1 / 32

PROSAMI

PROSAMI. A program for the promotion of maternal and infantile health in rural areas. Acronym derives from French title: promotion maternelle et infantile. Maternal mortality and morbidity. The facts:.

abeni
Télécharger la présentation

PROSAMI

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PROSAMI A program for the promotion of maternal and infantile health in rural areas. Acronym derives from French title: promotion maternelle et infantile.

  2. Maternal mortality and morbidity.The facts: • Maternal mortality is the death of a woman during pregnancy, delivery and up to sis weeks following childbirth. • This is the most extreme consequence of poor maternal health. • Approximately 500,000 women die in pregnancy or childbirth: one woman dies every minute.

  3. Maternal and infant health in developing world: A grim picture. • A woman in developing countries has a 1 in 16 chance of dying in pregnancy or childbirth, compared to 1 in 4000 risk in developing country. • Poverty, a combination of social, economic and cultural barriers pose major challenges to maternal health in developing countries.

  4. The facts cont… • For every woman that dies: more than 25 others suffer debilitating life-long consequences • Improving maternal health yields the benefit of: a healthy family, increased labor supply, productive capacity, economic well-being of communities and positive impact on the economy.

  5. The causes of maternal deaths • Most of them are preventable • Mainly due to insufficient care during pregnancy and childbirth: almost 2/3 of births in developing countries take place without a skilled birth attendant.

  6. One single essential intervention • To ensure a trained provider with midwifery skills is present at every birth, to provide quality emergency obstetric care in the face of unpredictable complications.

  7. Overview of maternal health in a developing country • Population: approximately 8,483,343 (density: 50/km²) • Population in age of reproduction estimated at: 1.600.000 • 5 District Hospitals. • 750 health care centers providing maternal and infantile health.

  8. Rural community problems • Illiteracy, ignorance, hazardous beliefs and practices. • Little income (> 1$ per capita): Poverty and deprivation. Pandemic state of malnutrition. • Environmental hazards: lack of basic infrastructure (water, electricity, sanitary ablutions…)

  9. Health care system in rural areas • Virtually no existent in some areas. Community depends on distant neighborhood. • No communication system (road, transport, telephone…). • Safety issues. • No health care workers. (Use of family members, traditional birth attendants, untrained personnel).

  10. Escape to no man land: daily strategy for survival • Let’s take a trip. When life is threatened, survival of the fittest strategies dictate. In these perilous times, one becomes prepared to overcome obstacles by inconceivable means.

  11. PROSAMI plan of action: the South African perspective. • to bring antenatal care to the community. • Creation of mobile clinics. • Midwives obstetric units. (MOU) • Advanced midwifery training. • National reduction in maternal and infantile mortality and morbidity rate.

  12. Objectives • To promote maternal and infantile health in the rural areas by improving the quality of perinatale care through: - an appropriate training of health care providers, defining the standard of care applicable to the rural context. - the creation and establishment of health centers in geographically accessible areas to the population to be served.

  13. Implementation Phases. • Training professors in advanced midwifery. • Establishing a pilot center • Training local nurses in advanced midwifery practice • Establishing rural health care centers

  14. Monitoring of MMR • Establish a task force to: - Collect statistics and analyze them - Identify causes of MMR - Make key recommendations - Develop guidelines for management - Implement corrective measures - Continuous evaluation.

  15. 2010 fundraising events • January: soup & sweet, silent auction. • February: spaghetti dinner & silent auction. • March: celebration of the 100th anniversary of International women’s day • April: Fun run • May: yard sale

  16. Who are involved • David Strider: President of the Board • Dr. Tom Massaro: Project advisor • Jennifer Mentore: Grant • Sally Williamson: Treasurer • Matthew Shiflett: secretary • Rob Williamson: Grant • Lois McGee: strategy advisor • George Morrison: strategy advisor • Agnes Kanyanya: training coordination • Dan Atkins & Ken Bucci: registered agents • Stacie Ried: account

  17. How can you help? • Fundraising • Grant writing • Translation from English to French & French to English • Health care expertise • Events organization • Donations of any kind • And much… much more….

  18. We believe no mother should die giving life… • Here is an opportunity for you, clinical nurse leader of tomorrow, to make a difference in the lives of thousands of voiceless mothers and infants who have been denied the right to live.

More Related