Sunday, 30 October 2011

A tour of St. Joseph's, Malawi (km should be metres)

Below is the link to a You Tube video tour of the St. Joseph's property and surroundings where I spent the last 3 weeks. (I am now back in Canada and feel priviledged to have had the opportunity to experience Malawi - albeit briefly)
http://youtu.be/9n9dG5KafmU

St. Joseph's Hospital Nglundi, Malawi (Summary)

St. Joseph’s is considered to be one of the bigger regional hospitals. It is a “private” hospital which means that it levies a charge for all services. Given that the salary costs are fully covered by the government of Malawi and the anti-retroviral medicine is provided free through the government, it means these charges cover other drugs, supplies and operating costs. This still imposes a considerable financial burden on the patient and St. Joseph’s indeed does not collect all that it charges due to thepoverty of the people it serves. Without the charges, however, it could not survive financially. The operating picture of St. Joseph’s is as follows:
Catchment Area
The total population of the hospital’s official catchment area with a size 184 sq km is estimated at 56,275 people (2009 census). This population consists of approx. 10,515 households divided over 119 villages within an average radius of 10 km from the hospital. The population density is one of the highest densities in rural Malawi and has a strong mixture of tribes.
The Community
The lifestyle is based on subsistence farming. Only a minority of the population has a paying job but even they are engaged in agriculture to produce their own food due to low wages. The main crops grown are maize, cassava, groundnuts and rice. Other crops are vegetables like tomatoes and cabbage and fruits like bananas and mangoes.
The area is prone to drought and there is very little water conservation. The water supply from the Blantyre Water Board is very unreliable and pump water from boreholes is limited due to very poor pumping equipment. As a result, there is no readily available source of water. Similarly, the supply of electricity is also unreliable and there are frequent blackouts. The sewage system is by way of septic tanks but the system is very old and in need of rehabilitation.
Malawi’s social indicators and health indicators are amongst the world’s worst. The health burden of the HIV/AIDS pandemic is enormous and is one of the leading causes of death in the most productive age group (20 to 48 years).

St. Joseph’s Operations
·         Staffing levels @ 85% of approved 227 positions
·         Staff vacancies @ 44% for nurses and 35% for clinicians and other HPs – lab tech, pharm and rad)
·         BUT spending is @ 105% budget > budget based on prior actuals vs approved positions
o   2004                               9,774
o   2005                               11,640
o   2006                               15,311
o   2007                               16,839
o   2008                               17,657
o   2009                               18,570
·         Diagnoses
o   Malaria                         24%
o   Respiratory                   16%
o   HIV/AIDS                       7%
o   Trauma                          6%
·         Note diarrhoreal and malnutrition have been reduced due to improved water and sanitation and improved food security

·         In-Patient admissions
o   2004                               3,330
o   2005                               5,560
o   2006                               6,216
o   2007                               6.975
o   2008                               7,640
o   2009                               8,285

·         Diagnoses
o   Malaria                                                                         42%
o   Other non-communicable diseases                             29%
§  eg. Asthma, epilepsy, sepsis
o   Pneumonia                                                                    8%
o   Trauma                                                                          5%
o   TB                                                                                  3%

·         2009-10 In-Patient Metrics

In-patients
# Beds
# Admission
Nursing Days
% Occ
ALOS
Deaths
Death Rate per 1000
Female
         33
         1,485
       4,675
    38.81%
      3.15
         40
       26.94
Male
         36
         1,641
       5,133
   39.06%
      3.13
         53
       32.30
Pediatric
         56
         2,781
       8,642
 42.28%
      3.11
         55
       19.78
TB
         34
            218
       2,450
 19.74%
    11.24
           9
       41.28
Maternity
         37
         2,111
       6,145
 45.50%
      2.91
           1
         0.47
Nursery
           4
               49
            31
 2.12%
      0.63
           2
       40.82
       200
          8,285
     27,076
 37.09%
      3.27
       160
       19.31


·         Preventative Health Care Service: Primary Health Care Program
Also of note is the growing Preventative Health Care Service: Primary Health Care Program. The core of the program is the Health Surveillance Assistant and there are 36 of these people. They are trained by the District Health Office but are linked to the St. Joseph’s Primary Health Care Team comprised of 4 community health nurses. The focus is on behavior change, early detection of infectious disease, immunization, pregnancy detection and home based care. 

Friday, 28 October 2011

Day 29 to 30

The flight home takes me over some magical names: Dar es Salaam, Zanzibar and Mount Kilimanjaro (Tanzania), Entebbe (Uganda), Mombasa and Narobi (Kenya), Addis Ababa (Ethiopia), Khartoum (Sudan) where the White Nile and the Blue Nile meet, and then following the Nile over the Aswan Dam and the relocated Sphinx to Cairo, Tripoli (Libya) and a lay-over in Amsterdam. 
Leave today at 12:00 and arrive home Sunday about 6:00. See you soon

Day 26 Mulanje

Visited the biggest attraction in Malawi (after the Lake) – Mt Mulanje and its tea plantations. It is a great spot for hikers and there are plans to boost it tourism appeal by introducing rock climbing (up)and para-sailing (off) the mountain. On the way, we visited Mulanje Mission Hospital. It too had a very friendly, clean and appealing atmosphere and was surrounded by school system much like St. Joseph’s.

Day 26 Play time in a Mt Mulanje Stream

Day 26 Mt Mulanje and Tea Fields (one bud and two leaves at a time)

Days 25 Village Outreach

Today I joined the Primary Care Team as they ventured out into a village to administer an ante-natal monitoring and post-natal prevention program. It was fascinating to watch and the number of mothers-to-be, and the number of mothers-in-fact, that were seen was truly impressive during the 2 hour session. One young boy whose picture you can hopefully see (background was too light) is wearing a Vancouver 2011 Olympic sweater, he was reluctant to pose but his mother was delightful. He did brighten up when I tickled the hockey player on his chest.