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Healthcare Four years ago, the East Africa Partnership (EAP) developed a problem to provide high quality local healthcare with a focus on prevention and education. There were originally two components to this program: 1) Develop self-sustaining health facilities in areas with minimal or no healthcare and 2) Develop a parish nursing program to focus on the prevention of disease and health education. During the past four years, we have developed 10 health facilities with 12 more in process and trained 42 parish nurses. Each health facility reaches about 25,000 people without health services and reaches almost 100,000 people through its mobile clinics.
The EAP responds to requests from the local community to establish its health facilities. The community must have a building, electricity and water in the proposed area. EAP then investigates the area and assesses the need. If the assessment meets our requirements, EAP agrees to establish a health facility. For the last two years, EAP has shipped containers with enough equipment to establish 4-5 health facilities, which contain at least 5 rooms. Each facility has hospital beds, a crib, a gurney, exam tables, suction, microscope, centrifuge, hematocrit, glucometer, EKG, AED, simple surgical tools, cautery, etc. Further, each facility receives a supply of drugs from the government, purchases drugs from MEDS (a division of the Christian Health Association of Kenya) and receives drugs from the U.S. Finally, each staff member receives three months of training from U.S. personnel plus Kenya personnel certified by the U.S. teams as trainers. They also receive additional training from U.S. medical teams four times a year.
In addition, EAP has trained 42 parish nurses and numerous healthcare workers. The parish nurses are nurses or healthcare workers, who have additional training and are given a backpack of supplies for diagnosis, simple treatment and medications and first aid instructions. They attend churches and schools at least twice a month to provide educational seminars and to provide preventative treatment as necessary. These nurses will be used for the school program to provide medical care to incoming students. The healthcare workers are trained mostly as AIDs educators and in first aid. They regularly support a home visit program to the terminally ill, AIDs patients and emergency cases. Riders for Health has supplied 10 motorbikes that are used for transport of medications and conducting medical clinics. EAP conducts 2-4 mobile clinics each week in areas where there is no health facility. Often these clinics are conducted in buildings that the community hopes will one day house a health facility. This program reaches a large population of Kenyans, who have no readily accessible healthcare.
The health services program is largely self-sustaining and each facility must be self-sufficient within 6-24 months. This program relies on the generous support of the Kenyan government and the local MOH, which provide medication. In addition, the government promised to second one nurse to each facility once the facility saw 35/patients per day in populous areas and 15 patients/per day in very rural communities. The government has only supported one person to date. Without this support, EAP has been forced to delay the opening of 12 new health facilities. We have the resources to stock these facilities with drugs and equipment, but cannot begin a new facility while still paying the salaries of three medical people at each facility. If the government can fulfill its commitment to EAP by paying the salary of one of our personnel after the first six months and after volume targets have been met, then we can start one new facility for each person supported. It is the goal of EAP to continue to improve the health of the Kenyan people by providing low-cost, quality, accessible healthcare locally and by providing education on the prevention of disease.
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