Margarida leaving a health center |
We
started our trip with a stop at the Namaacha district hospital where we met up
with government staff responsible for vaccine delivery in the area. While I was shown the hospital pharmacy,
stock room, laboratory, maternity ward, and the general patient area, Margarida
headed to the back of the hospital to go over their records of vaccine use and
disbursements in the district. She
quickly identified some incomplete and inconsistent data records and
immediately sat down with the staff until she was convinced they understood
what was wrong and how to make it better.
Margarida previously held positions as the national vaccine manager for
Mozambique and as the director of the Maputo province department of health, and
she not only knows her stuff inside and out, but she cares too deeply about the
issues to leave a room before she thinks all present understand their role in
facilitating vaccine disbursement in Mozambique.
Once
things were squared away at the district hospital we set out to visit the seven
health units in the district. At each
health unit, the government made their vaccine deliveries and Margarida met
with the health workers to make sure they were giving vaccines on the right
timetable and properly recording vaccine use.
Before we left she would check that their refrigerators were functioning
properly, check expiration dates on vaccines and rapid diagnostic tests, count
their existing stock levels of vaccine and rapid diagnostic test supplies, and
verify that the stock matched the records.
A visit of this sort typically took well over an hour.
Damaged solar panel at Dibinduane |
At
two of the health centers we encountered refrigerators that were having
problems. The refrigerator at the
Dibinduane health center was operated entirely by solar power and its
performance had been somewhat erratic as of late. According to the records, the temperature
inside the refrigerator had been fluctuating, but had so far not warmed beyond
the threshold that was safe to store the vaccines. Just to be sure, we checked the vaccine
packaging which indicates (via a color changing label) when the vaccines have
been exposed to higher than permissible temperatures and thus are no longer
safe to use. Happily, the vaccines were
still in good shape, but Margarida left the health center workers with
instructions to monitor the temperature in their refrigerator very
closely. As a die-hard supporter of
renewable energy, I argued that there was no actual proof that the solar power
was to blame other than the mere correlation of the frig being both erratic and
solar powered. However, most of the
Mozambiqueans (who admittedly had a lot more experience using solar power than
I do) just shook their heads and took this as yet another example of the
fussiness of solar energy.
Broken frig being used as a table |
At
the Kulula health center, we found a refrigerator (powered by traditional
sources) that was not functioning at all.
This meant we could not deliver any new vaccines and we had to take away
for disposal any existing (and requiring cool storage) vaccines we found at the
health center. Everyone seemed pretty
glum about this situation and said a replacement refrigerator was unlikely any
time in the near future. In the
meantime, the district would have to send out a mobile brigade (health workers
that operate from a truck and carry their supplies with them) to periodically
provide vaccines to the surrounding communities.
Before
heading to Namaacha, I had found it hard to grasp the hierarchical structure of
the Mozambique health system (the difference between a rural and district
health center and how supplies and information moved between them) and what it
meant for VillageReach to help with the logistics of getting healthcare
supplies to these rural communities.
After two days driving around the district with Margarida, however, I
was able to get a glimpse of how far removed many of the health centers were
from the district hospitals as well as some of the challenges facing the rural
health care workers, the Mozambique government, and VillageReach.
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