Health

 

 

 

 

The Ejere region (population 100,000) has 4 health centres and 27 rural health posts. Each post is staffed by health extension workers (HEWs) – young women who have had nine months training – and each serves around 4000 people. In the health centres there are more facilities. A simple lab with trained lab technicians, a limited pharmacy with a pharmacist and a delivery suite with trained nurses and midwives. There are also administrative staff and one ambulance. There are, however, no doctors.

For Ethiopia has provided furniture and medical equipment to every health post in the region. Since 2005 this has included basic furniture, examination couches, medicine cabinets, stethoscopes, blood pressure gauges, infant scales, sterilising equipment and sustainable solar powered fridges.

Good health is vital for the development of communities, therefore supporting health posts is a prime objective for us. We have now equipped all health posts in Ejere with basic medical equipment including delivery couches, infant scales, dry ovens, medicine cupboards and solar lamps. We have also provided medical reference books in both Amharic and English.

The community asked us for refrigerators. In 2011 we piloted our first solar fridge in Beso. Installation and training was given to the clinic workers and a local electrician by Solarsense-UK. This proved such a success that 7 more were installed in 2012/13. Reaching the furthest health posts with cold storage has reduced vaccine wastage from over 33% to virtually zero.

More recent projects are concentrating on delivery suites in the Health Centres. Our current campaign, Women and Children First, is aimed at helping to reduce the maternal and infant mortality. Supplying light and running water is the first requirement!

One of the clinics we equipped was in Ilu Aga.

The Ilu Aga clinic serves a population of over 7000. It has no power or running water. The lack of electricity means that immunisation campaigns have to take place within the limited time that insulated coolers can sustain the vaccines.

Access to Ilu Aga from Addis Alem involves a 1.5 hour 4×4 journey along bumpy tracks followed by a 30-45 minute hike over hills.

 

This means that equipment supplied to the rural clinics must be low maintenance and not rely on a connection to the Ethiopian power grid.  It also causes logistical issues when we attempt to transport anything bulky and heavy to the clinics as the delivery van just won’t be able to drive up to the clinic!

Latest Health News

April Newsletter

April Newsletter

April 23rd is St George’s day – we share a patron saint – but there will be few celebrations in Ethiopia this year.

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Brenda’s Bike – in the news

Have a read of the article just published on The Rider's Digest: I am not a biker. I am a retired GP from Bristol who is part of a small development project in rural Ethiopia, helping out with worthy aims such as wells, schools and health posts. So what am I doing...

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As a small charity, we have the benefit of very low overheads. We do not hire professional fundraisers or rent expensive offices.

Because of this we are able to put more of the money directly to projects to benefit those who need it!

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