Onboard the Train of Hope

In a past post, third year optometry understudy Samantha Davidson composed on the beginning of her excursion to South Africa chipping in ready the Phelophepa Train of Hope. In the first of two sections she narratives her experience rewarding more than 1,500 individuals over the course of about fourteen days.


Counting myself, there were 10 optometry understudies chipping in on board the train. Myself and 3 others were from Glasgow and 6 were from the University of the Free State. The various understudies on the train were from colleges in South Africa so we were the main remote understudies on the train. All through the excursion we turned out to be old buddies, getting each other out and imparting information and abilities to one another that would help the accuracy and speed of our schedules. There were 4 test rooms inside the train and 6 testing stations outside, we as a whole switched back and forth between chipping away at and off the train.


All youngsters were tried inside since the clamor and interruption outside would have been an over the top interruption. Whist testing on the train our routine was adjusted to be as effective as conceivable to augment the quantity of patients inspected. Just the patient’s principle objection was tended to, refraction and ophthalmoscopy were finished all through the eye test, making it much more brief than the far reaching eye test you would for the most part understanding here at home. We were seeing such a significant number of patients daily that it was difficult to follow along, however I would evaluate that in all out we saw around 1500 patients across 10 days.

There was a set scope of glasses and remedy focal points accessible in the lab on the train. This implied you wouldn’t have the option to give the specific remedy that the patient required. The hardware we had on the train wasn’t altogether finished so making do and adjusting to what in particular was accessible was a battle however we immediately got ready to capitalize on what we had. The principal station we worked at was in the town of Vryburg. It took us 10 hours on a transport to arrive at the train from Johannesburg and we were getting drug store, dental, nursing and brain research understudies en route.

Going on the train, the scene around us was level. In contrast to Cape Town, the territory around Johannesburg is eminent for having an absence of mountains and slopes.

At the point when we showed up we were appeared to our compartments, there were 3 of us in a little room yet we made it work and came to acknowledge what we had. It might have been little, yet the patients were so frantic to be seen that they began lining at 6pm the prior night. Some were so frantic of being seen, they dozed outside the train the prior night to guarantee they got an arrangement toward the beginning of the day. You may believe that South Africa would be warm yet while it might be summer in the UK, in this piece of the world it is winter and during the night the temperature would drop significantly.

My preferred patient from my time in Vryburg was an old woman who had waterfalls in both her eyes, one of her eyes was past adjustment by glasses yet she was not yet at the phase where she required alluded for waterfall medical procedure. To begin with she battled to see the greatest ‘E’ on the diagram, this frequently unsettled patients, anyway in the wake of doing refraction she had the option to see far down the outline. So regularly, I discovered, you are left inclination defenseless when none of the train’s administrations can help somebody whose vision is past sparing or even aided by glasses, however the grin all over and her energy when she had the option to peruse down the graph made my outing. She was yelling ‘E, E, E, E… ‘ with so much eagerness and force that individuals began to swarm round and see what all the whine was about.

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