of PNG, opposite the tip of Cape York, to stem that flow.” Doctors had to submit forms to Port Moresby requesting medication for each patient. “It’s incredibly bureaucratic, with tragic results,” Dr Macdonald says. The same problem works against the effective treatment of TB, but addressing the issue isn’t as simple as ensuring that doctors take medication with them. When doctors are visiting remote areas every 3-6 months, they need to ensure the supply of medication will continue after they’ve gone, or risk non-compliance and disease resistance. “We’re very careful to try to Continued next page June 2011 | Australian Rural Doctor | 23 RD. J UNE 1 1 . P G0 2 4 . p d f Pa ge Continued from previous page 2 4 1 8 / 5 / 1 1 , 1 : 2 0 PM Jack of all trades work within the current system,” Dr Macdonald says. “Doctors might carry starter packs, but we have to remedy proper supply lines.” He says that while ADI is now getting regular supplies of leprosy drugs into Western Province’s Middle Fly region, it is not having the same success with TB, largely because treatment requires 3-4 drugs and effective contact tracing. “TB is proving to be a real struggle,” Dr Macdonald says. “I’ve talked to AusAID and asked them to assist in their representations at a higher level.” One of ADI’s great successes is a public health program that has distributed about 55,000 bed nets. In just one year, the long-life nets, impregnated with insecticide, resulted in a 46% decrease in malaria cases presenting at one hospital in Western Province’s One wonders what the locals were thinking as they watched Dr Marg Purcell drive, in reverse, around and around their village. In her usual self-reliant style, she’d decided she needed to master reversing a trailer without jackknifing, as no one else in her team could do it. Having been to PNG four times with ADI, Dr Purcell (picture right) has fixed generators and temperamental 4WDs, and taught her boatman to drive. “He used to sit in the middle of the road. I’d keep saying ‘It’s not a river, move to the left,” she says. Dr Purcell, a GP who is a senior medical officer at Mareeba Hospital, near Cairns, has worked for many years in Indigenous health care and isolated communities. She has entertaining diary entries from her time in PNG, including a boat trip in which her travelling companions relied on her new canoe paddle to bludgeon a cassowary about the head. “I was, of course, horrified, but realised my privileged Western, vegetarian sensitivities had no place in this jungle where people see wildlife for the protein it is,” she says. Dr Purcell was disturbed to meet a 16-year-old girl with Hodgkin’s lymphoma who was admitted to a hospital in Port Moresby, but sent home, untreated. Her discharge summary read “drugs not given as none available”. “If the country can’t manage to treat a 16-year-old with a curable problem in its biggest hospital, then it’s no wonder others try sorcery for a cure,” Dr Purcell says. Another great frustration was obtaining medication for people with TB or leprosy. “I used to say, well Plan A didn’t work. We’ll get to P and we’ll give up, shall we? You’ve got to work with whatever you can.” Dr Purcell met her husband, Neil, on an early trip to PNG. Neil, an electrician, was working with Australian Volunteers International. She says anyone thinking of working for ADI needs to be patient, have a sense of adventure, and have a strong background in primary health care. “Those used to a lot of machines and high-tech equipment would be sorely disappointed,” she says. Continued page 26 Rural doctors You have the skills, we have the settings. Queensland Health is seeking experienced rural senior doctors with advanced skills in the specialities of obstetrics and gynaecology, anaesthesi anaesthesia and emergency medicine. NOW RECRUITING RECRU Senior Medical Officers and Medical Sup Superintendents with right of private practice for a range of locations across Queensland. Introducing the Senior Medica l Relief Program Se eking experienc ed medical prac titioners (prefer FRACGP or FACRRM) with an interest in rura l practise for sh ort term relief at rural fa cilities across Queensland. Outstanding pa ckages apply. Enquires to Que ensland Countr y Practice phone (07) 38 95 3160 or email QCP@he alth.qld.gov.au Dr Martin Brynne, Roma, Queensland Health 24 | Australian Rural Doctor | June 2011 Work For Us Search for vacancies or send an online Expression of Interest today at: www.health.qld.gov.au/medical M070411-2 Let us hel help find the job right for YOU. RD. J UNE 1 1 . P G0 2 6 . p d f Pa ge 2 6 1 8 / 5 / 1 1 , 1 : 2 1 PM ADI volunteer Dr Verena Doolabh. Continued from page 24 northern region. It’s often a long haul just to get the nets to the communities: they are flown to region, then transferred by boat, driven in 4WD and then lugged by volunteers trekking through dense jungle. ADI ensures the effort isn’t wasted, teaching villagers about the difference the nets will make and how to use and care for them. Despite the differences ADI is making on the ground, one of its greatest challenges is getting its workers’ visas processed. “It can take six months of sheer obstinacy in government departments in Port Moresby. They’re great paper shufflers,” Dr Macdonald says. “This is why most aid agencies will not operate in PNG. It’s too difficult. You wouldn’t expect the red carpet, but you’d expect them to open the door and let us in.” • How to get involved D octors don’t need procedural skills to work for ADI in Papua New Guinea . ADI president Dr Peter Macdonald says the organisation needs people with general practice skills, along with some knowledge of four basic infectious diseases: TB, malaria, leprosy and filariasis (elephantiasis). He says most ADI doctors have worked in the NT, in remote parts of WA or Queensland. Doctors apply through the ADI website. Dr Macdonald and two volunteers assess applications and candidates are interviewed by a panel. Volunteers need to commit for a minimum tour of three months but have the option to stay six months and go back several times. On tours, they do patrols to remote areas for 3-4 weeks, have a week off, and then go on patrol again. Doctors essentially work as volunteers, although they’re paid $1000 a month to cover a few bills at home. ADI covers the cost of flights, accommodation, insurance, vaccinations, food and transport. Challenge yourself. ADI’s doctors work closely with health managers, who improve the way local health clinics are run. While health managers typically have nursing backgrounds and have worked in small hospitals, Dr Macdonald says general practice managers would be well equipped for these roles. While parts of PNG are known to be dangerous, ADI is careful to ensure its volunteers are safe. “The rascals who cause problems in terms of the bigger cities aren’t in Western Province or New Ireland Province,” Dr Macdonald says. Recruiting Primary Health Care Professionals Northern Territory Health Workforce (NTHW) provides recruitment, retention and support services to GPs and health organisations across the Northern Territory (NT) of Australia. As a unit of General Practice Network NT, we have the benefit of being linked to an organisation that leads and coordinates a Territory-wide Primary Health Care network with the objective of improving health service delivery and health outcomes in the Northern Territory. We provide more than a ‘recruitment service’ to ensure that both GPs and our health services and practices are fully supported. www.gpnnt.org.au Blaze31552 Change lives. To find out more about primary health careers in the Northern Territory, contact the NT Health Workforce team on (08) 8982 1000 or recruit@gpnnt.org.au GPNNT acknowledges the financial assistance provided by the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing. 26 | Australian Rural Doctor | June 2011