M-PESA Foundation Partners With AMREF Health Africa To Promote Maternal Health In Homabay County

M-PESA Foundation Partners With AMREF Health Africa To Promote Maternal Health In Homabay County

Upto 90, 000 women of reproductive age and children under 5 years are set to benefit from a KES 150 million project that seeks to improve access to quality maternal health services in Homabay County.

M-PESA Foundation Partners With AMREF Health Africa To Promote Maternal Health In Homabay County
Karen Basiye(right), H.O.D Sustainable Business & Social Impact handing over a Mama pack to Eunice Auma(right)

Uzazi Salama project, a partnership between M-PESA Foundation, PharmAccess Africa, AMREF Health Africa, Action Aid, Pathfinder international and Homabay County Government, will strengthen the county’s health systems to support the delivery of quality reproductive, maternal, new-born, child and adolescent healthcare.

Homabay is one of 15 counties in Kenya with poor reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health indicators. These are attributed to poor access and/or low-quality health services, social-economic and cultural behaviours and unavailability of medical equipment to support optimal maternal health. Maternal deaths in the county stand at 583 per 100,000 live births and 119 deaths per 1,000 live births.

Uzazi Salama, launched at the Ndhiwa Sub-County Hospital today, has also been tried and tested in Samburu County since 2015.

“Every mother and newborn child deserve an equal chance of survival during the childbirth process. We believe that through Uzazi Salama, we will increase demand for hospital-based deliveries and greatly improve the quality of life for mothers and their babies as we have witnessed in Samburu County,” said Les Baille, Executive Director, M-PESA Foundation.

According to Dr George Kimathi, Director, Institute of Capacity Development, Amref Health Africa, some of the notable success of Uzazi Salama in Samburu County has been a 22 per cent increase in health facility deliveries; 9 per cent increase in immunization and 6 per cent increase in the first Antenatal clinic visit.

“These can be attributed to increased community education, capacity strengthening of health workers, as well as upgrading of health facilities to provide quality Maternal and Neonatal Health services. Additionally, over 500 community health workers have been trained on safe delivery methods and over 200,000 residents benefitting from the project,” said Dr Kimathi.

Uzazi Salama is the second maternal health initiative the M-PESA Foundation is launching in Homabay County today. The foundation in partnership with Gertrude’s Children Hospital will later launch the regional Daktari Smart telemedicine program, at the Suba Sub-County Hospital, which is part of a larger telemedicine initiative that targets over 32,000 children in Homabay, Samburu, Baringo and Lamu Counties.

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