Jonathan Cunningham
Resident in Internal Medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital
PGY 3
Resident in Internal Medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital
PGY 3
My first patient at Scottish Livingstone Hospital in
Botswana was 60-year old woman with a new diagnosis of diabetes and
ketoacidosis. She had actually been admitted three days earlier over the New
Years holiday, but no physician had seen her since the Emergency Room. At
Brigham & Women’s Hospital where I am a resident, the care of patients with
diabetic ketoacidosis is standardized. Patients with the degree of acidosis
this patient had (pH of 7.1) are admitted to the ICU, where they receive IV
fluids and blood tests every 4-6 hours to facilitate the potassium
supplementation. This patient had received little fluid and no blood testing. When
we checked her potassium that morning it was extremely low; thankfully she
appeared well. The local medical interns with whom I was rounding taught me
that the standard of care at Scottish Livingstone was to start oral potassium
and check lab tests every other day. We implemented this plan, and the patient
did well heading into my first weekend, when we do not go to the hospital.
When I returned on Monday, I learned that she had passed
away suddenly from respiratory failure. My attending felt that acute muscle
paralysis from low potassium was most likely the cause. I was devastated. I
felt (as I still do) that I could have prevented this outcome by organizing
more aggressive potassium checks over the weekend, or coming in to do them
myself. But the local members of our team felt differently. They reminded me
that there are only two physicians at the hospital over the weekend who must
draw all laboratory testing as well perform urgent procedures such as Cesarean
sections. Checking labs daily on well-appearing patients, they said, prevents
other patients from receiving necessary care.
I believe the truth lies somewhere between my feelings and
those of my local colleagues. Both poor medical care—our failure to recognize
that she required more careful monitoring—and limited resources contributed to this
outcome. To raise the quality of care in Botswana, it will be necessary both to
fight for more resources (such as a phlebotomy service or more staffing on
weekends) as well as to train local physicians to allocate them more
efficiently. I would be naïve to think I contributed to these goals in my short
time in Botswana. However, this patient and others helped me gain an
appreciation for the challenges faced by physicians in resource-limited
settings.
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