ADDDIS ABABA,
But not 8-year-old Zemen Toshome. For more than six years, Zemen has lived at Tikur Anbesa (Black Lion) Hospital in
Zemen has laryngeal papillomatosis, a disease in which tumors grow inside the larynx, vocal cords, or respiratory tract. The disease occurs when the human papillomavirus (HPV) is transferred from a mother to her child at birth. The tumors can grow quickly and cause difficulty in breathing, which if not corrected can lead to death.
In
He, like other children with papillomatosis at Black Lion, underwent a tracheostomy. A small incision was made in his neck, and a little tube was inserted through the hole into his trachea, his windpipe. That’s how Zemen breathes. That’s how he stays alive.
But it’s also why he lives at Black Lion. Were the child to leave the hospital for his home in the Gondar region, about 435 miles away, he would not make it back in time were a breathing emergency to occur.
Zemen’s mother, Senait Hadgembus, 26, sleeps each night on a mat on the floor by his bed. So does a younger son with no medical condition. They share Zemen’s hospital food. “”It is a very difficult life, very difficult,”” Senait said.
Only a handful of “”tracheostomy kids”” are similarly imprisoned, sentenced to life inside Black Lion, perhaps until adolescence, when the tumors should go away. Some have no parents to stay with them.
Two-year-old Isac Tenodros has his father. Solomon Tenodros, 25, said his child had been in the hospital about a month. “”I don’t know how long Isac must stay here, but I will stay, too,”” he said. “”The first concern is to save the life of my son. I am always here for Isac.””
Those words are heartening to someone from
I met Solomon and Isac, Zemen and Senait, and other patients and parents at Black Lion while accompanying an American medical-missions team there last week. I learned a lot about
This mission was the first joint venture between the
Gemini’s founder and president is
“”Out of
Teaming up with Healing the Children helped Gemini raise its profile in
The earthquake in
A senior health official at the
A slightly different perspective was taken by
“”The children are wonderful, the need is enormous, and as a physician, it is extremely satisfying to take care of them. But it’s far more good for our (medical) residents and the Ethiopian residents to have the experience of providing good medical care, because the medical care here isn’t good.
“”It isn’t good because the doctors doing it are too few and incompletely trained. It isn’t good because they lack the resources to take good care of patients. They may have equipment, but much of it is broken.””
Isaacson said it was clear that medicine had not been a top priority in
“”On the other hand, they’re surrounded by
The team was able to help the tracheostomy kids, but not so that they will be able to immediately leave the hospital. Healing the Children brought new equipment for Black Lion’s staff to remove the children’s life-threatening tumors, and the American agency plans to provide more equipment each year.
“”These children are here because they live too far away, or their parents have finally abandoned them after years of living in the hospital,”” Isaacson said. “”I’m hoping that the new generation of papillomatosis patients will be able to be treated and go home.””
Zemen’s mother said she had been told that her son may be able to leave Black Lion by the time he is 12. And Isaacson concurred. “”Papillomatosis shows up in most children when they are a few years old, and it generally burns itself out or disappears on its own in preadolescence.””
Healing the Children plans to return to Black Lion later this year. To help provide some continuity of care, Isaacson is working with the
I hope he is successful. I hope Zemen will be able to go home before he is 12 years old. I hope Isac will be able to leave Black Lion even sooner. Little boys should be outdoors playing, not stuck inside a place for the sick and dying.
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