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From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 3:32 PM
Subject: KENYA-SOMALIA: Breaking with tradition on reproductive health
To: Jean-Francois Darcq <[email protected]>


KENYA-SOMALIA: Breaking with tradition on reproductive health

DADAAB, 14 September 2011 (IRIN) - Most Somali women fleeing to
northeastern Kenya's Dadaab in northeastern Kenya have never visited
an antenatal clinic, let alone given birth in a hospital.

 "When I see an expectant mother or one with a small child, I ask them
whether they have gone to the hospital. If they haven't, I refer them
there," Miriam Ade, a community health worker in Dadaab's Ifo camp,
told IRIN. "Many of these women have lived here but you find some do
not even know that they can visit the clinic or some know where the
clinics are but they don't want to seek such services, mostly for
cultural reasons. It is my work to convince them."

 Most of the 470,000 refugees in Dadaab are from Somalia, where about
80 percent of deliveries take place at home or with unskilled
traditional birth attendants, according to the UN World Health
Organization (WHO). With an estimated 1,400 maternal deaths per
100,000 live births, WHO describes maternal and prenatal health in
Somalia as being "of pressing concern".

 Fatuma Ali, a 27-year-old Somali refugee, delivered all her five
children at home. When she fled Somalia for Kenya 10 months ago, she
was pregnant; community health workers in Dadaab persuaded her to
attend a local antenatal clinic.

 "In my country there are no hospitals, and we don't even believe in
going to the hospital... There are people who tell us it against our
culture to go to hospital to give birth," she told IRIN. "After I was
registered as a refugee here, I used to attend the clinic and they
have even tested me for HIV; they have taught me how to feed my child
and I received soap and sanitary towels soon after I delivered and
went back home."

 Ali was also treated for complications that the doctors attributed to
the fact that she had undergone female genital mutilation/cutting when
she was a girl, and gave her family planning advice.

 "I am a refugee and I wonder how I can take care of many children...
I have made a decision to stop giving birth," she said.

 According to Beldina Gikundi, the reproductive health focal point for
the International Rescue Committee (IRC) in Dadaab, community health
workers have been crucial in boosting the uptake of reproductive
health services among women in the camp.

 "Many women still believe in home delivery and many more people still
do not believe in discussing issues of sexuality that easily, but with
the use of community health workers, we have been able to reach out to
them to seek both reproductive health and HIV services," she said.

 Insufficient coverage

 She noted that a number of women also sought rape and post-abortion
counselling and treatment, as well as screening for sexually
transmitted infections.

 However, limited health facilities at the camp are struggling to cope
with the high demand for services. Thousands of Somalis continue to
arrive in Dadaab daily, mostly women and children, but only the IRC
and Médecins Sans Frontières have fully operational maternal health
facilities in the camp.

 "Many mothers either die or lose their children due to the poor
conditions they give birth in at the camps... The facilities can only
cater for so much," Gikundi said.

 "The number of women seeking reproductive health and maternity
services has increased over the past months and health facilities can
hardly cope with the demand," she added. "At times, women are forced
to share beds because occupancy is in the region of 110 percent."

 MSF has a 170-bed hospital in the complex, while IRC has a 40-bed
facility, which registers more than 310 births per month.

 "The contraceptive rate is low, hence very high fertility rates
putting pressure on resources at the maternity facilities. We are,
however, doing everything to ensure the uptake of contraceptive use,"
Gikundi said.

 The UN Population Fund is working with partners to provide refugees
with reproductive health kits, including contraceptives.

 ko/kr/mw[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93720



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