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Bosco rests
at the Keyala Healthcare Center |
Four-year-old Bosco
Oliha was wrestling with his brother
at home when he tumbled to the floor
and fractured his leg. His father,
Sarlino Oliha, carried him 15 kilometers
to the Keyala healthcare center,
which was recently renovated, expanded,
and supplied by the European Commission
funded Recovery and Rehabilitation
Programmeme (RRP) in Eastern Equatoria.
Sarlino said, “Before this
center, I would have to treat him
at home with tree bark, tying this
on his leg for two weeks, and using
warm water.”
Eva Cabatingan, the
Eastern Equatoria RRP’s primary
healthcare supervisor and trainer,
said that the Keyala community is
already educated about modern treatment,
and anxious to have access to healthcare
services. However, until this healthcare
center opened, the community had
no choice but to seek medical attention
from traditional healers, or walk
a day or more to the hospital in
Torit or Chukudum. Eva has been
a nurse for 29 years and has worked
in Sudan for 13 years. She has worked
for Merlin, one of the RRP NGO partners,
since August 2006.
Rose, a mother of four
from Haforiere, carried her 10-month-old
baby Sarfino 1.5 hours to the health
center to treat him for malaria.
“Before this health center,
I had a baby who was sick with malaria
and went to a fortune teller who
gave me herbs. My baby passed away.”
At the health center, Sarfino was
treated with a quinine drip to fight
the malaria and given fluids for
his dehydration. “Already
Sarfino is better today,”
Rose said.
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| The
Keyala Healthcare Center pharmacy
is stocked with the essential
drugs required by the Ministry
of Health
|
Since the healthcare
center began serving the community
six months ago, 8,659 people have
sought treatment. The majority of
patients are seeking treatment for
malaria and acute watery diarrhoea,
followed by pneumonia and other
respiratory infections. The center
has a pharmacy stocked with the
essential drugs required by the
Government of South Sudan’s
Ministry of Health, and also provides
immunization services for polio,
measles, whooping cough, tetanus,
and diphtheria. The center is staffed
by qualified local healthcare professionals,
recruited under the approval of
the Keyala community health committee,
which is responsible for managing
the facility. In combination with
all of its services, the center
provides health education, either
individually or in groups. The local
authorities in Eastern Equatoria
guided the RRP in all of its project
activities, including the renovation
of the Keyala health center.
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Patients
must rest outside the Imotong
health unit because of a lack
of facilities. |
Now that the Keyala
health center is functioning at
full capacity, the RRP in Eastern
Equatoria will turn its attention
to the Imotong community, where
there is currently only a temporary
health unit operating in a small
tukul, with patients resting outside
on the surrounding grounds. The
RRP is supplying medicine to this
unit, while it rehabilitates and
equips a proper brick structure
in Imotong Center. According to
Tracy O’Heir, the RRP in Eastern
Equatoria consortium coordinator,
“The communities we are serving
were completely cut off from basic
services during the war. The RRP
is not only restoring these services,
but training the community to manage
them.” Tracy works for Catholic
Relief Services, the agency leading
the consortium of NGOs implementing
the RRP in Eastern Equatoria.
Other partners in the
consortium include Merlin, Associazione
Volontari per il Servizio Internazionale,
and the Catholic Diocese of Torit.
In the Imotong, Keyala, and Imehejek
centers, the project will support
farmer field schools; construct
markets and roads; construct two
vocational centers to provide training
for carpentry, tailoring, bicycle
repair, handicrafts, and business
skills; conduct adult literacy classes;
drill new boreholes and repair damaged
ones; create valley dams; construct
and rehabilitate schools; build
public latrines; and construct a
theatre for community performances
and information campaigns. These
activities will serve 63,873 community
members and returnees.
The Eastern Equatoria
is part of a larger recovery Programmeme
implemented in ten states across
Sudan. Following the signing of
the Comprehensive Peace Agreement
in January 2005, the European Commission
re-launched its development assistance
with a € 54.3 million quick-start
Recovery and Rehabilitation Programmeme
(RRP). The RRP is a four-year initiative
(2006 – 2009) administered
by UNDP on behalf of the Government
of National Unity and the Government
of South Sudan.
The RRP is the
largest and most comprehensive recovery
Programmeme in Sudan serving up
to 800,000 Sudanese. A total of
47 national and international NGOs
are working together across the
country to build water points, healthcare
units, schools, and sanitation systems;
design projects that provide families
an opportunity to earn an income;
improve the local administration’s
performance capacity; and respond
to priority needs defined by the
communities themselves.
For more information on
the RRP, please contact:
Jami Schievelbein
Information Liaison Officer
Jami.schievelbein@undp.org