So here's the second part of the post on my Tanzania trip. This time I will show you the hospital that I worked in, Mkomaindo Hospital. It serves as a district hospital for more than 400,000 people in the Masasi District. Now that's comparable to the whole of Cambridgeshire.. However, the hospital has just over 200 beds and only an average of 150 beds are filled at any one time due to lack of staff.
The hospital is totally different from what I have gotten so accustomed to here in the UK. It lacks the most basic of equipments and medicines.. things that we so easily take for granted. For such a 'large' hospital, the only imaging they have are a really old and outdated X-ray machine and an even older ultrasound reader. The wards are crowded and dirty, and most beds don't have proper bedsheets. Houseflies are found everywhere in the wards, the delivery room and even in the operating theatre! I was totally shocked when I first entered the theatre. The condition was just apalling, and sometimes the doctors had to work without any electricity. It was definitely an eye-opening experience.
Apart from working in the hospital, I also visited a leprosy settlement just next to a remote village. Leprosy is a disease that is caused by an organism similar to those that cause TB, and it can lead to permanent damage to the skin, nerves, limbs and eyes. Infected people used to be isolated by their societies as it is spread via close contact and there was no cure until the 1940s. Even nowadays, many people are badly affected because of the stigma still attached to this disease. This little village of about 16 buildings are home to 60 people. They have all come here because of not being able to work to support themselves, or are discriminated by their own family.
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On a lighter note, here are some other pictures I took around Masasi:
Apart from working in the hospital, I also visited a leprosy settlement just next to a remote village. Leprosy is a disease that is caused by an organism similar to those that cause TB, and it can lead to permanent damage to the skin, nerves, limbs and eyes. Infected people used to be isolated by their societies as it is spread via close contact and there was no cure until the 1940s. Even nowadays, many people are badly affected because of the stigma still attached to this disease. This little village of about 16 buildings are home to 60 people. They have all come here because of not being able to work to support themselves, or are discriminated by their own family.
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On a lighter note, here are some other pictures I took around Masasi:
Bomani Football Ground
It really does seem like football is the most popular sport in the world. Every boy in the village wants to be the next Ronaldo! The football field shown above is about 15mins walk from where I stayed and there's a football match held there every Saturday. It's great to watch football in such a beautiful place ;)
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