In this blog, THET's Communications Officer, Timur Bekir, describes his visit to a rural village in Somaliland to see how a newly trained group of Community Health Workers are improving healthcare for the local population.
We’re driving along one of Somaliland’s main roads, an
artery that cuts across the Sahil Region linking the capital Hargeisa with the
coastal city of Berbera, when our driver, Abdi, makes a sharp right turn,
leaving the relative comfort of the pot holed tarmac and embracing the
undulating and unforgiving terra incognita of the Somaliland desert. As we hit
the earth, we’re thrown about in all directions and I make use of any and all
handles to support myself. A couple of minutes in and I’m starting to feel
nauseous. ‘How long till we’re there?’ I enquire. ‘Two hours,’ comes the reply,
‘maybe three.’ It’s at this point that I realise the herculean task of getting
an ambulance to a remote village like the one we’re visiting today, and how
truly awful it must be for any sick patient taking that journey.
60% of the population in Somaliland is nomadic and many
settlements and villages sit in isolated rural parts of the country. These
remote communities have little or no access to healthcare and often only seek
treatment when conditions take a turn for the worse. I’m visiting one such
village today, Hulqaboobe, to see how THET’s Community Health Worker (CHW)
programme is bringing essential healthcare to the local population.
I’m traveling with Amina Abdi, the lead tutor for the Community
Health Worker programme. The programme has been developed by THET in
collaboration with the Somaliland Ministry of Health and the UK Department for
International Development, and takes a three tired approach: train CHWs, update
the existing CHW curriculum and training manual, and deliver training to
trainers who can continue to deliver the course in the future.
One of the fundamentals of the CHW programme is that
students must be selected by their local community and then return back to that
same community to work and provide healthcare, as Amina explains:
One of the criteria
was that trainees should be selected by the health committees in their village.
The person living there knows the rules and what the situation is in the
community. We wanted to make sure the candidate can help their own community.
Hulqaboobe Village. Photo: Timur Bekir |
The car slows and Abdi tells me we’re in Hulqaboobe. The
village is flanked by mountains on two sides and looks about as remote as you
can get. Up ahead sits a large tree
surrounded by huts and a Primary Healthcare Unit, built recently by one of
THET’s partners Health Poverty Action. The village elders greet us and I’m
introduced to the three CHWs who will be serving the local population. I speak
to one, Asiya Awiye Muhumed, about her experience on the course:
When I was selected by
my society that was the first time they trusted me, and during my first visit
to the village after initial training we organised a community gathering and explained
about our objectives. We told them that with the knowledge we are gaining from
the training we want to serve them better.
Newly trained CHW, Asiya Awiye Muhumed. Photo: Timur Bekir |
Health indicators in Somaliland are extremely poor. According
to UNICEF one in every 14 children die before reaching age one while one in
every 11 children does not survive to their fifth birthday; the maternal
mortality ratio is 1044/100,000; and less than 50% of births are attended by a
skilled attendant.*
CHWs embark on a nine month course that is broken down into
six week blocks. This includes three weeks of class based study, a week working
in their local health facility, and a community placement for a week, which is
followed by a week of leave. Amina highlights the scope of the training:
The topics they are
learning are really a lot. I can say some of the things they are learning are
how to take care of pregnant mothers, how to take care of sick children, how to
recognise the danger signs during pregnancy, after pregnancy, or during delivery.
The healthy environment is also one of
the things we are teaching them so they understand what health means and why we
need to have a healthy environment, a simple example being handwashing.
The rugged beauty of Hulqaboobe village is quite stunning.
The unexpectedly green landscape is broken up by orange rock and dusty earth,
punctuated by the bright, vibrant colours of the Hijabs worn by local women. There
is a huge crowd in Hulqaboobe today and Hersi Ahmed, one of the other CHWs
selected from the village, explains that this is usual. People come from all
around the area to be seen by the health workers:
Every day is like this
and there are lots of sick people who need help, that is why I wanted to work
for my people.
Hersi describes the impact of the training so far:
The training is going
very well. We’re learning a lot of good things and Amina is supporting us to
learn many things which we did not know before. We did not know how to measure
BP and first aid, we knew none of these! But now we know many things.
CHW Hersi Ahmed. Photo: Timur Bekir |
As our time in Hulqaboobe draws to an end I grab a quick
word with the village elder. I ask him what impact the CHWs will have on the
community:
Before this health
facility was built we used to hire a lorry to take pregnant mothers to
hospital, but now we get access to ambulances, and when someone gets ill in the
village we get medicine from the health centre. Initially, there was only one
health worker in the facility, but now we are expecting it to be more efficient
because we are going to have the Community Health Workers who are very active
in the health centre. So that is huge benefit to the village people, and we are
very grateful to those whose support has made this happen and all those who
participated in their training. We want to continue from there and improve upon
it, I hope that we continue receiving support.
Village elder, Muse Hussein. Photo: Timur Bekir |
The engine of our car rumbles into life behind me, signalling that it really is time to go. It’s clear from the people I’ve met today that the appetite for healthcare development is strong in Hulqaboobe. The CHWs are providing a much needed life-line to neglected communities and I look forward to returning again when the CHWs have graduated and are in their posts to see the impact they are having on patient’s lives.
*Summary Preliminary Results Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey, 2011, UNICEF.
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