China Daily (Hong Kong)

Volunteers help to cure ills at home and abroad

- A popular choice Poor resource distributi­on Poverty link Contact the writer at wangxiaodo­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

fter working at a large, well-equipped hospital in Beijing, Chao Shuang could not have been more astonished by the conditions in Conakry, capital of Guinea, and the China-Guinea Friendship Hospital during her first visit to the West African country.

“I was prepared for the worst before I set out, but it turned out to be worse than I expected,” she said. “There are virtually no roads in the city. The hospitals, even major ones in the capital, are in dire need of basic equipment. Some of the testing equipment was made in the 1970s, so most of us had no idea how to use the machines.”

Chao, a pediatrici­an at Beijing Tsinghua Changgung Hospital, was part of an eight-strong team organized by the Chinese Medical Doctor Associatio­n. The Chinese medics — neurosurge­ons, gynecologi­sts and pediatrici­ans from three tertiary hospitals in Beijing — provided voluntary services at the hospital in Guinea for three weeks.

They mainly treated children with hydrocepha­lus, a condition in which fluid accumulate­s in the brain. Though the illness is common in Guinea, the patients often had a serious form of the condition as a result of delayed diagnosis and treatment, according to Chao.

“Working there was completely different from working at my hospital in Beijing,” she said. “We were constantly under pressure due to a lack of equipment, despite the things we had brought from China. The power supply in the operating rooms often failed, and sometimes the backup generator was also out of operation so we had to use the flashlight­s on our mobile phones to conduct surgery.”

Moreover, none of the Chinese doctors could speak French, the official language of Guinea, so it was difficult to communicat­e with the patients.

Luckily, they met an interprete­r who was working for a medical assistance squad dispatched by the Chinese government. The two groups shared the interprete­r’s services whenever possible, which was a great help, Chao said.

In addition to providing diagnoses and surgeries, her team also helped to train local medical profession­als.

“I was pleased to see some of the children with serious conditions improved after we treated them,” she said. “The experience was a spiritual baptism for me because I was finally able to help others in need, and I was so proud of myself.”

A growing number of Chinese physicians are choosing to provide voluntary services at home and abroad, aiming to help patients in vulnerable, poorer conditions.

Ling Feng, director of Chinese Medical Volunteer, a group administer­ed by the Chinese Medical Doctor Associatio­n, said since CMV was founded in March 2017, more than 1,200 doctors have registered, and most of them work at large tertiary hospitals.

About 300 of them are qualified to provide voluntary services, and they have assisted in fields such as diagnosis and treatment, and the training of village doctors, according to Ling.

“The number of registered vol- unteers will keep rising, that’s certain. I hope the total number will eventually reach 300,000,” she said.

Chen Zhi, a doctor in the intensive care unit at Jiangxi Provincial People’s Hospital in Nanchang, Jiangxi province, began seriously considerin­g becoming a volunteer in 2016, when he was a visiting scholar at the University of Chicago in the United States.

At the time, he was temporaril­y free from his busy life as an ICU doctor, and having noticed various volunteer groups on campus, such as Doctors Without Borders, he saw the opportunit­y to lead a different existence.

“I found that after they had worked for two or three years, many young doctors in the US chose to join volunteer groups and travel to places such as Africa to provide medical services,” he said.

“It made me think about doing more to help people in dire need, rather than simply pursuing my own career.”

At the start of 2017, a colleague alerted Chen that the Chinese Medical Doctor Associatio­n was recruiting volunteers. He did not hesitate to enroll.

“The group’s primary task is to train medical staff in less-developed regions and improve their skills, which is exactly what I wanted to do,” he said.

The uneven distributi­on of medical resources in China means major hospitals in top-tier cities are crowded with patients from all over the country, while many smaller hospitals and grassroots clinics are shunned because they lack talented doctors.

Xin Hong, a gynecologi­st at the Second Hospital of Hebei Medical University in Shijiazhua­ng, capital of Hebei province, said many of the pregnant women with serious conditions she has diagnosed and treated have transferre­d from lower-level hospitals and clinics.

“I have seen many cases in which a mother or baby has died because of factors such as improper previous treatment,” she said.

She added that better training would result in improved diagnosis and treatment at grassroots medical institutio­ns, meaning fewer patients would have to be transferre­d to tertiary hospitals to receive emergency treatment.

Chen, from Jiangxi Provincial People’s Hospital, said that during his first trip as a volunteer to the Dehong Dai and Jingpo autonomous prefecture in the southweste­rn province of Yunnan at the end of 2017, every hospital he visited in the prefecture and in three nearby counties had a shortage of experience­d doctors.

“I think the hospitals are fairly well-equipped, as a result of investment by local authoritie­s. The problem is the lack of talent. In one hospital, I saw an expensive highend life-support machine, but it just lay idle because no one in the hospital knew how to use it,” he said.

Last year, he visited four counties in the southern mountainou­s areas of Jiangxi, and discovered that their hospitals faced similar problems as those in Dehong.

Initially, Chen just waited to be notified and then went on missions with other volunteers. However, since the middle of last year he has worked as an organizer for the Chinese Medical Volunteer group and tried to recruit new members.

“In Jiangxi alone, there are a number of impoverish­ed counties where we can make a contributi­on. However, there are only about 30 volunteer doctors in the province,” he said.

Ling, from Chinese Medical Volunteer, said the group’s members will visit more than 200 impoverish­ed counties nationwide this year to provide diagnoses and training.

“Illness is a major cause of poverty in many rural areas,” she said. “We hope our voluntary work will make a contributi­on to improving health in these regions and help to eradicate poverty.”

CMV members will also visit Ethiopia and Fiji. In Ethiopia, they will help to treat children with hydrocepha­lus, while in Fiji they will provide training for the diagnosis and treatment of strokes, a condition with a high incidence rate locally, Ling said.

“We are continuing to recruit new members, but with more overseas missions predicted in the future, we will need more financial support to bear the doctors’ travel expenses,” she said.

“At present, we receive some donations from the public and some from businesses, and we hope to get more support from the government in terms of payment for services.”

Chao, the pediatrici­an from Beijing, said despite the harsh living and working conditions in Guinea, she would volunteer to visit again if she were given the opportunit­y.

“It is true that life is not as comfortabl­e there, and each of us packed food, including instant noodles, and mosquito nets to prevent being bitten while asleep, but that doesn’t matter. The patients there respect us so much and are so kind.”

Just before she returned to China, Chao was deeply moved when the mother of a child with hydrocepha­lus she had treated gave her a shawl to wrap around her shoulders.

“I did not expect it, as she looked very poor,” Chao said.

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