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Success Story
Teaching prevention
and promoting health
services in rural Djibouti
A New Breed Of Community Organizer
Photo: John Snow, Inc.
Saida listens intently to the needs of her
community.
“Before I was an organizer,
I wasn’t sure what to do,”
Saida says. “Now I know
— even though the work is
hard sometimes, I like it and
will keep doing it.”
“Sometimes I walk a long way to visit with women in their camps. They
don’t always want to listen, and sometimes they don’t have time to talk.
But I keep going — now we know things we didn’t know before and
we can be healthier,” says Saida, a community health worker in rural
Djibouti.
Selected by her community to promote prevention of common illnesses
and increased use of health services, Saida serves a community
of several hundred people including scattered encampments of
traditionally nomadic families. As part of a recently completed and
extremely successful USAID program, community mobilization took
place across all the rural districts of Djibouti for the first time.
For community health workers like Saida, this is an opportunity to be
a community resource—besides improving their own knowledge and
health practices, they are outreach workers that assist clinic-based
nurses to link those in need to available services. Women rarely play
visible, public roles in rural Djiboutian society. However, because
women will not speak to men about health issues, the predominantly
male nurses working in the countryside are often unable to serve their
patients. Women like Saida are overcoming traditional beliefs about
sickness and prevention—and their role in the community—while
helping women access health services and prevent illness at home.
The USAID program aims to provide rural residents with better access
to quality health services. The goal is to reduce morbidity and mortality
rates among women and children, and promote full community
participation in health services delivery. USAID worked with the
community to organize and train the village health committee to select
and train health workers like Saida, and to update the trainings for
nurses in the health centers.
Saida speaks with confi dence about her role in the recent polio
eradication campaign as an educator and motivator. She worries
about the high level of anemia in women, which she recognizes now
from common physical symptoms, and the common bouts of diarrhea
among young children, and she hopes to help change things.
“Before I was an organizer, I wasn’t sure what to do,” Saida says.
“Now I know—even though the work is hard sometimes, I like it and will
keep doing it.”
The impact of health workers like Saida was one of many impressive
results of USAID’s five-year maternal and child health program in
Djibouti. Over that period, immunization rates tripled, child mortality
decreased by 27% and four out of five births now take place in health
facilities, as opposed to one out of five when the program began.
Women like Saida helped make that progress possible.
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