This morning
during a lull our outpatient department (OPD) “house supervisor” Becky (the nurse that helps keep
everything flowing), showed me how patients
get a ticket to be seen.
Early in the
morning people come and line up outside the gate. Two medics sit in little booths at the head
of the line and triage everyone who comes.
They will decide who gets the tickets to see the doctors. It is not first come first serve. With only two surgeons (who are amazing), one
family practice doctor (who astoundingly also does most of the C-sections -- 400 last year), a
part time family practice doctor and myself (both of us are handicapped because
we need translators) some patients will simply not be able to be seen. Though I think this is less of an issue right
now because everyone is fasting for Ramadan and fewer people come to be seen.
A green
ticket means you get to see a surgeon. A
yellow ticket means you get to see a medic (and not a doctor). A red ticket is an emergency ticket and that
means you get to see me! A white ticket
is the most diverse. It is a medical
ticket – but it also includes OB, pediatrics, chronic disease, and acute
medical problems. An OB patient sees the
full time family practice doc. The young
peds patients under 5 months (are supposed) to see the part time family
practice doctor. And we divvy up the
others as they appear.
My last
patient today was a tribal patient (I can tell because of the way she was
dressed). She is 6 weeks pregnant and has
bad typhoid. This is her second pregnancy.
Her first baby was born dead. I
am hoping and asking for a healthy baby this time around.
Test comment
ReplyDeleteSo proud of you two.
ReplyDeleteDon't you feel special being the red ticket taker! What a blessing knowing you're there!
ReplyDelete