Archive

Archive for November 16, 2008

For my fellow Christian doctors

November 16, 2008 1 comment

This article is meant for Christian doctors. I would like to share a commentary that encouraged and inspired me. :)

Commentary: The Doctor Is In
By Soo-Inn Tan

One of the results of sin is that we hide. We hid from God when He came
looking for us that first evening after we sinned (Genesis 3:8). We have
been hiding ever since. We try to hide our sin from God. We try to hide our
sin from others. And we try to hide it from ourselves. We are in denial
about our sinful condition which makes it very difficult for us to receive the
help we need. As every health care professional knows, we can help
someone only when that person realises that he or she needs help and is
open to being helped. Which is why Christian doctors and dentists and
other health care professionals hold such a critical place in God’s purposes.
We meet people at times when their humanity and their need are most
exposed.

There are few places where the human condition is as exposed as the
waiting room of the emergency department at a hospital. Young and old,
rich and poor, men and women, people of all races — wait in pain and
anxiety. Whatever lives they may lead elsewhere, here they are just
human and in need. There are few places as honest as the doctor’s office
or the dentist’s clinic. Here we hear stories that others never get a chance
to hear. Of course there are attempts to hide here too but sooner or later,
if the pain is bad enough, we get to hear some semblance of the truth. If
the need is severe enough, patients tell the truth to themselves as they
tell it to the doctor.

I have the privilege to serve as the chaplain of the Singapore Christian
Medical and Dental Fellowship (CMDF). At their recent Annual Dinner I
reminded my colleagues of the unique ministry opportunities they have in
their professions. We are in one of the few professions that allow us to
walk with people at times when they are most aware of their humanity and
their brokenness and their need for help. Therefore we have the unique
opportunity of being Christ’s representatives to people at moments when
they are most aware of their need.

I not advocating that Christian doctors and dentists verbally confront
patients with the gospel as the only expression of Christian service.
(When I was a dentist I heard too many jokes about how our patients
have to listen to our gospel presentations when we are working on their
teeth, especially when we are drilling. I have a feeling this practice
violates both the laws of God and the laws of the Dental Association.)
There will be times when this should and must happen but I believe our
first duty to our patients is to minister to them in the compassion of
Christ. Experiencing the compassion of Christ through the compassion of
the doctor, the patient encounters the Christ of the gospel. If they know
God cares they will be more willing to care when we verbalise the gospel.

And because we care for our patients we will want to be as competent as
we can be. Once a surgeon asked me:”If you desperately need a surgical
procedure, would you choose a surgeon who was caring or one who was
very competent?” Christian medical practitioners do not have the luxury of
such questions. We are called to be both compassionate and competent.
Indeed it is precisely because we care for our patients that we strive to
give them the best care possible. But medical care bereft of compassion is
not Christian. To be Christian is to love God by loving neighbour (Luke
10:25-28).

Perhaps we are better able to show compassion when we remember our
own humanity and our own need for Christ. I remind myself and my
colleagues every chance I get, that the distance between ourselves and
our patients is not as great as we may think. We too are part of a fallen,
broken humanity that needs grace and needs God. And doctors are as good
as anyone in denying our wounds and our failures. Indeed it is well
recognised that doctors make the worst patients.

Instead of hiding our own wounds we need to embrace them as the
necessary prelude to allowing the Master Physician to heal us. We
therefore stand with our patients as fellow wounded humanity in need of
God. In the term popularised by the late Henri Nouwen, we are “wounded
healers.” Writing about pastors, Nouwen says:

[Since it is his (pastor's) task to make visible the first vestiges of
liberation for others, he must bind his own wounds in anticipation of the
moment when he will be needed. He is called to be the wounded healer,
the one who must look after his own wounds but at the same time be
prepared to heal the wounds of others. He is both the wounded minister
and the healing minister ... (the Wounded Healer, New York: Image
Books, 1979, 82)]

Paul would agree. He learned the hard way that “He (God) comforts us in
all our troubles so that we can comfort others (2 Corinthians 1:4a NLT)”
and that God’s power works best in weakness (2 Corinthians 12:9a ).
Christian medical practitioners need to constantly bear this in mind. We
still live in a world where many see doctors as godlike shamans, a world
where professionalism is often defined as elitism, and in monetary terms.
We are only wounded healers, both recipients of grace and its bearer. It is
a high calling.

[... ministry can indeed be a witness to the living truth that the wound,
which causes us to suffer now, will be revealed to us later as the place
where God intimated his new creation. (Nouwen, Wounded Healer, 96)]

Sun, 161108 @ 1200

Categories: Me, Muses

Curing AIDS?

November 16, 2008 1 comment

Photobucket

Jimbo might be out of a job soon.

Click here to read a fascinating story of how a patient with HIV/AIDS was “functionally cured”!

The Wall Street Journal has described the case of an HIV-infected man who has been off treatment and free of detectable HIV for more than 600 days — ever since he had a bone marrow transplant for leukemia. The bone marrow donor was homozygous for a genetic mutation (CCR5 delta 32) that made him virtually immune to HIV.

Writing in HIV and ID Observations, a Journal Watch blog, Paul Sax concludes: “If ever there were a plausible target for gene therapy, the CCR5 delta 32 mutation seems like a great place to start.”

Jimbo read through the entire article and came upon these paragraphs:

Researchers discovered that some gay men astonishingly remained uninfected despite engaging in very risky sex with as many as hundreds of partners. These men had inherited a mutation from both their parents that made them virtually immune to HIV.

The mutation prevents a molecule called CCR5 from appearing on the surface of cells. CCR5 acts as a kind of door for the virus. Since most HIV strains must bind to CCR5 to enter cells, the mutation bars the virus from entering. A new AIDS drug, Selzentry, made by Pfizer Inc., doesn’t attack HIV itself but works by blocking CCR5.

About 1% of Europeans, and even more in northern Europe, inherit the CCR5 mutation from both parents. People of African, Asian and South American descent almost never carry it.


Sigh….

Looks like we Asians are pretty unlucky…

Sun, 161108 @ 0700

Categories: Medical