Mae Tao Clinic - End of week two.
This week we have seen more sick people. Its been sad but we are getting used to the way things are here. We had a 5yr old girl at the clinic with an abscess behind her eye. She suffered an injury about 5months ago and her eye was getting progressively worse. She stopped eating and was sad all the time from the pain. Her eye was protruding out her face, she was weak and cried a lot, it was pretty hard to watch. She has been at the clinic since we first arrived. Anyway this week Damien finally convinced the staff to send her to Mae Sot hospital to have the eye out. We haven't seen her since her operation but the idea is that she will get a false glass eye and be able to live a normal life - if she didn't get the op she may have died. One of the hardest things we have faced here is making health decisions based on money. If tests are too expensive - they usually don't happen. We find ourselves saying things like 'if we do test and find cancer, we cant treat it anyway so don't bother spending the cash on the test in the first place'!
We have been working at the clinic with a humble man known as Dr David. He is a retired surgeon from the states who has been coming here for the past 6yrs. He told Damien to feel free to spend more money on the kids as their department has been neglected over recent years. Its nice to know we have a bit of space with ordering tests for the sick kids. Its not like at home though. Results of blood tests usually take 3days to come back unlike the 1hr at home that we would complain wasn't fast enough!
I have become quite fond of some of the kids. Especially those that have been with us for a while. My favourite patient whose name was Ja Ma Bi left during the week. She was discharged home. Its hard to say goodbye. Its not like they are going home to lay on the couch for a few days and watch TV while they recover. She is 13 but looks about 8. Her parents aren't around and she lives with her grandad. She only went to school until grade 2 and has spend most of her life in and out of the clinic. She has a chronic condition that requires blood transfusions monthly. I have noticed though that people here are very stoic. They seem to take things in their stride and don't complain much.
This morning a local guide took us to the Mae Sot tip. We went with an American photographer. There is a lot of Burmese migrants living there sorting through the trash. They sell the bottles they find for 40bhat per bag, Its about $1 Aussie. It was so sad to see families living in the rubbish. The kids seemed happy but they were covered in dirt and most of them had runny noses. Families were cooking breaky on little stoves surrounded by mounds of rotting rubbish. The smell was overwhelming and there was flies on everything. The saddest thing was when a dump truck was unloading and the families ran to the rubbish being offloaded. They were in a frenzy trying to sort through the fresh stuff - it was pretty upsetting.