My ear, nose and throat practice in a teaching hospital in northern
rural Ghana is different than when I practiced in community hospitals in New Jersey,
USA. My patients now are younger. The 2019 median age here is 21 years, in USA,
it is 38 years. Weekly we remove tracheal and esophageal foreign bodies and see
caustic ingestions and stridor in children.
Another
difference is how poverty influences patient presentation and treatment. Because of their concern about expenses, the patients
or their parents first attend a local villager who has a reputation for health
knowledge and only after worsening of the sickness and obtaining permission
from the village elders, do they come to our hospital in late stages of diseases
and in septic shock. Resuscitation is necessary before definitive treatment can
be done. There are three dentist in northern Ghana and septic shock and deep
neck abscesses from molar infections is common. We now have a maxillofacial
surgeon who will extract the carious teeth which we previously struggled at
doing. Frequently the patients and the hospital cannot afford their antibiotics
and we buy their antibiotics using donated funds.
Somewhat similar
to the USA practice is the trauma caused from road traffic accidents, which
here is the leading cause of adult deaths. The motorcycles and old imported cars
along with inexperienced, risk taking, fast driving teenagers result in many deaths
and injuries. The police have to do a much better job.