NAIROBI, Kenya, September 13, 2017/ -- General Electric (www.GE.com)
and charity Shining Hope for Communities Organization (SHOFCO), today
announced a new maternal and infant care initiative aimed at increasing
access to pre-natal screenings for expectant mothers in Kibera, believed
to be the largest urban slum in Africa with an estimated 700,000
inhabitants [1].
Under the $25,000 partnership,
GE Healthcare will provide hand-held ultrasound, training and advisory
support to help SHOFCO’s mission to mobilize mothers to seek pre-natal
screenings. Twenty-four SHOFCO nurses and clinical officers have each
received over 40 hours of training. Among the subsidized technologies
provided is GE’s hand-held ultrasound device, designed to help primary
health workers conduct examinations that may result in the earlier
detection of potentially life-threatening pregnancy complications.
Slum
dwellers lack access to quality healthcare infrastructure and are more
vulnerable to HIV/AIDS and malnutrition amongst children [2]. Maternal and child mortality rates are about 50% higher than the national average [3], with an under-five mortality rate of 64 in every 1,000 live births [4]. A lack of access to proper care during and immediately after delivery contributes to high mother and child mortality.
“Through
a range of initiatives across the continent, GE is proud to support
better outcomes for mothers and babies across Africa,” said Andrew
Waititu, General Manager, GE Healthcare East Africa, during an event in
Nairobi to celebrate GE and SHOFCO’s partnership. “We are firmly
committed to serving as a partner in the development of healthcare in
Kenya and are humbled to contribute in expanding SHOFCO’s capabilities
and reach in the community where it is needed most.”
“Most of the
health facilities available in the slums lack appropriate equipment to
deal with prenatal and maternal health emergencies, in addition to a
shortage of skilled personnel needed to provide emergency obstetric
care. This solution, to be deployed at SHOFCO’s Subra and Makina
satellite clinics, will help in reducing unnecessary referrals and
decongesting the main health facility in Kibera.” said Kennedy Odede CEO
and Co-founder of SHOFCO. “Through this program, expectant mothers will
have access to ultrasound scanning before 24 weeks of gestation, that
according to guidelines [5], assists clinicians in
better estimating gestational age, improve detection of fetal anomalies
and overall, help us improve a woman’s pregnancy experience.”
“We
are grateful to GE for their support in helping us expand our services
to serve more patients and through capacity building, empowering our
clinical officers and nurses with the know-how to deliver proper care to
the most vulnerable.”
SHOFCO is anchored under four pillars:
Education, Health, Community Empowerment and Water and Sanitation. Key
under the health pillar is the Mother and Child Health incentives
program, provided for free to mothers in Kibera. The program is designed
to counteract the high child morbidity and mortality rates by
encouraging mothers to seek regular antenatal, post-natal, and child
welfare services to ensure positive health outcomes for themselves and
their children.
According to WHO data for Kenya in 2015, maternal mortality rates accounted for 510 deaths per 100,000 live births [6] and an infant mortality rate of 36 per 1,000 live births [7]. Led
by a commitment to improving access and quality of maternal, newborn,
and child health care services towards the attainment of Kenya’s Vision
2030 and the Sustainable Development Goal 3 agenda, the Kenyan
government has made significant progress towards reducing the burden of
maternal and infant mortality rates. A 2013 program providing free
maternity services in the public sector has shown a doubling of the
number of women accessing skilled birth attendance to over one million
deliveries in 2016, with 2,000 maternal deaths and 30,000 child deaths
avoided annually since 2013 [8]. In 2016, the
government announced a new program seeking to reach 400,000 underserved
expectant mothers by expanding the network of institutions including
faith organizations that offer free maternity services [9].
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