| It's started. They invade by causing the populace to think that their brand is innocent. Then.... BTW I wish McD's DID selldoner. Beats a Big Mac and already has fries on the inside. |
I am slowly becoming less intimidated. I dislike expat
places but find myself there on occasion as it is just easier to get a beer and
a burger. My diet is now exclusively vegetarian except canned tuna and the odd
meat fest when I eat out. But my gut goes into full on protest afterward. So
here I am in a state where the national dish is meat and I get a gut ache when
I eat it.
Still I try, although I am reluctant to get meat here as I see it
handled by hands that are, well, bloody and filthy. I used to eat sausage but
thought about all the parts in there that were like wise handled so though
better of it. The produce is good and I can wash it. Mind you there isn’t
epidemic gastroenteritis here but I’m just not in the mood to risk it. Rather
unlike me come to think of it.
| Even in the high end area of town this is just so.....wrong. |
I have mastered the buses here to the extent that that is
possible for a non-Russian speaker. For the most part there are just two
speeds; too damn fast and stop. So the buses which are often jammed and one
sneeze away from a major measles outbreak, lurch and stop such that it takes a
while to get one’s land legs back. Most of the drivers here have been doing so
for less than 10 years so it is no surprise that moderate acceleration and
braking are for the most part a novelty.
The last week I have been teaching third year students how
to do a quick screening neurologic exam. It begins with a case that I generally
make up on the spot. The students then engage in a history and “physical”. It
is here we discuss when to do the neuro exam. I find I seem to repeat the same
tired refrain from the days in Botswana to Hilo to Rustaq to Hue to Skoder to…..”if
you don’t ask the questions you won’t get the answer” So I lead these poor
little lambs to the didactic slaughter only to rather sternly advocate for
excellent patient histories and physicals, citing how “in my country we often
hear headache and order a CT scan”! The presentation involves lots of
interaction and playful shenanigans and is met with laughter and, I hope,
retention. They are all engaging and eager at this point in their careers. And
by the time they are in the 7th course (last year of a two year
internship) things stand to change dramatically in the health care sector here.
| Testing for visual fields |
There was this one woman however…who made the mistake of
having head-in-cell-phone and was giving me eye rolls whenever we did an exercise.
At the beginning of each seminar I inform the students that I consider it an
insult to refer to mobile phones for anything less than translation. And that
they are of course adults and can make their own choice, just do the phone
thing outside and once you have left please don’t return. She gave a deafening
eye roll and, well, it was a bad time on a difficult day, so she and her
enabling side kick (a man) were soundly chastised to the point of head hanging.
They bowed and returned to their seats.
After class I pulled them aside and
through an interpreter let them know that I knew that they could do the work,
they just needed to care about it. The woman sniffed and said that the only
reason she was here was because her parents wanted her to be. This is a very
common refrain and while not unique to KZ (I see it often in the States) it
seems accepted with a shrug by faculty. The thing that I am starting to
appreciate is how the old Soviet system is really the only contextual framework
that remains after less than a generation of independence.
| YOU try to test pupils on some one a full 1/2m taller than you |
People long for “Soviet times” as the parks were beautiful
and there was order to daily life. I often imagine what it would have been like
to awaken on Dec. 17, 1991 and realize that this was the first day of autonomy.
One uses, and still does, what one is used to…..an autocratic protocol, wherein
ones first concern on arising in the morning is not how to improve situations
under one’s purview but how to be off the radar or at least to be a target not
worth shooting. Ambivalence reigns.
| Checking relfexes |
I realize that seems harsh but the interns at least are
rarely, if ever, all present and all on time. There seems to be little accountability
and the physician pay is so poor that many admit that after they satisfy their parents
they are out of medicine.
Now that I am not exercising other than walking I seem to
feel older and heavier. The photos seem to bear that out. I look forward to
getting back in the pool and saddle. I
still take stairs two at a time and living as I do on the 5th floor “helps”.
I have had a bad cold and am down to one lung, having coughed up the other and
strained my damn chest. Everyone asks very kindly what I am taking for this.
They have every right to ask as they have patients or relatives who have
coughed like this and had Tb or died of pneumonia. Mine is a stupid lingering
cough that is on the wane, still truly embarrassing and not a little painful.
No antibiotics for Mikey, just patience. Like I have a lot of THAT…
| The classes were held on the grounds of an old Soviet hospital
that has not been maintained. Never the less it would seem that
there are still patients there. It reminded me of Albania. |
| An old well |
| No clue except the tree is younger than the icons |
| Al Farabi, a beloved philosopher. |
| Nikolay Ivanovich Pirogov- Russian physician and teacher |
Keep it up Mike. I enjoy your observations. And, the photos are wonderful.
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