Not your regular general practitioner
You won't find this 30-year-old treating patients at any clinic or hospital in the city, or even the country.
It would have been an easy option for Dr Shiny Kaki, from Vijayawada, to pursue a post-graduate degree after graduating from CMC Vellore, and eventually lead a comfortable life, like many of her peers. But Shiny let go of the path cushioned with comforts and took the most important decision of her life — to join Doctors Without Borders (Medecins Sans Frontieres or MSF).
Recalling how the journey with MSF began, Shiny shares, “Looking back, I think the incident that actually prompted me to take this path was the death of a cousin in a car crash. It took me a long time to get out of that grief. I don’t think I have managed to do it yet. In those moments of grief, I made this instinctive decision. I didn’t know why but I applied, and here I am.”
She adds, “I was supposed to do a nine-month-long project with them, which took me to Somalia. After that I was to return and pursue my post-graduation. However, four years later, I am addicted to the job, and my post-graduation is still waiting to happen. Thinking of further studies makes me sad! I am not keen to be restricted to one place, one hospital. After being elsewhere, out in the open, I realise this corporate setup isn’t for me. The thrill of working in a dangerous situation has become such a huge part of my life, that I think normalcy will seem boring!”
Since joining MSF in September 2013, Shiny has served in high-conflict zones like Somalia, South Sudan, Yemen and Nigeria. And she shares that every new place leaves an impression on her along with offering a different experience. “There are a few things that are very enticing about this job. One, the travel and understanding of new cultures — meeting people of different communities and exchanging culture has become an integral part of my life. You experience the world in a whole new way and it’s so beautiful.”
The second attractive thing, for Shiny, is the people she gets to meet. “Not just the locals, but also the like-minded individuals who come together from across the world in a pursuit just like mine. I have met some amazing people and made good friends. And the third and most important thing is the difference you are making to the world. You are contributing to a healthy world. Every night as you go to bed, you know that you have saved at least one life, and nothing feels better than that,” she says
happily.
As much as Shiny makes her work sound interesting and fulfilling, there’s no undermining the level of risk her job involves — notwithstanding the constant hardships, emotional situations and death threats at every juncture. “I have seen several senior doctors who have done around 50 to 60 projects, switched off from the emotional quotient. All the pain and sorrow doesn’t affect them anymore. The conflict and suffering seems to have become a part of their lives. But I don’t want to reach there. I want these things to affect me and move me. I remember my experience in Africa. It destroys a part of you. The thought that life is all about sunshine and rainbows will abandon you.”
Conflict zones do come with complex systems — and Shiny has learnt to become a tough taskmaster with time.
Amidst all this, Shiny does have moments when she is reminded of home. “The inconvenience of living in places where there are no facilities and comforts can make you do that. And then, there are times when I want to eat something as simple as dal which I crave for days together, and I think of people back home. In fact, my parents initially did resist my choice and willingness to pack my bags off to a risky zone. However, luckily for me, they are very free-willed and have come to terms with my desire to make the world a better place. There are times when I think of them on field but it’s not always possible to reach them. But I think we have all understood that this is my life, and what I love to do.”
Interestingly, Shiny didn’t want to be a doctor from the start. “It was like any typical South Indian household where the choice for a bright kid was between engineering and medicine and I chose the latter. However, with time, I started loving what I do and today, being a doctor is all about human contact for me. Wherever I am posted, I spend a lot of time talking and exchanging stories with every patient, play with the kids and spend time with them. The saving grace of this profession for me is human contact and I always want it to touch my heart and affect me,” she concludes.