Clinic Report
21Sep13
It appears that I
have hit the ground running. Wednesday's arrival was the usual ritual
of greeting and arranging accommodation. Thursday was supposed to be
busier. Unfortunately, neither the reverend nor the headmaster were
available in the morning, having been called to the Ministry of
Education office in Kasungu to deal with urgent issues around the
boarding facilities in the day schools. That gave me some time to go
up to the site of the school Bishop's is building near Senior Chief
Kaomba's court about 2 kilometres southeast of us. It is a very
ambitious school set up and Ken Manda is acting as site manager. It
is a school and does not appear to have a health facility included as
had been rumoured.
We finally met the
reverend to make begin making our plans in mid-afternoon. We were the
folks at Makupo who represent the village on the clinic joint
committee and myself. I explained the purpose of the visit and he was
super agreeable with the purpose and the validity of the concerns
that the Canadian clinic support folk had raised. We agreed to start
our exploratory visits by going to St. Andrews and Kasungu District
Hospital the next afternoon and begin to plan our trip to Lilongwe
for next week.
I decided to travel
with Lonjezo as Makupo's eyes and ears to this process. He was one of
the 3 Makupo youth to begin health training at St Andrews earlier in
the year and originally wanted to train as a nurse. Kenneth
Alimekezeke Chikondi-Phiri is the minister in charge of the Chilanga
CCAP mission. I wanted Kenneth to see what was happening at other
church sites and how they function as compared to the Nkhoma method.
Sautso will join me on Saturday and hopefully she will be our project
management representative after I leave. She has worked with Nellie
and I since the first well in 2004 and is a very trusted collaborator
who is a competent administrator, and has completed a certificate in
management including accounting
We arrived
unannounced at St. Andrews to find Peter Minjale, the medical
officer, on vacation and literally everyone else at lunch. Mrs
Phyllis Bwanali, the Nursing matron graciously came to introduce us
to the facility. I had not really visited the place since we went as
group in 2008 and I was impressed at how much it has grown. In fact,
it began as a small clinic, even smaller than what we are proposing.
It is now a large sprawling facility with several wards, a surgery,
delivery facilities and a dentist, ante-natal services, nutrition
rehabilitation and outreach services. Most of what is there has been
put in place over the last 10 years. A testament to its essential
role in the health care system was the fact that the operating
theatre was being used by a surgeon from Kasungu District Hospital
while we were visiting, because of a problem with their facility. It
was an essential orientation for we lay people.
We wanted to visit
the District Health Officer at Kasungu District Hospital. We need to
coordinate with him and his team around issues of government
sanction, standards and support. Unfortunately, the vice-president
had come to Kasungu on some specious mission to lay a cornerstone for
a new maternity wing at the hospital, which was in fact an excuse for
a political rally. The governing coalition of Joyce Banda is facing a
real insurgence of the MCP especially in the heartland of Kamuzu
Banda. The net result was that all people except essential medical
staff were obliged to attend the rally as part of the protocol duties
when the VP is in town. We therefore couldn't meet anyone at the
hospital and a tour was not really necessary.
We still had some
time together so we moved across the road to te Kasungu Inn and spent
a couple of hours planning, discussing and sharing ideas. We have our
first meeting set up with the Nkhoma Health Unit in Lilongwe for
Monday morning and one with the contractor for that afternoon. On the
way down to Lilongwe we will stop at Madisi and Lifeline to set up
visits on Wednesday afternoon as we return from Lilongwe. So those 3
days are starting to look profitable and I am pleased with how things
are shaping up.
Some brief
background before I close off. Mission organisations still deliver
well over half of Malawi's health care. So collaboration on issues of
health care are with government and or the church. The Anglicans have
set up St. Andrews as a satellite of their much larger facility in
Nkotakota about 1.5 hours to the lakeshore to serve the much
under-serviced region of eastern Kasungu. Despite the name
Presbyterian as part of the CCAP moniker, Nkhoma Synod of the CCAP
operates in the Central region in alliance with the old Dutch Reform
Church now known as World Renewal, not the international Presbyterian
church of Scottish heritage. Nkhoma is situated about an hour south
of Lilongwe and has a rather elaborate set up including a large
teaching hospital, training facilities for nurses and other health
personnel. Their health unit is in Lilongwe so I will take the
opportunity to pass by Nkhoma in a later phase of the trip when I go
to the southern region.
The churches depend
on outside help and are more than willing to collaborate with funding
organisations even old non-believers like me. To that end Kenneth
agrees that if it would help fund-raising efforts then we should
create a local NGO to make the clinic structure arms length from the
church and open to everyone in the community. Sautso is office
manager for one of Malawi's preeminent law firms so we will explore
the value of this option over the course of the visit with someone
from there.
Good job. I like the "local NGO" idea. Keep us posted.
ReplyDeleteDoug,
ReplyDeleteSounds like you have made an excellent start! Will you get another opportunity to meet with Aubrey Wande the administrator out at St Andrew's? He has been involved with St. Andrew's from the beginning and has overseen all the growth that you mention. He had offered to consult on our project when I spoke with him about it last March. He also could give you some idea of the operating costs of a small hospital and how much of this is covered by the MOH. If you can meet with Peter at any point, this would also be beneficial as we could really use his help when implementing the Village Health Workers Program. Would he be interested in doing some of the training as I had proposed in the document that you have? Not to overwhelm you Doug, but one of the many pieces of the puzzle for me that I have not been able to fit, is the role of this HSO (Health/Village Surveillance Officer) What exactly is their mandate? What kind of resources do they have? How could we work together to provide the villages with more primary health care? My understanding is that they report directly to the DHO but I find it strange that they have not provided, to my knowledge, any interventions at Makupo. Over worked, too large a catchment area or I have their role wrong?
We will all be following your blog closely and once we feel there is enough info to discuss, we can get a meeting together here in Mtl.I too find the idea of an NGO appealing. This would also be appealing to potential sponsors.
A big hello from Amai Melodie to the Village of Makupo!!
Zikomo Doug!
Doug!!! You certainly HAVE hit the ground running. I love to hear about these stories. I get so nostalgic reading about the people and the places and can literally picture you as your are riding up to Mthunthama or enjoying a Fanta at Kasungu Inn.
ReplyDeleteWhat's great about all of this is that you were working with a such an amazing group of intelligent and motivated individuals that can certainly help to propel this project forward. The political events that transpired the day you went to Kasungu serve to remind us of importance of the political influences on health care (and obviously, everything else) - it brings me back to last year when Vincristine was almost non-existent because of the government's refusal to receive aid... or lack of fuel causing mayhem at the expense of hospital generators....We could go on and on --> the need for this clinic is manyfold!!
Keep us posted..Can't wait to hear more.
I am here and looking forward to working more with you guys on this project!