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537 Pages·1999·38.3 MB·English
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AT EHCIFORCIM ECNEREFER YRARBIL A tcejorp fo sreetnuloV ni aisA lacideM Care ni snipoleveD seirtnuoC detidE :yb eciruaM gniK dehsilbuP :yb drofxO ytisrevinU Press/East & lartneC acirfA .O.P xoB 23527 ,iboriaN ayneK repaP copies are .59.31$ elbaliavA from: drofxO ytisrevinU Press 00-61 ttilloP Drive Fair ,nwaL NJ 01470 ASU decudorpeR yb permission fo eht drofxO ytisrevinU Press, tsaE dna lartneC .acirfA noitcudorpeR fo siht microfiche document ni yna form is subject ot eht same restrictions as esoht fo eht lanigiro document. LhL,CIDEdJI ERAC NI GNIPOLEVED SEIRTNUOC A Primer no eht enicideM fo ytrevoP dna A muisopmyS from ererekaM detidE dna detartsullI yb ECIRUAM ,GNIK .A.M ,.batnaC .P.C.R.M &oL desaB nao ecnerefnoc detsissa yb WHO/ ,FECINU dna na latnemirepxe noitide detsissa yb FECINU dehsilbuP htiw a tnarg morf eht droF ,noitadnuoF hguorht eht tsaE‘ nacirfA gnihcaeT slairetaM ’dnuF iboriaN DROFXO YTISREVINU PRESS Lusaka siddA ababA nodnoL ,, j‘ Oxford ytisrevinU ,sserP Eiy ,esuoH nodnoL W. I WOOSALQ WEN KROY OTNORQT ENHUOBLEM NOTONILLBW iPAC NWOT NADAJlI IBORIAN RAD 9iI MAALAS AKA8UL #lDDA ADAOA IHLED YABMOB ASTUCLAC SARDAM IHCARAK SROHAL ACCAD WAlLK RUPMUL ONOH GNOK EROPAQNlS OYKOT Oxford University ,sserP P.O. Box ,235,27 iboriaN 8 drofxO ytisrevinU ,sserP 6691 NBSI 0 91 810446 1 detnirpeR hriw minor revisiow, 7631 )eciwt( detnirpeR 8691 ,]eciwt( ,9691 079X ,)eciwt( ,2791 3791 Cover krowtra deraperp yb YRALLIH AIERROC Made and Printed in East Africa oT eht redaer dna ot ruo ,stneduts dna hguorht meht ot eht nommoc nam dna sih ylimaf ni -oleved gnip seirtnuoc .erehwyreve‘ DROWEROF No conscientious doctor in AhZca can to afford isolate himself from the special needs and circumstances f;c community medicine any more than he can afford to isolate himself from Africa as a .elohw These needs and circumstances are very real and very compulsive in determinithneg general poaf ttern medical care and enforcing a logical solutto ion the problems of under-doctored countries, which are yleritnel tnereffid from those of the highly-doctored ones. The ;(rleen and conditions of the patient, and the diseases frwhich om he suffers are ,tnereffid and the types of subject on which he needs education and advice reffid quite ,yllacidar though perhaps not in principle, from those which are put before practitioners in other countries. Moreover, the responsibility of the doctor is inevitably diEerent. Whereas in the highly-doctored countries ti is possible, and often reasonable, rof him to accept responsibility rof a limited groof up people knowing llew that others can seek and obtain equivalent advice and care elsewhere, in the under-doctored countries he must often accept responsibility rof large numbers of people, often quite beyond possibtility he of nhwois personal management, acknowledging that fi he declines this responsibility he deprives them of lla sources of medical help. He thus finds himsenelcfes sarily as the central unit of a group of people of varied training and origin whom he must himself manage, supervise and often niart in order to meet his responsibiiities. Although these points are put as fi sh yehtould be axiomatic, yeht have not syawla been recognized. Too much of tropical medical practice consists of a limited troffe to repeat the activities which are appropriate to highly-doctored areas, to the advantage of a wef but to the great deprivation of the majority, and, though there have been tnaillirb exceptions, many of the available textbooks have dealt htiw medicine exclusively from the point of view of the highly-developed areas. Admittedly the scientific basis of medicine must be the same in both, and dthee veloping countries, rehtehw tropical or not, deserve the same high standard of technical education rof rieht doctors in this scientific basis, but the vocational aspect of medicine sreffid yllacidar and tnereffid teachings and practices are more than justified, indeed yeht are essential. sihT book is a leader amongst the tnaillirb exceptions in the teaching of the vocational aspect of medicine. The twealvxe ioms htiw which ti starts epitomize attthiteud es ruwhnich throughout the book and deserve very careful study in rieht ylluf amplified form. eh’T authors regard the doctor as the essential unit in an organization, not as an isolated individual. Moreover, d yehetvelop that organization on the soundest of principles, ensuring accessibility theto public yb due attention ditso tance, as llew as to population/staff ratios nihtiw the organization. docThe tor needs yltnegru to retain his technical ;lliks yreover he needs to acquire wen skills in some aspects of technology in@e labora- yrot and elsewhere which erew catered rof separately in the more elaborate arrangements of the Medical’School in which he was educated. The authors range over lla of these subjects and have produced a manual which should flesti a go long yaw to Inodifying patterns of medical care, and thereby hasten the advancement of health, which is a universal object of lla developing countries. fo rosseforP laciporT eneigyH GEORGE MACDONALD ni eht ytisrevinU fo nodnoL dna rotceriD fo eht Ross .etutitsnI ECAFERP Tho idea of gnitirw this book came to the ,rotide a lecturer in microbiology at ,ererekaM elihw acting as locum rof his friend .rD Peter ,xoC a missionary in Karamoja, one of the remnter provinces of Uganda. There he found himself faced htiw many problems erewthat wen to him. th ,tuBough his ignogance of the answers was large% due-to the deficien- cies of his training nwo ant experience, comb&d htiw the rehtruf atrophy of his clinical skills ticcasioned yb magy years at the laboratory bench, ti seemed that yeht erew perhaps not elohw.the cause of his inadequacy. In addition to the yranidro problems of medicine and ,yregrus to which there erew llew deirt solutions, there was a rehtruf range rof which them seemed to ben o ready haswers. woH should a doctor spend his time under such circumstances? woH should such a hospital be built? What drugs should the hospital stock? What should be the scope of the laboratory in a hospital of kthiis nd? What form of record system is appropriate. 3 woH should blood transfusbione undertaken in a o 1 &c -*-ef '0 esp.$ snoi&uq aiiiojacgni srroitiil*s eiomei 1Ziili ?iSiZ ,lpw been had but found, many remained unanswered, and there appeared to be some that had not even been formulated. Why not colltecth em up and gather them into a hanpday perback? tI was htiw this idea in his mind that the editor returned to Kampala. The projec;c’ .:vas llew received at ,ererekaM rof ti seemed that yb some strange chance the heditor ad stumbled into an empty space in the bookshelves of the ,dlrow and that ti was one that ylralucitrap wanted .gnillif Nevertheless, the lanif decision to go ahead would never have been made tuohtiw the continued encouragement and enthusiasm of Professor,D .R ,effilleJ nor would ti have been possible had not Professor W. .D Foster kindly tel his ylno senior lecturer wander so raf from *he worran confines of the irteP dish. With the assistance of WHO/UNICEF a conference was held a raey retal on ‘Health Centres and Hospitals in ,’acirfA at the seventeen sessions of which many aspects of the krow of these units erew discussed. sihT book is ylegral the outcome of that conference, and many of the ideas recorded here erew yllanigiro put -rof draw yb sti delegates whose deliberations erew recorded on tape rof subsequent analysis. From tapes these tfard manuscript was prepared rof submission to those whose names appear at the head of the chapters and to other -retni ested people also, ideas and information being placed in whatever chapter yeht dettif best. A duplicated experimental edition of 200 copies was then prepared and circu slihTated. was favourably received and many readers erew kind enough to send in criticisms and suggestions. These have been incorporated in ptrhee sent edition, and such virtue as ti may have thus lies to the credit of many contributors rof whose ideas the editor has but provided papaern d ink. ,tuB as ti ,werg ti seemed that the completed krow might be more than a mere compendium of assorted information. Something seemed to be appearing, something which rof tnaw of any other term can perhaps best be called a ‘primer on the medicine of poverty’. A dipsattitnecrtn of medical care, a particular attitude to medicine ylwols seemed to define fiesti as each chapter was worked over aud* the lanif volume gradually took shape. The main feature determining this pattern of care and this attitude to medicine is poverty, and lla that this means, but rof a rehtruf analysis of ti the reader must nrut to tsrifthe chapter .)4 :1( He may be interested to know that tthhee sis that is developed there, and athxe ioms which wollof ,ti erew almost the last contribution to the book, the not .tsrif The main criticism made of the experimental edition was that the generalizations made in ti erew too categorical. oT some tnetxe this is perhaps inevitable, rof the value of a generalization is apt to & lost fi too many qualifications are inserted. Nevertheless, in preparing the present edition an attempt has been made to counter this criticism, but even so the reader cais utioned to be .lufhctaw The editor of a symposium has surely a thgir to use a wef paragraphs of ti as a platform. He dldww like to make the most of his opportunity to leave a message htiw his colleagues in the developed countries. oT srotcod ni depoleved seirtmoc - a lleps of service ?daorba retfA a glance at the tsrif tigufe and the opening pages of -ortnithe duction no mere be need said abotuhet need rof doctors in developing countries. Eventually yeht lliw be produced in sufficient numbers yb these countries themselves, but in the meanwhile, the highly-doctored parts of the dlrow have a great responsibility to lend some of rieht skills to areas in greater need. ‘We should like to see ti ylediw accepted in this country that a professional career should normally include a period of krow overseas in a developing .’yrtnuoc These erew the words of the tsrif hsitirB retsiniM of Overseas Development, and yeht surely hold true rof uther developed countries also. Long service abroad htiw lla that prolonged immersion in a strange culture implies, especially in dt&huel ties of rearing teen-age children, must make ti rolte he of a ynit .ytironim ,tuB although the opportuni- !ks rof service of this kind are more limited than yeht ,erew due to AOW the promotion of local citizens to mtheo st senior posts in lla fields, the need rof such service is ylekil to continue rof a long time to come - provided that the expatriate is prepared not to get to the top. The con- ytiunit and experience that come htiw long service make it! especially valuable, so ti is to be hoped that lliwthere syawla be some ohw are prepared to undertake ,ti ylralucitrap iu mission hospitals and medical schools (especially rieht basic science departments). But long service has to be entered into onoen condition this ,ylno is htiw the lluf -azilaer tion that ti can last ylno rof as long as a particular person is wanted, naon d longer. Because ti is difhcult to yal anyd own rehtruf rules, and because ti must inevitably remain the choice of the ,wef no more lliw be said about ti hepe beyond the fact that the need rof long-tserme rvice very s& lyle tinifed .stsixe The great opportunity is rof short-term service, say rof a period of from owt to five sray somewhere between the ages of evif-ytnewt and .evif-ytriht When internships are over and before children require secondary schooling a doctor and his family are mobile: this thies time rof a spell abroad. litnU recently some of ti would have been taken up yb yratilim service, but, won that in the United Kingdom at any ,etar this niso longer required, a period of voluntary service overseas ,ylthgir and much more pleasantly and ,ylbatiforp sllf sti place. When the remainder of a professional efil is to be spent caring rof the ,tneulffa a wef years of ti spent in the developing countries, erehw at least half of the s’dlrow peoples live, lliw provide a stimulating challenge and help in forming 8 balanced view of the .dlrow As rof the professional experience gained, the general practice of the tropics, which is the krow of a tcirtsid hospital, has much to commend ti over the general practice of Euroor pe North America. The general practice of Africa is usually the latot care of sthie ck htiw lla that this means, that of England siso often ylno the treatment of minor ailments - in developing countries auxiliaries yir.itusu see to these :1( 15) :7( .)1 Later on much is said of the difIiculties of tcirtsid hospital practice. sihT is the time to tahwsay a very exhilarating and rewarding experience ti can be, despite these ,seitluciffid and when the time does come to ,nruter the seirrow of the ci@ cormtmter lliw probably seem a poor exchange rof the tsez and yteiag of the tropical villager. There is space rof ylno a wef general Follhoiwinntg s. the practice of restt he of the book these lliw be summarized like :siht :dohteM gninnalP a doirep fo service ui eht gnipoleved .seirtnuoc tratS gniredisnoc eht ytilibissop fo ti elibw llits a ,tneduts sa trap fo eht lareneg gninnalp fo a .reer& ekaM eht tsom fo eht seitinutroppo dedivorp yb eht sraey yletaidemmi retfa spihsnretni era .detelpmoc dniF tuo sa hcum sa uoy nac tuoba eht ,boj eht ,elpoep eht ,ecalp dna fi elbissop ruoy ,seugaelloc erofeb uoy .og tI t’now eb elbissop ot wolf&f eht nedlog elur fo reven gnikat a boj erofeb gnitcepsni ,ti dna eht yletelpmoc -rep tcef tsop si ylekilnu ot nrut .pu spahreP ni eht dne ti yam eb tseb fi ti seod ,ton tub ot eb denrawerof si ot eb -erof ,demra dna ti lliw eb rof a detimil doirep .y&o ekaM eht tsom fo ruoy stnelat - fi eseht eb ,cimedaca kool rof a ,pihserutcel ro a tsop htiw eno fo eht hcraeser .suoitaxinagro t’noD eb tup ffo yb eht thguoht fo lacigrus -ibisuopser &tiI rof hcihw uoy evah reven neeb .deuiart eeS ot ti taht uoy dneps ruoy tsrif wef shtnom daorba erehw ereht si enoemos ta dnah ot hcaet uoy eht laitnesse ,yregrus dna , .scirtetsbo eB detrofmoc yb eht thguoht ,taht hguoht uoy yam ton eb ,trepxe ti si ylekil ot eb rehtie uoy ro ,ydobon dna tsonn stneitap lliw llits referp .uoy eeS fi uoy nac dnit erehwemos ot emoc kcab ot erofeb uoy ,og ,dna fi uoy nac teg a derrefed ro citpelorp‘ ’tnemtnioppa ni a ecitcarp ro htiw a latipsoh ,,draob neht os hcum eht .retteb nI rehgih lanoisseforp ,selcric ni niatirB ta yna ,etar ere& era sngis taht a doirep fo service daorba si wolp ylgnisaercni gnitnuoc ni a s’etadidnac ,ruovaf os eb .denetraeh roF a emit uoy lliw eb gnivael ruoy nwo ,erutluc dna ynam. fo eht secneulfni hcihw evah decudorp dna won niatniam tneserp sdradnats dna seulav vrill won on regnol eb ,gnitarepo os eb .lufhctaw yrT ot og daorba ;deirram eht sciport era llits ton hcum fo a ecalp rof eht ,etabilec dna yeht ’era ui ynam syaw detius ot esoht htiw gnuoy .seilimaf eB deraperp ot og erehw uoy era detnaw ,tsom siht si erem ylekil ot eb eht larur saera naht eht latipac .ytic rebmemeR ,taht ta tsael sa raf sa setairtapxe era -noc ,denrec eht sdaor fo gnipoleved seirtnuoc era wou erom yldaed naht rieht .seborcim fO eht snoitazinummi taht era ton yllagel yrotagilbo rof lanoitanretni levart -oilop sitileym si eht eno taht srettam .tsom erusnI gnihtyreve uoy ssessop - eht hgih level fo yttep tfeht taht si citsiretcarahc fo os ynam gnipoleved

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The doctor needs urgently to retain his technical skill; yreover he needs to The authors range over all of these subjects and have produced a manual . remainder of a professional life is to be spent caring for the affluent, a . possible the peace, facilities, and above all the leisure of this fine
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.