Day One: Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, The Amana District Hospital


Aug 17th, 2009 4:29 PM EST
By ONE.Partners

Gabrielle Fitzgerald of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is on the ground in Tanzania with Dr. Margaret Chan, Mr. Ray Chambers, and Dr. Tachi Yamada. She reports back on their first day:

Our first site visit this trip is to the Amana District Hospital, which provides care to the one million residents of the Ilala municipality. The hospital complex was large and well-maintained, and was filled with orderly rows of mothers and their children waiting to be seen.

Amana sees approximately 1400 people a day, and delivers 100 babies. New mothers are given a bed in the maternity ward for six hours to recover from the delivery of their baby, before being discharged to go back home.

But what has traditionally driven the high volume of patients at the hospital has changed in recent years. In 2006, malaria was the leading cause of admissions for both adults and children. Since then, Amana’s malaria cases have dropped by more than 50%.

The drop in malaria cases is due to increased use of insecticide-treated nets, new anti-malarial medicines and better diagnostic tests.

Tanzanian health officials credit support from the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and the U.S. President’s Malaria Initiative for this progress, and are confident that these numbers will continue to decrease as malaria programs reach a greater number of the Tanzanian population.

You can learn more about malaria, what it is, and how it’s prevented and treated, here.

You can learn more about bed nets and how they are distributed, here.

-Gabrielle Fitzgerald, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

TAGS: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, On the Ground in Uganda and Tanzania, Tanzania

 

  1. A Nophelessays: Aug 17th, 2009 9:18 PM EST

    August 17, 2009 at 9:18 pm

    “The drop in malaria cases is due to increased use of insecticide-treated nets, new anti-malarial medicines and better diagnostic tests.” It couldn’t be the dry cool weather, could it? Is it just convenient that they take Drs Chan and Yamada to the place where interventions have been in place? Surely you must have seen a place without interventions where malaria has not fallen to make such a broad and firm conclusion. Is this a news piece or a promotional blurb?

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