Addressing Child and Maternal Mortality

February 16th, 2009

Source: IRIN
Source: IRIN

African Union (AU) Commissioner for Social Affairs, Biencé Gawana, insists that African countries should focus on promoting maternal, infant and child health and reporting on progress. During a summit on child and maternal health in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the members of the AU agreed to create a continent-wide campaign to stress the importance of child and maternal health. While Africa has some of the highest rates of maternal, infant, and child mortality, progress is being made. As information and communications technology and innovation continue to grow, health officials are certain that the improvements to maternal, infant and child health will be “paramount”. In addition, the AU has proposed a pharmaceuticals manufacturing plan, which will allow countries within Africa to produce their own drugs and medicines.

In the hope of reducing child and maternal mortality, which are key indicators of the health of any community, 60 nursing aides in Sierra Leone have recently been awarded certificates for passing a course specifically educating them in child mortality. While there is a lack of qualified health workers willing to work in health throughout Sierra Leone, the graduation of these 60 nursing aides shows that Sierra Leone has heeded the advice of the AU, and has taken steps to assure that infant, child, and maternal mortality decreases over time.

Free health care for women and children

February 6th, 2009

The Sierra Leonean government is considering introducing a health care plan that would combine a national insurance plan with completely free care for the nation’s neediest groups. The implemented plan would fund basic health care through insurance premiums, taxes (on such items as alcohol and cigarettes), contributions from citizens, and donors. The UK’s Department of International Development (DFID), has pledged to back Sierra Leone’s government in providing free health care. Children, pregnant and lactating women, and the destitute would be exempt from premiums. While Sierra Leone already has a policy that includes free health care for children and pregnant women, they have been unable to provide the care, due to lack of financing. Children and pregnant women have been subject to “informal fees” - mostly because the few health care workers are paid very poorly, or often not at all.


The insurance plan would be administered by the existing National Social Security and Insurance Trust (NASSIT). According to NASSIT, the new health insurance plan would be phased in by district, but creating and implementing a sustainable system will take approximately 10-20 years. Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) and Save the Children are also working with the government to improve access to quality health services. Health Minister Dr. Kabia says, “We will not rest until our [women] and children stop dying.” (Full story)


Counting stones to track health indicators

February 3rd, 2009

In areas where there are low levels of electricity, literacy, and the availability of health information, it may now be possible for rural villagers to accurately track health information by counting stones. For more than a decade, the University of Oslo, Norway has created health information systems for countries throughout Africa. Sierra Leone, with its low health ratings, recent civil war, and virtually non-existent power grids in rural villages, is the University’s latest project. In Tobodu, eastern Sierra Leone, the traditional midwives of the village place stones in a box that has five compartments. In this way, the box registers births, stillbirths, post-birth death of a child, post-birth death of a mother, and illness of a mother. These key indicators of health are then counted monthly by the local health center, and passed along to the district authorities. The information is logged in a regional database, which is a part of the national system.


In August, 2008, Sierra Leone’s Minister of Health and Sanitation, Dr. Soccoh Alex Kabia, unveiled a “revitalized district health informations system,” with the goal of documenting and producing information on key health indicators. With funding from the World Health Organization and the Health Metrics Network, all 13 districts in Sierra Leone are being provided with low-powered computers that operate on solar energy to create a nation-wide system to document information that will directly influence the decisions of health officials. “This will help us reduce the high mortality among children and pregnant women…by contributing to move to evidence-based planning and decision-making at local levels, transparency and accountability and regular monitoring of progress made in the sector,” said Dr. Kabia.

Villagers ride over 5 miles in wheelbarrows for medical care

January 26th, 2009

Recent developments in Sierra Leone highlight the lack of adequate healthcare in the region. According to the IRIN (Integrated Regional Information Networks), an editorially independent part of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, clinics that were approved to open under the SLPP (Sierra Leone Peoples Party, defeated in 2007) have never been built. In the village of Charlotte, residents use wheelbarrows to cart those needing medical care to Regent, a neighboring village. The distance is approximately 9 kilometers (5.6 miles). The last medical care given to the residents of Charlotte consisted of a temporary clinic created by volunteer doctors in April 2008. These doctors distributed medicines and treatment before leaving.

(Full article)


As of 2004, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimated that Sierra Leone had 168 doctors in the entire country (far short of the 1 per 10,000 residents that WHO recommends). Sierra Leone falls at the very bottom of UNICEF’s recent report of The State of the World’s Children 2009, with respect to maternal and newborn health. However, UNICEF workers there remain hopeful that the health of Sierra Leonians is improving. According to Dr. Samuel Kargbo, of the Sierra Leone Health Ministry, health is a top priority for the government in 2009. The UK-based Department for International Development is slated to help develop the infrastructure necessary for improving health throughout the country. However, it has been acknowledged that money is not the only answer to the nation’s failing health. Systems, infrastructure, and medical personnel are necessary to execute government plans for rebuilding the war-torn country. Short and long-term sustainable goals are necessary, according to UNICEF, to dramatically reduce infant mortality.

(Full article)

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