Picture from one of the dramas that a SAFE-partnered community groups wrote and performs. What a great way to educate communities about the importance of family planning!!
Safe Mothers, Safe Babies

Photo Credit: Anne Sherwood
Showing posts with label community health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label community health. Show all posts
11 August 2012
Maternal Health Drama
Labels:
behavior change,
civil society organization,
community group,
community health,
drama,
family planning,
health behavior,
safe motherhood,
song
Location:
Iganga, Uganda
22 July 2012
Lighting the Darkness in Partnership with WE CARE Solar and Rural Communities!
Can you imagine personally delivering--or birthing--a baby in total darkness? What if your wife, mother, sister, or friend needed to undergo an emergency cesarean section to save her life or the life of her unborn child's? These thoughts are terrifying, and Safe Mother, Safe Babies believes that nobody should ever face such conditions as a reality. That is why SAFE partnered with WE CARE Solar to bring Solar Suitcases to Ugandan health facilities' maternity wards and operating theaters. Our first set of installations took place in December, but right now, WE CARE Solar is in Uganda doing more installations as we speak! Check out the pictures and captions below for some insight into their experiences with SAFE!
14 July 2012
June in Uganda: SAFE interns at Ibulanku and Lubira health centers
A group of medical and
public health students from the University of Texas recently returned from
Uganda where they were working on a variety of projects pertaining to SAFE’s e-Ranger
motorcycle ambulance program, which was launched just last summer!
Along with SAFE’s Program Manager Mukalu Medie, the group
consisted of SAFE interns Danika Brodak and Rica Mauricio who worked with
Lubira health center, as well as Brittany Meyers, Youstina Ishak, and SAFE
practicum student Paul Tumbu – the subgroup that worked at Ibulanku health
center.
Since the e-Ranger program is already established at
Ibulanku, the main goal of the Ibulanku subgroup was to assess the overall
effectiveness of the program. The group met with the staff at Ibulanku health
center to determine generally how the project is faring. They also gathered
delivery and antenatal records from the hospital to gauge both how e-Ranger
patient information was being collected by the midwives and to see the raw
numbers of how many mothers in labor were being effectively transported by the
e-Ranger ambulances.
The group also met with MABEDA drama group to assess how the
club is using drama performance to promote the use of the e-Ranger motorcycle
ambulances in their community.
Community involvement is absolutely essential to the e-Ranger program,
because without the community’s support and active involvement, the project would
have never been implemented. This emphasizes how important community is in
ensuring the health of mothers and babies and families in general! With this in
mind, also meeting with the Village Health Teams was helpful in order to
discuss their role in community mobilization relating to the use of the
motorcycle ambulances to promote safe deliveries – both of women to the health
center and of their babies!
Finally, the group at Ibulanku spoke with a former e-Ranger
user who shared her experience utilizing the motorcycle ambulance service and
asked her if she would help spread the word to other pregnant women in the
community. In following with this encouragement, the team also conducted health
education sessions for the pregnant women in the antenatal care clinic and
discussed with them how to prepare for a safe delivery.
While the
e-Ranger program has been running for a year at Ibulanku health center, the
program has not yet been established at Lubira, but the SAFE team was working
hard to gain the support of health workers and the community at large so that
SAFE can launch the program there and thus make the service available to even
more mothers in labor! The Lubira subgroup conducted a meeting during which a
memorandum of understanding was signed between the Lubira community health
center and the Buyanga sub-county community groups. They also met with the
Lubira management committee and the health facility staff to discuss the
logistics of launching the program.
Also at
Lubira, SAFE coordinated many maternal and child health-related activities
including having several groups perform dramas about important health topics. SAFE
also provided immunizations and conducted HIV testing and referred individuals to
the clinic for treatment. The safe mama kit program was also launched,
providing mothers with a package of supplies necessary for a clean and safe
birth.
Overall,
the June 2012 trip was very productive and a great success! The interns paved a
great road for the successive group of interns who just arrived in Uganda! The
July interns plan on carrying out refresher training with the traditional birth
attendants in obstetric emergency response and referral for complicated cases.
They are also currently working to follow up on the work done in June on the
process of launching the e-Ranger program at the Lubira health center.
Excellent
work done by all the June interns, and stay posted for an update about the July
trip soon!
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