Sunday, April 8, 2012

Service delivery in the bush

Two weeks ago I visited some of our health facilities in the Grand Cape Mount county to observe service delivery and organizational structure. Our project supports many health facilities across the country, I am trying to visit as many as I can. As part of this mission, I visited one health center and two clinics - Sinje health center,  Bo-Waterside Clinic, and Tieni Clinic. Terminology is important because a health center is different from a clinic - type of services, number of staff, catchment population, and other factors play a role in deciding if a particular facility is a health center vs. clinic.

Sinje is a health center. They have a maternal and child health ward, provide family planning and reproductive health services, and even have an in-patient section. Fairly well run. I found a few issues here and there, but what health facility does not have issues, especially in the developing world? Even though I am not their supervisor, I found some areas in health records maintenance that I advised. I noticed that the newly appointed child survival officer was not adequately trained on recording patient data, therefore I took it upon myself to show her what individual columns mean in the ledger and how to record patient data. She was more than happy to listen because she has been looking for someone to show her how to record some of the data. If you look at the size of the book (see pic below), you will realize why training is needed to fill in the data. Our County Coordinator was quick to capture Dr. V in action, resulting in this picture.

Me explaining data collection to the child survival officer. Look at the size of that book!

After visiting the children's ward and talking to various staff, I wanted to visit the maternal health section. Reproductive and family planning services are top priority when it comes to improving Liberian health system. As such, it is very important for us to understand and improve service delivery in these areas. I was greeted by the Certified Midwife, who just finished delivering twins. I had the privilege to visit the children and delivery room. Neatly maintained. I even spoke to a few pregnant women who were waiting for their antenatal care checkup. I inquired patients about their satisfaction with services and the type of services they are receiving. While services are delivered as planned, there is still a lot of room for improvement. That is why I am here, to strengthen service delivery as a part of strengthening the system.


Avoid sex?
One of the posters I noticed on the wall in the maternal section caught my eye. It is a message aimed towards youth. Teenage pregnancy is a big problem in Liberia and there are different campaigns - from USAID, EU, WHO, etc - aimed towards family planning of both youth and adults. This particular poster is not from our project. What particularly caught my attention on the poster is "avoid sex". Technically speaking, the poster is absolutely correct. Abstinence is part of comprehensive family planning. I appreciate the "protect yourself at all times" message.


Following Sinje, I visited Bo-Waterside clinic. Also known as Bo-H2O (waterside = H2O, get it?), the town borders Sierra Leone. We ate lunch at a restaurant situated right at the border. In fact, we waved at the border patrol while eating lunch. Bo-H2O delivers a limited range of services compared to Sinje health center. We talked for an hour with the Officer in charge (OIC), who is a young guy working there for about 6 months. I discovered a lot of issues with the way the system is currently set up and I plan to address them during our interventions. Tieni clinic was the same as Bo-H2O, with limited service delivery and an even smaller facility. 


Pink delivery table
Besides these facilities, I also visited the Gbanway clinic in Lofa County. One of the best clinics I've visited so far, very clean, neatly organized, and all staff were present and busy working on the day I went (I didn't inform them ahead of time of my visit). The major attraction at Gbanway clinic is the pink delivery table. It put a smile on my face. Child birth is a tedious process, a little color in the delivery room might add some pleasant visual. I am so tired of seeing the hospital green and grey delivery tables, pink is a welcome change. I think every clinic should get a pink delivery table.


I can write about each one of the clinics in great detail, but I do not want to bore my non-public health friends with additional details. I have more trips planned and I will post pictures of my visits. I am in the bush all week doing assessments, so I hope to come back with more stories and pictures. 


2 comments:

  1. I don't see why the govt can't take over the oil market like they did with USPS, the Combined Declares Email Assistance and mail shipping.

    Delivery Services

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  2. V- Thank you so much for sharing this; its helpful to see your world too :). Please be careful. Amy

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