Let me rephrase that question, How important is great, prompt medical care to you? If there are no Doctors in the villages, there must be quacks. Someone's got to take care of the sick.
Nature abhors vacuums.
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Walking back from a brief check on patients on admission in the facility.
Rural lifestyle. Showing the new building in progress. Before coming here to post this, I had ranted. Ranted to myself, my couch, laptop, television, just about everything and anything that cared to listen. Therefore, I would post calmly and collectedly now. I have unloaded the anger.
Most of my posts that luckily find their way to the rural doctor initiative platform and attract an audience reflect the life styles and activities of the average rural dweller: the conditions they live with and in, the incomparable dystopia they subsist within, the deplorable health system they contend with and the pathetic inexorable hardship that is a way of life for them. In rural areas even a phonelight can be helpful.
We were operating when the light went off. We switched to light source from a phone light. It is with mixed feelings that I read the message below of one of our very committed rural doctor, Dr. Micheal Nnamele Chinedu, in the crisis ridden far northeast Nigeria. I pray for God to continue to bless you and find someone else to replace you as you take a bow,. You will be sorely missed.
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