Africa: Exploring Cultural Heritage and Social Issues › Forums › Democratic Republic of the Congo, DR Congo › South-Ubangi Gets medical equipment for coronavirus pandemic
- AuthorPosts
- April 18, 2020 at 5:13 pm #205193
The province of South-Ubangi now has a first batch of medical equipment to protect the population well against the coronavirus pandemic.This donation from the central government, which arrived this Friday April 17, 2020 in Gemena, coming from Kinshasa, is composed of laser thermometers, gloves, protective masks and many other important materials for the response against the covid-19.
“We have more than 1,000 kilos of materials intended for the protection of responders both in hospitals and our borders for protection and surveillance,” said Jean-Claude Mabenze, governor of South-Ubangi.
The provincial authority of South Ubangi reports an encouraging start in the fight against this pandemic in its province.
“These materials made available to us, of course, do not cover all of our needs, but it is an encouraging start. Because this will allow health professionals as well as our border offerers to interact with other services to better protect our population against the coronavirus pandemic, “added the chief of the provincial executive of South Ubangi.
Invited to manage this gift “as a good father,” the local committee of response against the covid-19 in the South Ubangi will “dispatcher these materials in all the corners of entry,” he specified.
It should be noted that South Ubangi has not so far been affected by this coronavirus disease.
https://africa.com.se
May 10, 2020 at 5:50 pm #205340REDUCED CAPACITY OF BUNIA MORGUE
Voices are rising more and more in the city of Bunia to denounce the reduced capacity of the morgue of the general reference hospital of Bunia, in Ituri province.Some residents interviewed on Friday 08 May 2020, estimate that this morgue, which has a capacity of 4 places for a population estimated at 1 million inhabitants, can no longer meet the needs.
“A few days ago, I was in mourning. When we brought the body of the deceased to the morgue, the manager told us that there are no places. We were forced to bury him on same day, “complained one resident.
Faced with this difficulty in preserving corpses in the town of Bunia, these residents ask the Congolese government to increase the capacity of the morgue at the general reference hospital in said town.
The Director of the General Reference Hospital of Bunia recognizes this situation and says that steps are underway to meet this challenge.
According to Doctor John Katabuka, a MONUSCO team has promised to provide this hospital structure with a refrigerated room which could increase its capacity to 16 bodies.
Given the current context marked by the coronavirus pandemic, Patrick Karamura, provincial minister of Ituri in charge of health recommends that the population transport the bodies directly to the cemetery without exposing them at home.
https://africa.com.se
May 23, 2020 at 6:20 pm #205391International Day for the Elimination of Obstetric Fistula
Statement by UNFPA Executive Director, Dr. Natalia Kanem, on the occasion of the International Day for the Elimination of Obstetric Fistula, May 23, 2020

Last November, the world gathered in Nairobi to celebrate the huge strides made over the past 25 years in promoting the health and rights of women and girls. With a deep sense of urgency, vision and hope, world leaders – from presidents to ordinary citizens, refugees to royalty, young activists to CEOs – are committed to accelerating actions to ensure health and sexual and reproductive rights for all.
Barely six months later, this commitment is put to the test like never before. As health systems struggle to respond to COVID-19, the pandemic is expected to weigh heavily on maternal and newborn health. The crisis is already worsening the economic, social and logistical obstacles that women and girls face in accessing sexual and reproductive health services.
Even when services are available and accessible, the fear, misinformation and stigma associated with COVID-19 discourage some pregnant women from seeking obstetric care.Failure to receive timely medical treatment will certainly lead to a dramatic increase in obstetric fistula, a serious injury to childbirth resulting from prolonged and obstructed labor.
Poor women and girls in rural areas are particularly at risk. The disproportionate incidence among the poor of this debilitating and sometimes fatal disease is a reflection of social and economic inequalities and the unequal enjoyment of the right to health, including sexual and reproductive health.
Even during better times, they are more likely to lack access to qualified health personnel. Child marriage and early motherhood are other contributing factors.
While obstetric fistula has been virtually eliminated in developed countries, hundreds of thousands of women and girls in the developing world are still living with this debilitating condition.
As lead of the Global Campaign to End Obstetric Fistula, UNFPA provides funding and support for prevention, treatment and reintegration programs for women recovering from obstetric fistula.
Since 2003, we have enabled over 113,000 women to undergo obstetric fistula repair surgery.
However, we will need to accelerate efforts if we are to achieve our global ambition to end fistula by 2030, the target date for the Sustainable Development Goals.
To this end, the response to the COVID-19 pandemic must ensure the provision of essential sexual and reproductive health services, including midwifery and emergency obstetric care.
On this International Day for the Elimination of Fistula, the memory of the late Dr. Catherine Hamlin, who died in March of this year, is still vivid.
She has spent most of her long life treating women and girls with obstetric fistula, focusing not only on physical injuries, but also on the scars created by stigma and discrimination.
Her charity, HamlinFistulaEthiopia, has brought hope and healing to thousands of women and girls, raised awareness of the obstetric fistula and encouraged innovative efforts to end it.
Let us work in memory of Dr. Hamlin to realize his lifelong dream and our long-standing aspiration to eliminate this preventable condition.
By doing so, we will help protect the health and human rights of the poorest and most vulnerable women and girls.
https://africa.com.se
- AuthorPosts
You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
The province of South-Ubangi now has a first batch of medical equipment to protect the population well against the coronavirus pandemic.









