Health Consultation Meeting 20100323
From Map Kibera
Revision as of 09:39, 6 April 2010 by Jamie.lundine (Talk | contribs)
Health Mapping Stakeholder Meeting, iHub, 20100323
Attending:
- Josh, UNICEF
- Anne, AIDS Portal
- Maureen, Coptic Hospital/Map Kibera
- Mikel, Map Kibera
- Hannington Ojijo, CEDI-Kenya/community pharmacist
- Erica, Map Kibera
- Jamie, formerly KANCO, Health Geography consultant
Contents |
summary
overall collecting data and stories on community/service providers in the field of HIV, public health through mapping and community consultation, and empowerment of community owned means to express needs.
- what are the available services and gaps?
- what data and programs to coordinate data already existing programs?
kinds of things to map
- clinics
- inpatient vs outpatient
- govt/ngo/public/private
- doctors? nurses? trained medical personnel?
- ex. Ushriki, Cfk, Amref, MSB, CDC, Kicoshep
- opening hours
- chemists
- dispensing vs non-dispensing
- health NGOS
- VCT
- herbalists, traditional medicines
- counselling services
Types of Services
- Maternal Health
- Malaria
- TB (int'l medical corps, leaving kenya)
- communicable vs non-communicable disease
three levels
- community clinics, basic services
- larger clinic in Kibera, specialized services (MSF, etc)
- hospitals, all
other kinds of health activities
- public health education (like CEDI)
- condom distribution
- teen pregnancy services
- health outreach through youth groups, women's groups, churches
- so many advocacy groups
- media helps, kibera journal, pamoja
Referrals
Wider service area
- Kenyata, Ochindi, St. Mary's etc.
- MSF only refers to Bengatthi, and offers transport
- kibera clinic refer cases they can't handle
- perception is that hospitals are too expensive, even just the registration, has resulted in deaths
- handle major diseases
Herbalists
- traditional medicines, used to treat asthma, diarrhea
- cheaper
- controversial in treatment for TB, AIDS
- hygiene questionable
- training not standardized
- less stressful than entering official medical facilities
interesting reporting opportunities
Counseling services
- VCT
- alcohol & drugs addiction
- HIV
- PMCTC
Data sources and other schemas
http://mapkibera.org/wiki/index.php?title=Tagging#Health
- Ministries of Health master facilities list
- has categorization of services
- www.ehealth.or.ke
- each facility has a unique code ... this can be linked from OSM
- each facility has a location .. Jamie has contact
Master facilities schema
- contact info -- phone number /email
- who owns it
- type
- geocode hierarchy, gps coord
- status (open/closed)
- opening hours
CBO are missing from MHFL
- National AIDS Control Council (NACC) has CBO data
- KANCO has CBO data
KANCO breakdown of types of activities
- prevention
- care/treatment/support
- mitigation
- management & coordination
Survey Design
Balance needed in level of data collection for privacy and acceptability to community. What's the sweet spot?
SPECTRUM
name ------------- types of services ------------- patient details.
Issues
- costs -- this may be difficult to collect share -- they are variable! negotiated.
Missing Needs in the Community
- veterinary services (rabies treatment for animals and people)
- no dental facilities in Kibera, Nairobi hospital is expensive.
- no radiologists
- mental health ... nearest facility is Mathare Mental Hospital, 100km away (connect to British high commission dude)
- optometrists (gideon's story)
- emergency medical services, ambulances ... related to security
- research on deaths
Presentations
UNICEF Kenya's interest
- what are the commitments to health made by Government, NGOs
- National AIDS commitment plan
- M&E
- SODNET
presentation
- filtering based on category of facility
- data sharing through categories, downloads
- Anne, through UNAIDS, looking at data standards, central registry.
Potential Uses
Midwifes
- some trained midwifes
- hundreds, difficult to map
- cheaper, birth at home
Judy is interested in having midwifes report birth/deaths via Ushahidi.
- to connect with help for problems
- birth certificates -- lack of registration leads to problems later on, school registration
- follow up care
- immunizations
- death certificates
Knock Out Stock Outs
- availability of drugs
- community facilities deal in affordable drugs for minor cases (malaria, etc)
Rape/violence
- referred to Nairobi Women's Hospital
- considered expensive
smart card system
- 500 /= insurance cover
- probably won't work