(Daily Graphic, Oct 21, 2011, page 23)
EVERY year,
the headlines of national dailies read: “Doctors refuse postings to the north.”
And the excuse that is repeatedly given by these professionals is that the
north is under-developed.
However, for Dr Akis Afoko, a
physician-trained urologist, it is rather in deprived communities that the
services of doctors are more crucial.
This explains why he accepted to work in
the north and has since then remained committed to rendering his services to a
population of about 4 million.
Dr Afoko joined the Tamale Teaching
Hospital (TTH) in… and by so doing, became the first and only urologist to have
accepted to serve in a hospital in northern Ghana.
Although, many people know very little
about urologists, their relevance in the medical field is so crucial.
According to Wikipedia, the free
internet encyclopaedia, urologists are physicians who have specialised in
diagnosing, treating and managing patients with urological disorders.
These disorders, it notes, comprise
medical conditions that affect the penis, kidneys, prostrate, adrenal glands,
urinary bladder, urethra and testes, among others.
Wikipedia further notes that urology is
one of the most competitive specialties in the medical field and the world can
boast of only a limited number of them.
One can therefore understand why in
2005, the tragic death of three surgical urologists in Ghana was likened to a
national disaster.
The TTH would therefore be considering
itself lucky to have a urologist in its fold.
Apart from being a consultant urologist
at the TTH, Dr Afoko also works as a senior lecturer at the School of Medicine
and Health Sciences (SMHS) at the University for Development Studies (UDS).
In an interview with Dr Afoko, he
described his work in the north as a calling from God.
“Each day, I see over 70 patients at the
Out Patients Department (OPD),” he revealed.
In spite of the large numbers of
patients requiring surgery, Dr Afoko is only able to do about four surgeries a
week and he blames this situation on the lack of modern equipment.
“I can do a minimum of 35 surgeries in a
week if there is a spacious theatre and modern equipment,” he said, adding that
with modern equipment surgical operations become simpler and faster and the
patient’s recovery is enhanced.
“Using the outdated gadgets and methods
currently available in Ghana, I would use about three hours for a single
surgery, depending on the condition, and the patient would need about 14 days
to recover.
“With an Endoscopic machine, treatment
takes less than 20 minutes and the patient is discharged the same day,” Dr
Afoko explained.
As the interaction with Dr Afoko
progressed, middle-aged young men pushed their octogenarian father on a
wheelchair into the consulting room.
The old man, who looked as pale as
death, had a urinary catheter inserted into him, and due to his situation, the
doctor could not do otherwise than to pause the conservation and attend to the
old man.
When the conservation resumed, Dr Afoko
said he still remains resolved to stay and serve the north, in spite of the
problems he faces daily.
“If I leave, it would be terrible for
the people here because when again would another urologists come to the north.
Even my conscience would bother me,” he stated.
In actual fact, Dr Afoko does not only
remain committed to serving the north, but is determined to work towards
improving the practice of urology in the north.
I grinned with delight when he hinted of
plans that he and a Dutch urologists, Dr Hans de-Wall, were making for the
establishment of a medical centre at the TTH to provide modern urological
services to people in Northern Ghana and beyond.
Dr de-Wall operates a urological
hospital in Offinso in the Ashanti Region, which he established through the
Ananse Foundation in partnership with the Ghana Health Service.
Together, the two have conducted
endoscopic surgeries on patients at the TTH on a number of occasions.
The proposed TTH urological centre, as
Dr Afoko explained, would be a centre of excellence which would take care of
urological and pelvic floor disorders.
These conditions, he noted, were being
ignored and yet many people in the north and elsewhere were leaving with such
conditions.
According to Dr Afoko, his desire to
establish the centre in the north, and not anywhere else, was due to his
conviction that treatment must be nearer to those who need it most.
He said he had realised over his few
years of practice in the north that many children die or suffer from conditions
like posterior urethral valve, because of poor diagnoses and lack of quality
healthcare.
He also identified obstetric fistula and
prolapsed uterus us two of the many urological conditions that women in the
north were suffering from.
“I have been very saddened by the number
of cases of fistula in the north,” Dr Afoko stated, adding that fistula is as
an example of a severe form of pelvic disorder.
Dr Afoko believes that training more
urologists locally is one of the key strategies to increasing the number of
urologists in the country and he believes the centre would be able to achieve
that.
With the desire to serve being
demonstrated, evidently, by Dr Afoko, one can only pray and hope that he
receives the needed support, particularly from health authorities and the political
leadership.
8 comments:
This kind of sacrifice is what we need from our professionals to ensure that not only Accra and Kumasi get developed
Thanks for your comment. All these people need is the enabling environment and not money. They are personally motivated to serve.
The information you share is very helpful, Thank you. Dr Ashish Kumar Saini is a best urology doctor in Delhi. Dr. Saini has got a rich experience of 14 years in his field as he has done more than 5800 urology surgeries when practicing in AIIMS for 4 years.
Please can I get Dr Afoko's contact
I am Dr Afoko. My number isn+233206835046 email as below.feel free to call or send a message
Thank you Dr afoko for your sacrifice to the north
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