Health care for 30,000 slum residents in Mali

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Clinic to break ground September 27th!

By Katie Walter - 2008 Clinic Coordinator, August 11, 2008 06:11 PM

After a brick laying community ceremony on September 27th, construction of a health center for 30,000 underserved slum residents will begin! Sikoroni residents are continuing to invest in their own community with individual contributions to make up $8000 of the costs and the remaining funds will be funded through a combination of MHOP donations and committed money from the Malian government. The National Ministry for Health has at long last approved our application! We just need to complete our US-based fundraising.

The clinic is scheduled to be completed by June 2009, so Ben and I have spent the last few weeks revising a list of the medial supplies needed to equip the clinic. We met with Dr. Magdalene Togo, the ex-chief of medicine of the national hospital, at the Ministry of Health to better understand what clinic equipment we could expect to be “prise en charge” (provided by the government) and what will need to be provided by MHOP. Dr Togo immediately agreed to assist with questions during the clinic construction process and provided us with a copy of the “Liste Type Material CSCOM”, a list of equipment that is supposedly provided by the government to each CSCOM (local clinic).

After meeting with Togo, we visited several neighboring clinics, and it became clear that most CSCOMS aren’t supplied even with the “minimum” materials. We spoke with the Médecin Chefs at nearby CSCOMS to determine which equipment they saw as essential. They assisted us in creating a prioritized list of crucial equipment but most of all stressed the need for equipment to be continuously updated and replaced. MHOP clearly needs to supplement the equipment that will be provided by the government. Over the next year, our student group will form partnerships with international medical supply organizations and seek donations from US hospitals and universities to acquire high-quality equipment not covered by the Ministry of Health.

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Clinic committees formed, fundraising progressing.

By Caitlin Cohen - US Coordinator, July 10, 2007 05:46 PM

Progress on the Community Clinic in Sikoro is coming along, slowly but steadily!

We have elected and established the committee to oversee the clinic management after its construction, and another committee to do fundraising within the community. More than 400 people (219 registered adults) showed up to the “constituting assembly”.

We have submitted our application for the legal status of the clinic, the “ASACOMSI 2” (Association de Santé Communautaire de Sikoro 2). All the architect’s plans and engineer’s estimations for the building itself are complete, and the committees are starting the long process of collecting small taxes every month from the residents of Sikoro for their contribution the cost of the clinic. Hopefully we will have fundraised enough money to begin construction in March, 2008. We are partnered with the local government, as we believe that it is our role to foster rather than replace the public system, and we are asking the government to build an extension to the clinic in 2009. In the mean time, we continue to do public peer education on malaria and hygiene, including a malaria theater and mosquito-net distribution festival, pictured in the project gallery.

Furthermore, Mali Health Organizing Project’s peer educators have gone out into each house in the community and explained resident’s rights regarding the clinic, the process of voting for clinic committee members, and the benefits of membership (half-price consultations, voting rights). We have talked with the Imams of the village, the chiefs of each sector of the town, and other village leaders about promoting the clinic and fundraising. We are also starting to use local radio to explain the campaign and our accountability system.

We will not begin construction on the clinic until the fundraising is complete, so that the building is not harmed by rain. Thanks to all those who have contributed so far. With the money that has been given, we have a foundation (both literally and figuratively). The next few months of fundraising will be difficult, but we remain confident that it is possible to raise the requisite funds. Please help out by donating or spreading the word.

Peux ce que veux. Where there is a will there is a way.


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