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Rwanda's rural health initiative brings quality care and home visits
to Burera
By Peter Drobac
A young, widowed mother of five named Patricie was recently admitted to the
Burera District Hospital. She suffered from both advanced HIV/AIDS and disseminated
tuberculosis. Though there are an estimated 600 new cases of tuberculosis in
the district annually, Patricie was only the second person to receive treatment
this year. Just a few months ago, there was only one physician to serve a population
of nearly 400,000. Many faced limited access to health care, and despite the
fertile volcanic soil, childhood malnutrition was rife.
We have seen this before. Three years ago, Partners In Health, in partnership
with the Clinton Foundation, arrived in Rwanda to help the government rebuild
health systems in two rural districts—Kayonza (Rwinkwavu) and Kirehe.
Two hospitals and seven health centers later, hundreds of thousands of Rwandans
have gained access to high-quality health care; more than 2,000 HIV-infected
individuals are thriving with antiretroviral therapy, village-based accompaniment,
and nutritional support; thousands of jobs have been created, many of them
for our recovering patients. In Rwinkwavu, the contrast between the post-conflict
desolation of 2005 and the lush gardens and bustling activity in the government-run
facility of 2008 is striking—even for those of us who have seen this
before in places like central Haiti.
So when the Government of Rwanda proposed an ambitious program to strengthen
rural health systems throughout the country utilizing many of the core elements
of the PIH/CHAI model, we were both humbled and delighted. The resulting framework,
developed by the GOR in close collaboration with bilateral and multilateral
funders, PIH/CHAI, and other NGOs working in the country, will require years
of work, new partnerships, and significant funding.
The first step was to replicate the successes of the Rwinkwavu collaboration,
and other health delivery approaches in use in the country, in one of the two
remaining Rwandan health districts without a district hospital — Burera. Nestled
in the volcanic hills of northwest Rwanda, Burera happens to be the prettiest
corner of what just may be the prettiest country in Africa. Yet it is a large
district, physical and communications infrastructure are among the nation’s
poorest, and the GOR aims to accomplish the Burera scale-up more quickly — and
more effectively — than ever before.
To help support such a daunting and critical project, as the implementing
partner in the district, PIH needed to identify someone special. Did
we look to Harvard or another elite American university? No. Perhaps a respected
international consultant? Hardly. Instead, we turned to rural Haiti.
Patrick Almazor joined PIH's Haitian partner organization, Zanmi Lasante, seven
years ago as a newly minted young physician from Port-au-Prince. After several
years of serving and training in Cange, Patrick helped to transform the delivery
of health care at several facilities in Haiti’s central plateau. He
gained formal training as a public health practitioner, and then crossed the
Atlantic to become PIH’s Burera District Director.
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Patrick Almazor visiting Patricie
and her family at their home |
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Those familiar with the philosophy of PIH know that home visits are an integral
part of our work. There is no substitute for the opportunity to sit with a
patient in his or her home in an effort to understand the social, economic,
and structural forces that shape lives and contribute to illness. For this
reason, the first home visit in Burera felt like an inauguration of sorts.
Dr. Patrick had met Patricie just a few weeks earlier during her initial hospitalization.
Though gravely ill, she had survived that hospital stay and begun treatment
for both HIV and tuberculosis—starting eight new medications, in all. Patrick
decided to see how she was faring at home.
The walk to her home involved about two hours of steady climbing, and brought
us within a stone’s throw of the Ugandan border. Upon arriving, I quickly
understood how it is that a child can starve in such a fertile region. Patricie
and her five children live in a two-room shack with a thatched roof and a mud
floor. Their home is nestled near a picturesque hilltop surrounded by lush
fields of sorghum, corn, beans, and vegetables. Yet Patricie’s land is
hardly bigger than the poor little house itself—none of those crops are
hers. She has scraped out a living by working her neighbors’ land in
return for a small share of the crop yield. Due to her illness, Patricie was
unable to work at all for several months. Her husband had died years earlier
of AIDS. As a result, her five children (though blessedly HIV-negative) clearly
suffered from malnutrition and parasitic infection.
The GOR framework provides Patricie with more than medicines alone. She is
visited daily by a trained accompagnateur from her own village, who provides
a critical link to the health center. Patricie and her family receive both
medical and nutritional support. We hope to someday help rebuild her house
and help get her children to school, as has been done for hundreds of other
destitute families near Rwinkwavu (and thousands in Haiti). Agricultural projects
and other income-generating activities are planned, as the support becomes
available.
Peter Drobac, M.D., is a clinician who works with PIH, predominantly in Rwanda,
and aa Research Fellow
in the Division of Infectious Disease and Social Medicine at Brigham and Women's
Hospital in Boston.
[published June 2008]
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