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Medic's Guide to Work and Electives Around the World - Electives, hospitals, medical schools, medicine, nursing, travel, work,  NGOs, voluntary work, UK, USA, Australia, New Zealand, Mark Wilson
The Medic's Guide Book

Paediatrics in Réunion
by Pascale du Pre - Edinburgh

Population: 750 000Map of Reunion
Language: French
Capital: St Denis
Currency: Euro
Int Code: +262

Réunion is a small and beautiful volcanic island in the Indian Ocean.  The island is run as an overseas department of France.  French culture dominates every facet of life and the Réunionnais are proudly French speaking.  Yet the French atmosphere has a firmly tropical twist, with subtle traces of Indian, African and Chinese cultures.  The island has terrific surfing and diving and the hiking and beaches are spectacular.  There is even a live volcano that erupts every few months.  The island has a very young population and the night life is great.  French speaking is essential.

Medicine

Medical care is run on both a state (compulsory national health insurance) and private healthcare system. Access in both public and private services does not usually require referral.  The public services tend to cater for inpatients, whereas the private (e.g. GPs) tend to cater for outpatient services.

Climate

Hot, rainy summer from December to April and cool, dry winter from late April to October.  The east coast is considerably wetter than the west.   Temperatures in the summer average 22oC during the winter to 29oC in the summer.

St Denis

With its brasseries, bistros and café culture is a perfect reproduction of metropolitan France. The beaches and best night life are ½ hour drive down the coast and it is worth hiring a car. 

HOSPITALS

Hopital d’Enfants
60 Rue Bertin, 97400 Saint-Denis Cedex.  Tel: 02 62 90 87 00. Fax: 02 62 90 87 10.  Email: hop.enfants@wanadoo.fr

The hospital: A small paediatric hospital with a terrific team of five consultants and six house officers on 6-month placements from mainland France.  There are up to 15 day-case admissions to see every day as well as two wards of 40 or so patients and a walk-in clinic. 

Elective notes: Hand over takes place over coffee and croissants! The doctors are very friendly and welcoming.  French is the official language but many of the patients speak Creole.  There are many great experiences to be had and your work is that of a house officer; clerking, ward work and clinics.  This elective is great for experience in general paediatrics with a huge range of both standard and rarer syndromes.  It has all the advantages of a modern healthcare system and in a tropical environment.  Lunch in the hospital is provided and very good.  Afternoons are spent in the hospital or at the beach depending on the number of admissions! 

Accommodation: Not provided but the hospital can put you in touch with the current house officers.

Centre Hospitalier Départemental Félix Guyon

Bellepierre 97405 Saint-Denis Cedex. Tel: 02 62 90 50 50. Fax 02 62 90 50 51.

The hospital: The CHD is the main general hospital in St Denis with all the general medical specialties. Paediatrics is mainly adolescent and haematology/oncology although the neonatal unit and paediatric A&E were recently transferred here from the Hopital d’Enfants.

OTHER HOSPITALS IN REUNION:

CHG BP 350 97448 Saint-Pierre Cedex Tel: 02 62 35 91 43

(There are also others in St Paul and St Benoit)

Pascale's actual elective report:

AIMS

I wanted to use this opportunity to set myself the challenge of undertaking an elective in a totally French-speaking environment.  At the same time, I wanted to do an elective in Paediatrics since I have always had a strong interest in child health.  Yet also I was keen to work as an important member of the medical team while obtaining good practical hospital experience for my future career in medicine.

Reunion

While I wanted to spend my elective perfecting my medical French, I really wanted to travel beyond Europe.  Réunion provided the perfect solution; a slice of Europe in the Indian Ocean!  At the same time, Réunion offered the combination of both a modern paediatric hospital without being a teaching environment and a safe environment for a young girl travelling alone. 

Réunion is totally unique, being a department of France sitting in the middle of the Indian Ocean. Many people in the English-speaking world are unaware of these islands in the Indian Ocean. Réunion, unlike the other islands is still owned by the French. French culture dominates every facet of life, and the Réunionnais are proudly French speaking.  Yet the French atmosphere of the island has a firmly tropical twist, with subtle traces of Indian, African and Chinese cultures. Apart from the vibrant cultural mix, Réunion offers a host of attractions from the dramatic peaks of the island’s mountainous interior to the smouldering volcano and gorgeous beaches.

While Réunion has a population of 700 000, over 25% of the population is under the age of 25, ensuring paediatric services are in high demand.  The Hopital d’Enfants was situated in the capital, St Denis.  Although officially private, the hospital functioned rather as a public hospital.

Hopital d’Enfants, St Denis

The morning hand-over took place over coffee and croissants. The medical team was made up of five consultants and five ‘internes’ or house officers. Within the first few days, my role quickly became that of a replacement house officer following the unexpected departure of one of the house officers.  Alongside the remaining house officers, I was responsible for clerking patients, conducting ward rounds, writing up notes, ordering investigations and even dictating letters. (N.B. all in French!) 

Common medical problems on the wards included sickle cell anaemia, cancers, diabetes, cystic fibrosis and obesity, while the walk in clinic attracted colds to head injuries. Aside from these, there was also much in the way of fascinating pathology. One of my most memorable cases was that of a child with phacomatosis, whose hair was naturally divided in colour exactly down the midline; blonde in colour on one side and brown on the other with a similar pattern of skin hyperpigmentation.  Another case was that of an infant with situs inversus, with an unforgettable chest X ray.  

In my last week, I was faced with the complicated diagnostic challenge of a 3 yr old with a 17 day history of unremitting fever with very few, if any, other symptoms.  Despite every investigation known to modern medicine and seemingly every differential diagnosis excluded, I was sorry to leave the island before the case could be solved.  The case was a terrific opportunity to test my academic knowledge and clinical skills, systematically suggesting and excluding diagnoses from the common Kawasaki’s and Still’s diseases to rare tropical infections.

Other challenging cases included the numerous children coming from families with severe social problems, for whom there was really no system of social support.  I spent a few days at the new ‘victimologie’ unit at the central hospital in St Denis dedicated to children suffering from physical and sexual abuse and often incest.  Similarly the adolescent ward in the hospital was filled with young teenagers following attempted suicide while the operating lists and surgical wards were filled with young children sent over from neighbouring islands alone for life-saving surgery.

French Healthcare

In France, physicians work in either of two medical environments: public hospitals or private practices.  After 7 years of medical school, medical graduates decide whether to follow the route of public hospital medicine specialising over the next four years as a house officer doing 6 month rotations.  After four years these doctors are effectively hospital consultants.  Only 25% of physicians work in public hospitals.  These are essentially public servants, paid a fixed rate by the government.  For those that choose the equivalent to our ‘GP route’, the four years following medical school are spent in paediatric and A&E placements and a GP placement.  After the four years, they can open their own ‘cabinet’ or GP practice. 56% of physicians work in private practices and are paid on a fee-for-service basis[i].

In France, the healthcare system is mainly under state control with the public system covering around 75% of total costs.  Half of the rest is paid out of pocket and the rest being made up by supplementary insurance companies. About 85% of the French have private insurance.  In January 2000, a means-tested, public supplementary insurance programme called CMU (Couverture maladie universelle) was implemented to support patients without funds for private insurance.

As a result, France is the only country where access to care is unlimited.  Patients can see as many physicians as often as they like.  Patients do not need referrals to see specialists, they just look them up in the phonebook.  Similarly if one of the patients on the ward needed to be seen by a dermatologist for example, you simply look up a dermatologist and ask them to come and see your patient on the ward.

One of the most striking differences in the healthcare delivery was the role of nurses.  In France, the nurses take all bloods, do all the investigations and generally play a much larger role in the hospital team.  Unfortunately this meant that this choice of elective did not enable me to put into practice my clinical skills since doctors were not expected to know or perform these skills. A good example was also the use or lack of use of fundoscopy.  In the French system, doctors do not perform fundoscopy but have to get an outside ophthalmologist to perform this investigation. Similarly, since doctors do not take bloods, outwith the hospital blood tests and X rays need to be prescribed like medication, and the patients must go to private laboratories to have the tests.  The results are posted to the patient.

More specifically to paediatrics, the French also had a system of the ‘Carnet de Santé’ the equivalent to the ‘red book’ or personal child health record[ii] – a book issued to parents at birth that documents all the child’s medical details, development, immunisations and growth. “The introduction of this system was to improve communication between health professionals thus enhancing continuity of care and to increase parents knowledge of their child’s health and development.”  The concept proved extremely useful during my elective, all consultations were clearly documented, and provided a clear record of the child’s development since birth.  My impression, having completed my paediatric attachment in Edinburgh, was that the French use this facility much more than the British.  It was very rare to see a child in the clinic without their ‘carnet’.  In Britain the personal child health record is not used beyond the age of five years while the French ‘Carnet’ is used much more frequently up to the age of eighteen.

[i] Fiscella K, Frankel R.  Overcoming Cultural Barriers: International Medical Graduates in the United States.  JAMA.  2000; 283: 1751
[ii] Bedford H.  Revisiting the Personal Child Health Record.  Community Practitioner.  2004; 77 (5): 174-174

 
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 The Medic's Guide to Work and Electives Around the World

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