Monday, June 30, 2014

The last of the vests have been given out

Participated in the measles campaign in the Province of Kinshasa last week, where I helped supervise the downtown area. I was surprised and pleased as punch to learn that downtown included 10 islands. The islands are home to about 12,000 children eligible for the campaign but access is not easy. Teams had to rent dugout canoes with outboard motors and go island to island looking for children. Reaching the islands was the hard part. Mothers were eager to get their children vaccinated and came to the shore when they hear the outboard approaching.

We started out crossing paths with barges, arriving from or departing to the interior. We approached on arriving barge and approached carefully in our little motorized dugout to let mothers know that they could take their children straight to the vaccination posts in port where nurses were standing by.










The next surprise was to live the vastness that is the Congo River at the level of Kinshasa. It could have been the ocean from our level. It was rather intimidating, but the guy steering seemed to know where he was going.
The team I was with took it all in stride. They had been on the river for 4 days already in the campaign and typically travel these same paths periodically for routine immunizations. The supervisor was le Pasteur, known to all, serving the community's health and spiritual needs for 22 years. He manages the boats, guiding the guy steering and keeps the teams going. After 2 islands in 2 hours, I was ready to call it a day even with my stash of sweet tea to keep me going. The team had nothing, getting about $2 to work the campaign for 5 days. I do not know what sustained them other than the Pasteur's energy, but we hit 3 more islands to make sure there weren't any missed children. I had been working land-based sites the other days and found 30 - 50% of the children unvaccinated. On the islands, the only unvaccinated children had arrived after the team had  last passed.

The team I was with was one of three. In our boat, we all had vests including 3 that I had provided thanks to donations by the paddling and Peace Corps communities. Another was labeled Delta, so check for yours next time you board a flight over water. The team members were grateful to have vests, regaling me with tales of people who had fallen in the river while working. They are not used to receiving such small considerations. Alas, they were the last 2 I have and it doesn't even meet the needs of the islands of Kinshasa.


Sunday, November 24, 2013

Challenges to vaccination service delivery

Some of the biggest challenges to delivering vaccination to children in remote areas of this country are infrastuctural - roads are poor, health centers in poor condition, the cold chain necessary to keep vaccine viable in poor condition.

The Stop Transmission of Polio (STOP) program recruits, trains and sends volunteers to high risk countries to work on the front lines for service delivery. These are some pictures taken by a STOP volunteer, showing a mud and thatch health center, a broken down refrigerator and what it takes to navigate the roads by motorcycle.

Mud and thatch health center


Broken down fridge
Getting past obstacles to supervise

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Tax deductions are now available for any donations thanks to the Peace Corps Friends of DR Congo. For more information on giving or to learn more about PC FOD, visit http://www.sangonini.org/life_jackets

Thursday, February 21, 2013


Vaccination against 5 diseases (diphtheria, whooping cough, tetanus, polio and measles) reaches more than 100 million children every year, in every corner of the world, rich and poor, urban and rural. But more than 20 million children a year do not receive all of their basic immunizations and 1,500,000 children died in 2010 due to vaccine preventable diseases.  


There are many challenges in reaching children with life-saving vaccines and other health services. In many places, the major one is simple logistics. Remote areas of the Democratic Republic of Congo have no electricity, no phones, no TV, and the roads are in such pitiful condition, cars cannot use them and it can take 12 hours to go 50 miles by motorcycle. I was in the Equateur Region of DRC recently and learned that they can only do supervision and deliver supplies by boat. But many of health workers are uncomfortable going by boat, because they can't swim and have no life jackets. The donation of a life jacket would make it possible for supervisors and others to travel safely by boat to deliver vaccines and other life-saving health interventions.
Children receive polio vaccine, Mbandaka, DR Congo


If you would like to donate a new or gently used PFD, please drop it off at
Outside World

471 Quill Drive
Dawsonville, GA 30534
or
1025 Broadway
Columbus, GA 31901

Tax deductions for your donations coming soon.

If you would like more information, feel free to contact Karen at kxw232@gmail.com.