Newly
trained home-based care facilitators from the Namibian Red Cross,
ready to put their new skills into practice (p9501)
Each
new care facilitator received a bag with basic care ingredients
to equip them for their future task (p9496)

The participants performed a roleplay during their graduation
ceremony to show the interaction between a home-based care facilitator,
his client and the client's family (p9498)

The participants marched from the hospital in Katima to the
graduation ceremony, singing songs in Lozi and Subya, the languages
of the Caprivi Strip, to show their solidarity (p9493)
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In Caprivi, Red Cross care extends
across the borders
2 April 2003
by Solveig Olafsdottir in Katima
It was an historic day for
the Botswana, Namibia and Zambia Red Cross Societies when 43 new home-based
care facilitators graduated after a two-week training course, ready
to take on their new duties in providing care in their communities
across the borders along the Caprivi Strip.
It also manifested the commitment of Southern Africa Red Cross Societies
to strengthen their cooperation. Although they have a long experience
in providing home-based care in the region, the Caprivi project is
the first time that three national societies have devised a joint
programme to fight a common foe.
The new graduates have a grave assignment: to join forces in the fight
against HIV/AIDS across the borders. The need is evident. The HIV/AIDS
prevalence rate among adults ranges from 30 per cent in the Sesheke
district of Zambia and 43 per cent in Caprivi in Namibia, up to nearly
50 per cent in Chobe district on the Botswana side of the border.
The border posts between the three countries are constantly busy,
a steady stream of people going back and forth. This constant movement
of the population, the Red Cross believes, calls for a common approach
in fighting HIV/AIDS. It is a concern shared by the local authorities
across the Caprivi Strip.
“We are all the same family. There is a lot of interaction and
intermarriage in this region,” said Bernard Sibalatani, the
Regional Governor of Caprivi in Namibia, in his address to the new
home-based care facilitators.
“It is very important to know the situation on the ground in
all the three countries. All your training was done here in Katima,
but it is essential that you continue to share your information with
your colleagues across the borders,” he told the newly trained
facilitators.
The governor was touching upon a crucial element of this new approach
launched by the Botswana, Namibia and Zambia Red Cross Societies.
By training the facilitators from the three countries together and
thus forging a team spirit among the participants, the Red Cross can
ensure a common approach in the fight against HIV/AIDS, even if the
situation varies from country to country. It will also secure constant
consultation and flow of information among home-based care facilitators
throughout the Caprivi Strip.
The situation is most serious in Chobe, in Botswana, where HIV/AIDS
prevalence is far above the national average - almost 50 per cent
compared to 39 per cent nationwide. The health authorities in Chobe
have seen some positive indications that new HIV cases have fallen
in the past year, a tribute to an effective government campaign against
the pandemic.
Information material and posters keep the population well informed,
and the government plans to provide all those living with HIV/AIDS
with anti-retroviral drugs. A New Start Voluntary Counselling and
Testing Centre (VCT) was opened in Kasane, the district’s urban
centre, last year, and has also made people much more aware of the
problem, as they get tested for HIV and receive counselling at the
same time.
The opening of a home-based care programme in Chobe is a milestone
for the Botswana Red Cross. Not only will it provide a necessary service
to a community heavily affected by the pandemic, but it is also the
first project of this kind the Society has undertaken in the country.
“The effect of the HIV/AIDS pandemic has caused a great strain
on Botswana’s modern health system. The Red Cross home-based
care programme will help to alleviate that strain by providing care
for those affected within their own homes,” said George Tlhalerwa,
Vice President of the Botswana Red Cross Society, at the graduation
ceremony.
“We are proud of the 13 care facilitators from our National
Society who have undergone the training with the other participants,
and are now equipped with skills to take care of the most vulnerable
in their communities,” he added.
The Caprivi region is also one of the hardest hit parts of Namibia,
with 43 per cent HIV/AIDS prevalence, compared to 22.5 per cent nationwide,
according to Dr Chirwa, the Chief Medical Officer of the Ngweze State
hospital in the town of Katima.
“We appreciate the work the Red Cross is entering into here,
and we hope it will also help our medical staff, who are close to
burn-out because of the heavy workload due to the HIV/AIDS pandemic,”
Dr Chirwa said, as he addressed the graduates. “The Red Cross
is working within the communities, together with the traditional leaders
and the population, which is bound to make their vocation sustainable.”
Sesheke district in Zambia, just across the Zambezi River from Katima,
seems to be less affected by the pandemic, as the estimated HIV/AIDS
prevalence rate stands at some 30 per cent. The reality on the ground
is probably somewhat different - there are no testing facilities at
the district’s three hospitals, nor is there any surveillance
of lactating mothers as there is in other parts of the country.
It is also evident that the effect of HIV/AIDS is increasingly being
felt in Sesheke, and that the movement of people across the borders
with the neighbouring countries, where prevalence is higher, is of
great concern.
“The Zambian Red Cross has successfully established home-based
care programmes in three districts in the country,” said Charles
Mushitu, the Acting Secretary General of the Zambian Red Cross. “We
are convinced that this project will be no less successful, and will
help mitigate the effect of HIV/AIDS in the three border towns and
the region as a whole.”
The 43 new home-based care facilitators, trained by the International
Federation’s Regional Delegation HIV/AIDS team, face a huge
task as they return to their respective homes. With support from the
regional HIV/AIDS programme and their national Red Cross societies,
they now have to put into practice what they have learned for the
past two weeks in Katima. They are pioneers in their own communities,
chosen by the Red Cross to provide care for those living with HIV/AIDS,
to fight the stigma attached to the disease and to help curb the spread
of AIDS through dissemination and prevention messages. But they are
not alone.
Nicolette Bessinger, the Head of Programmes at the Namibia Red Cross,
the host national society, reminded the graduates that they cannot
act alone, that they have to make the most of this historic moment
of solidarity between the three national societies that are now joining
force in the fight against AIDS.
“I also urge you to join hands with all our other partners working
in HIV/AIDS activities - governments, local authorities, hospitals,
clinics and non-governmental organizations. We cannot fight this disease
in isolation,” Bessinger said.
One of the greatest strengths of the cross-border project is indeed
the reassurance that the new graduates will not work alone - that
they will work as a team across the borders, providing each other
with necessary support.
“It has long been our dream to start an HIV/AIDS programme here
in Caprivi. Now we are finally here in the region, and not only launching
a project with the Namibian Red Cross, but also Zambia and Botswana
Red Cross Societies. That is a great accomplishment,” said Bongai
Mundeta, the Regional Delegation’s HIV/AIDS Coordinator.
“Now, I just hope that the next time we meet, the two other
countries sharing borders with Caprivi - Angola and Zimbabwe - will
be here with us to further strengthen our cooperation in the region.”
Now the new Red Cross volunteers go back to their communities equipped
with their basic home-based care kit, enthusiasm and their slogan:
“Where we can’t cure, we can care.”
Related links:
more on Reducing the Impact
of HIV/AIDS
Regional
programmes for Southern Africa
Southern Africa Food
Crisis
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