Reuters AlertNet Full site
Homepage | Newsdesk | NGO Latest | Crisis briefings | Country profiles | MediaWatch | Jobs | Alerting | Login
Zimbabwe: Getting to the health centre in an ox-cart
24 Feb 2009 16:18:00 GMT
Written by: Save the Children
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.

Camilla Jones is visiting Zimbabwe as a child protection trainee for Save the Children UK.

Recently I had the pleasure of meeting Sitshengisiwe, our HIV/AIDS and Reproductive Health Coordinator in the Zambezi Valley. In the valley there's no safe water, electricity, transport or communication systems. So if someone gets ill they will have to walk, or at best be transported in an ox-cart, to the nearest basic health centre.

This wasn't always the case. Sitshengisiwe tells me that there used to be a working ambulance for referrals to the district hospital 46 kilometres away. But as with many things, this is no longer functioning.

Lack of transport dealt a serious blow to one family that Sitshengisiwe managed to support. Following childbirth at home, a young mother had suffered post-partum haemorrhage. In attempt to get his wife to the nearest clinic, her husband tried to sell one of his goats to pay for transport, but nobody he asked could afford to buy his goat. He tried to take her in an ox-cart instead, but sadly she died before they made the 10-kilometre journey.

The husband then chose to brave the 46-kilometre walk to the district hospital, to register his wife's death at the district hospital. This is where Sitshengisiwe was informed of his case. She visited the family soon after - walking only a 12 kilometre round trip this time.

On arrival she and her Ministry of Health counterpart provided health and nutrition advice to the family, and gave them a 'baby kit' that contained essential items for caring for newborns, including a baby-grow, warm clothes and a hat, nappies, towels, soap and Vaseline.

She also discussed options for feeding the baby with the husband, aunt and grandfather who are now left to care for him. They resolved to feed the baby with modified goat's milk using a cup and spoon as it was seen as the only sustainable option for them.

Save the Children feels strongly about the importance of infant feeding and actively supports the "Operational Guidance on Infant and Young Child Feeding in Emergencies" which provides the do's and don'ts in this area. The current international guidance is that modified animal milk should not be promoted as it lacks some important nutrients.

I was interested to find out more about this so I spoke to Ali Maclaine, an Infant Feeding Consultant who is working for Save the Children in this area. Her role in Zimbabwe is work with the Zimbabwe Nutrition Cluster (a group of organisations involved in nutrition) to ensure that breastfeeding is supported and that agencies know and follow the international guidance.

She told me that breastfeeding, especially in emergencies, saves lives and protects infants from diseases such as diarrhoea, malnutrition and death. In fact, non-breastfed infants in non-hygienic conditions are 6-25 times more likely to die than breastfed infants. Moreover, breast milk specifically helps protect infants from cholera. When infants are not-breastfed pre-crisis or when the mother dies usually a "breast milk" option is looked at as a first resort as it is such a life saving intervention.

Other options include wet-nursing (breastfeeding by someone other than the mother), milk banks or re-lactation (re-starting breastfeeding - if the mother had stopped pre-crisis or by a grandmother if the mother has died).

In places like Zimbabwe where there is a high prevalence of HIV, the guidance is that wet-nurses should be counselled and have an HIV test.

Where a breastfeeding option is not available infant formula should be provided for as long as the infant required needs it - along with additional support such as education on making up the formula as safely as possible, provision of additional materials e.g. cooking equipment and it should be fed to the child by cup as bottles and teats are very hard to clean.

Yet even if the care-givers get formula and extra support it is not easy: The child must be monitored and health care provided as they are likely to get sick more often and more severely than a breastfed child, collecting the additional water and fuel to make the formula and then feeding the child takes time, etc.

As part of her routine work, Sitshengisiwe carries out infant feeding support sessions for young mothers. In these sessions they talk about things like the importance of exclusive breastfeeding, the reduced risks of HIV transmission with exclusive breastfeeding compared to mixed feeding and how to breastfeed successfully.

She also talks to them about when to introduce other foods/fluids and what foods they should use. The sessions are generally a mixture of sharing experiences and concerns, and providing mothers with information.

It is hard not to get angry at the unfairness of what the people Sitshengisiwe works with have to face. Cholera and malaria are easily preventable illnesses and the vital information and resources health workers like Sitshengisiwe and her Ministry of Health counterpart can provide saves lives.

But, with the terrible road conditions making each home visit into a cross-country trek, the amount of families benefiting from such services is never enough.

Reuters AlertNet is not responsible for the content of external websites.

Del.icio.us Del.icio.us  |   Digg Digg  |   NewsVine NewsVine  |   Reddit Reddit   
We welcome argument but AlertNet will not publish comments that are racist, abusive or libellous.

Leave a Reply

Enter the code shown on on the left *

When you submit a comment to us we request your name, e-mail address and optionally a link to a website. Please note where you submit a website address, we may link to it via your name. By sending us a comment, you accept that we have the right to show the comment and your name to users. Although we require your email address, this will not be published on the site, and is only required to enable us to check facts with you, e.g. if you are making a claim we can not confirm easily. Additionally, if you would like your comment removed at anytime, you'll have to use this e-mail address when you contact us. To remove a comment at any time please e-mail us at blogs-(at)-reuters-(dot)-com (address obscured to avoid spam) specifying who you are and what you would like removed. We moderate all comments and will publish everything that advances the post directly or with relevant tangential information. We reserve the right to edit comments in order to maintain the quality of the comments, and may not include links to irrelevant material. We try not to publish comments that we think are offensive or appear to pass you off as another person, and we will be conservative if comments may be considered libelous. Reuters will use your data in accordance with Reuters privacy policy. Reuters Group is primarily responsible for managing your data. As Reuters is a global company your data will be transferred and available internationally, including in countries which do not have privacy laws but Reuters seeks to comply with its privacy policy.

All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content in this article, including by framing or by similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.

This is the blog of Save the Children, the world's largest independent organisation for children. Save the Children works in both emergency relief and long-term development to help children achieve a happy, healthy and secure childhood. The International Save the Children Alliance is made up of 27 national organisations working together in over 120 countries.

Latest bloggers

More bloggers
Global: Convoy to Gaza Makes History

South Korea: Suicides and Statistics

China: TV News Broadcasting Suicide

Kenya: Activists Arrested and Beaten

Kazakhstan: Ban on Scientology Church



Disclaimers |  Copyright |  Privacy |  Contact Us |  Feedback |  About Us |  RSS XML

Last updated:Tue Feb 24 16:24:43 2009