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ORAF is supporting the establishment of a maternity clinic in Korogocho in Nairobi. The project began in 2005 and is now near the completion stage.
Joe Radkovic, the CMS missionary who is managing the project, reported in June “that Korogocho clinic itself is going very well. Patient numbers at the outpatients side has gone past 400 per week. We will have to put on another nurse to help with the increase – a good problem. The maternity continues to deliver 2 to 3 a day. One lady due to deliver with us had her baby at home instead and bled to death. It is hard to know what we can do to avoid such things. Hopefully our fees didn’t put her off. The staff have been on a one day retreat, which they loved. Good food, teaching, activities and fun. It was a great day, and needs to become regular.
The maternity is also going well. When a baby gets stuck and is reluctant to come out, it is not always necessary to refer the Mum for a caesarean operation. We can use a suction cup on the baby’s head to pull it out. This is gentler than forceps, and safer, and certainly beats transfer to Pumwani for a caesar. Until now it has been me racing in at night or whenever to save the day. As good as that makes me feel, it is better if I can train the nurses up to do this procedure themselves. The midwives have seen me do it, and I have walked them through it, but none have fully delivered a baby by vacuum extraction (as it is called) themselves. Last week one of the midwives – Njoroge – rang me to come in to pull a baby out. But with me at home only giving instructions and encouragement over the phone he successfully got the baby out himself by vacuum extraction. Njoroge was so pleased with himself, as he should be, and this has encouraged the other midwives that they too can do this themselves.”
Joe Radkovic, the CMS missionary who is managing the project, reported in June “that Korogocho clinic itself is going very well. Patient numbers at the outpatients side has gone past 400 per week. We will have to put on another nurse to help with the increase – a good problem. The maternity continues to deliver 2 to 3 a day. One lady due to deliver with us had her baby at home instead and bled to death. It is hard to know what we can do to avoid such things. Hopefully our fees didn’t put her off. The staff have been on a one day retreat, which they loved. Good food, teaching, activities and fun. It was a great day, and needs to become regular.
The maternity is also going well. When a baby gets stuck and is reluctant to come out, it is not always necessary to refer the Mum for a caesarean operation. We can use a suction cup on the baby’s head to pull it out. This is gentler than forceps, and safer, and certainly beats transfer to Pumwani for a caesar. Until now it has been me racing in at night or whenever to save the day. As good as that makes me feel, it is better if I can train the nurses up to do this procedure themselves. The midwives have seen me do it, and I have walked them through it, but none have fully delivered a baby by vacuum extraction (as it is called) themselves. Last week one of the midwives – Njoroge – rang me to come in to pull a baby out. But with me at home only giving instructions and encouragement over the phone he successfully got the baby out himself by vacuum extraction. Njoroge was so pleased with himself, as he should be, and this has encouraged the other midwives that they too can do this themselves.”
