At One Namibian Hospital, Shorter Lines, Healthier Clients

At One Namibian Hospital, Shorter Lines, Healthier Clients
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In remote northern Namibia, Onandjokwe Hospital is becoming a national model for bringing health care to people where they live.

Today the waiting room at Onandjokwe’s Shanamutango HIV clinic isn’t crowded. Wait times have dropped drastically since the hospital hired additional staff and began making services available beyond the central hospital location. Here nurse Ruusa Shipena holds an HIV-negative infant while the baby's mother receives care.

Today the waiting room at Onandjokwe’s Shanamutango HIV clinic isn’t crowded. Wait times have dropped drastically since the hospital hired additional staff and began making services available beyond the central hospital location. Here nurse Ruusa Shipena holds an HIV-negative infant while the baby's mother receives care.

Morgana Wingard for IntraHealth International

Just a few years ago, if you’d visited northern Namibia’s Onandjokwe Hospital to, say, get a refill on your HIV meds, you’d have had to sit in line for an average of 8 or 9 hours.

“You had to wait for your name to be called at reception, then to have your BMI measured, then to have blood drawn, then HIV counseling, and then wait up to five hours at the pharmacy,” says nurse Ruusa Shipena, the ART (antiretroviral therapies) supervisor at Onandjokwe’s Shanamutango HIV clinic. People would turn up at the clinic the night before and sleep on the sidewalks just to be at the front of the line the next morning.

Shipena and her colleagues were seeing up to 80 clients per day—each.

The waiting room was permanently packed. Staff were stressed out and exhausted.

“Every day when you go home, your hands, your fingers, you have to—” nurse Shipena winces and makes a pained stretching motion. She and her colleagues were seeing up to 80 clients per day—each.

Just a few years ago, the waiting room at Shanamutango was permanently packed. Staff were stressed out and exhausted. The clinic had just one doctor and five nurses to care for over 10,000 clients per month.

Just a few years ago, the waiting room at Shanamutango was permanently packed. Staff were stressed out and exhausted. The clinic had just one doctor and five nurses to care for over 10,000 clients per month.

Trevor Snapp for IntraHealth International

But today that number has dropped to around 40. The waiting room isn’t crowded. Things are running smoothly. And the few people who sit waiting in the reception area are called up within a few minutes of taking their seats, their entire visit now taking about an hour. The nurses are busy but calm as they talk with clients and smile at the visiting babies.

What Changed at Onandjokwe

Two major reasons for Onandjokwe’s former overcrowding were: 1) it was the only place to get HIV-related services for over 81,000 people in a region that suffers high rates of HIV infection (reaching 22.6% in Onandjokwe district); and 2) it was severely short on staff.

In 2012, the Shanamutango clinic had just one doctor and five nurses to care for over 10,000 clients per month.

Onandjokwe Hospital serves as the primary health care center for the Onandjokwe District of the Oshikoto Region, which spans about 25,000 kilometers. Before decentralization, it was the only place where over 81,000 people could get HIV-related services. This photo was taken after one of the few rains during what should have been the region’s rainy season. By the next morning, the ground was bone dry once more.

Onandjokwe Hospital serves as the primary health care center for the Onandjokwe District of the Oshikoto Region, which spans about 25,000 kilometers. Before decentralization, it was the only place where over 81,000 people could get HIV-related services. This photo was taken after one of the few rains during what should have been the region’s rainy season. By the next morning, the ground was bone dry once more.

Morgana Wingard for IntraHealth International

But IntraHealth International is helping Onandjokwe solve its staff shortage by recruiting additional nurses, health assistants, administrative staff, and drivers. In all, IntraHealth’s USAID HIV Clinical Services Technical Assistance Project has helped add 42 new health workers to the region through its rapid hiring approach.

“We now have more time to spend with our clients,” Shipena says. “They are very happy with that.”

Shanamutango HIV clinic helps HIV-positive mothers like Katrina Kambunde, 42, prevent transmitting the virus to their babies.

Shanamutango HIV clinic helps HIV-positive mothers like Katrina Kambunde, 42, prevent transmitting the virus to their babies.

Morgana Wingard for IntraHealth International

And the additional resources and hands on deck have allowed Onandjokwe to staff satellite facilities and establish points of care within the communities. Supported by USAID through PEPFAR, IntraHealth has now helped it decentralize ART services to eight clinics throughout the district.

The result: Onandjokwe is now number one in the country for decentralization—that is, making services available beyond the central hospital location. It’s become a model for providing high-quality care to remote populations that are spread out over vast geographic areas. And best of all, people who live far from the hospital no longer have to walk for days or spend precious money on transport to get the care they need.

Now we can do a lot. We can plan our community outreach.

“Now the mothers who used to come get their services here, they have started going to clinics that are closer to where they live,” Shipena says. “That’s why you can see it’s so empty in the waiting room.”

IntraHealth also set up ART services at 20 of the hospital’s 45 community outreach points, which provide general care to communities in the district. Before the newly hired drivers and donated cars were available, Shipena and her staff could only provide outreach services when the opportunity struck.

Nurse Ruusa Shipena has more time to spend with her clients, including Katrina Kambunde, 42. Katrina is HIV-positive, but thanks to the services at Shanamutango HIV clinic, her baby was born HIV-negative. “We were short on the ground, especially when it came to nurses and admin staff,” Shipena says. “Then IntraHealth came in and gave us more staff. Now some can draw blood, while some can do counseling, while some do pediatrics. To us, it’s our rescue.”

Nurse Ruusa Shipena has more time to spend with her clients, including Katrina Kambunde, 42. Katrina is HIV-positive, but thanks to the services at Shanamutango HIV clinic, her baby was born HIV-negative. “We were short on the ground, especially when it came to nurses and admin staff,” Shipena says. “Then IntraHealth came in and gave us more staff. Now some can draw blood, while some can do counseling, while some do pediatrics. To us, it’s our rescue.”

Morgana Wingard for IntraHealth International

“If there’s no car, and the community’s waiting on you to deliver the services—” Shipena shrugs. “Sometimes you end up suspending some of the services. But now we can do a lot. We can go on our own time, we can plan our community outreach.” She and her staff visit each of the 20 sites every month, providing not only ART services but also immunizations and HIV testing.

“Yesterday we went to the farthest outreach point, 133 kilometers from Onandjokwe,” she says. “Patients were telling us that in the past, they had to wake up at two in the morning to walk through the bush, just to get their HIV meds. Now—they’re happy.”

IntraHealth is working with the government of Namibia to increase the number of health workers providing HIV services and provide the support and training they need to reach the country’s goal of an AIDS-free generation. IntraHealth’s USAID HIV Clinical Services Technical Assistance Project in Namibia is funded by the US Agency for International Development through the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Response (PEPFAR). Read more about IntraHealth’s work in Namibia.

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