Tuesday, May 10, 2011

What I Thought I Needed to Know to be an International Doctor, and What I Really Needed to Know

Section 1
What can we learn from one doctor’s experience? The most important thing to learn is that one experience is not everyone’s experience. I have had a pediatrician colleague who had to do a Caesarian Section because he was the most qualified person available at his hospital in Gabon, Africa and it needed to be done. I have also heard of overseas physicians who put the patient to sleep themselves, then operated while every few minutes stepping to the other side of the curtain to ask the patient how she was doing. Thankfully, I have never had to reach that far to care for a patient.
Many doctors have a variety of experiences. Few have to be the Lone Ranger who can do everything by themselves, but most have to adjust to the medical environment and medical personnel as they are. When I was a medical student, I thought I needed to know how to do a lot of things all by myself. What I really needed to know was how to learn while making decisions, how to adjust to changing situations and medicine stocks, how to work with professionals of various cultures and education levels, all while having the final responsibility as “captain of the ship”.
I have been a missionary doctor for seven years, five in Shell, Ecuador on the edge of the Amazon rainforest, and two in Lilongwe, Malawi, a tiny country in southeastern Africa. While I was a resident, I spent two months in a mission hospital in Washim, India. Each experience taught me more about what a missionary doctor really does and who a missionary doctor really is.