Showing posts with label The Imani Project. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Imani Project. Show all posts

Friday, May 9, 2014

North Bend, WA volunteers help prepare for September Medical Clinics

Volunteers cutting zinc tablets
On April 26, members of the North Bend Ward of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints gathered to count band-aids and pills for the Imani Project. 30 members of the congregation, located in North Bend, Washington, spent over 70 hours working on supplies for our September, 2014 trip to Kenya.  Adults and teens from seventeen families joined us for 1-3 hours on a Friday evening.  It was a great opportunity to socialize and count, count, count and bag, bag, bag!

In their 70 hours, the volunteers:
  • Counted and bagged 29,600 band-aids of various sizes
  • Cut 4205 zinc pills in half
  • Counted and bagged 8410 zinc halves
In September, the Imani Project is travelling to remote villages near the coastal city of Malindi, Kenya to conduct medical clinics,  On that trip, they will distribute 800 health kits to families who attend health classes and clinics.

Well done! Thank you!  The North Bend Ward congregation has planned another service project for the Imani Project in North Bend on May 30 at 7:00 PM at the North Bend LDS church building.  Everyone is welcome to join the effort!

Counting and bagging band-aids
Counting and bagging band-aids

Zinc time!  Cutting, counting and bagging


Monday, November 12, 2012

Training Day

September 11, 2012

Today was Training Day, the day when the Kenyan Imani Project volunteers come to the hotel to be instructed on the activities of the next two weeks.  Because the bins of supplies didn't fly with us yesterday, we had to delay the start.  Without the supplies, we couldn't organize the medical supplies or prepare for assembling the health kits.  We were forced to enjoy a leisurely morning (against our wills, of course). 

All the bins arrived about noon, so our fears of not getting the hard-prepared supplies were relieved.  We had an hour to unpack a few things before the volunteers arrived.


We have about twenty Kenyan volunteers. Many that we worked with last year have returned, but there are many new ones, too.  It was good to see Henry, Jackson, Pheny, Helen, Constance, Jonathan, and the others again.
 
The Kenyan volunteers are assembled

Marlene greets everyone, with Fondo translating
 
Rodgers and later Francis gave their welcome statements, and all volunteers introduced themselves.  Marlene described the schedule of clinics and gave an overview of who would have what responsibility.  Francis went through all of the medications that had been purchased and explained their use and dosage. 

Francis, Marlene, and Fondo review the medications
 
I gave my contribution by photographing and videotaping throughout.  We took a break for an excellent meal cooked by Elvina.
 
Elvina serves the lunch
 
After eating, Cindy went through the TB training, Earline reviewed the diarrhea and ORS training, and Diane described all of the materials in the health kits that we brought.  (We decided that "health kit" made a better name than "first aid" kit, since the kit also contains the ORS spoon and two condoms.)
 
Cindy demonstrates how to wash hands to prevent spreading TB
 
Earline describes how to use the ORS spoon

Diane shows off a health kit drawstring bag

We then split everyone into two assembly lines and filled the cloth bags with the health kit supplies.  Because we were delaying in starting the training, we were fighting sundown to get them completed.   We almost made it, falling short by 30-40 before we shut down the assembly. What a great time saver it has been to have the volunteers assemble the bags!

Happy workers on assembly line 2

Handing off a bag on assembly line 1

Over 700 health kits are assembled!

Sunday, September 30, 2012

The Imani Project Arrives in Kenya

By now the Imani Project's United States contingency is bringing their time in Kenya to a close, but we would like to go back a few weeeks and recall our eventful arrival to Kenya.

On September 10th, Imani Project member Phil Garding wrote,

"I've heard it said that your trip to Kenya is never complete without a close encounter with a mouse, the frogs, and a snake.  If so, our trip is already complete.  More on that later.

After flying for 19 hours, we and our 18 pieces of checked luggage landed safely in Nairobi.  We met up with Cindy Harnly, a health educator and paramedic who had flown in from Portland.  We drove to the Heart hotel where we found a welcoming bed and a hot shower the next morning.  After breakfast at the hotel, we climbed back into the trucks to return to the airport.

The flight to Malindi is only an hour long, on a small prop-driven plane that holds about 50 people.  Checking in was a challenge due to our luggage.  On such a small plane, there is no bin room for conventional carry-on suitcases, so those had to be checked as well as our larger items.  We are allowed 20 kg of luggage per person with the ticket price, but our 24 pieces of luggage to check weighed 522 kg!  The airline waived part of the baggage fee, but we still had to pay $260.  An expense, but no problem.  The problem came when we were sitting on the plan, just about to take off.  The man from the airline desk came on the plane to tell us that they couldn't fit 15 of the storage bins on the plane.  They would be delivered tomorrow morning.  Fortunately, the training day was tomorrow, not today.

The Sabaki River Delta Hotel is a little bit different this time than last.  They've moved the tents around and built some new covered areas.


They now have a small generator which helps to power a light over the eating area and power where Rodger and his family live.  In 2010, we were only able to charge batteries through a solar panel or by taking AA and AAA batteries into the village.  We will help pay for petrol (gasoline) for the generator.  Even more advanced, Rodger's son, Mtawali has an internet stick - a USB adapter that connects to the cellular network for data access.  We can do our email, upload of this journal, and other things right from the Hotel!  The world has gotten smaller in the last two years.

The dining table is in a new covered area:


The trouble with this is that the side walls block the breeze from flowing through, so we are getting bug bites around our lower legs and feet.  We actually enjoyed being in the open space so we could watch the birds and world from the dining table.

Diane and I are staying in a tent on the property.  Showers and toilets are in the building at the left edge of the photo:


As expected, we have already had some encounters with the local wildlife.  When putting the suitcases in the tent, I discovered a little mouse inside the front partition.  Not too surprising, considering that the tent flaps were a little bit open at the ground level when we got there.  I tried to shoo the mouse toward the door, but ended up chasing it around until it went through a hole and into the back partition where the bed is located.  I gave up on that for a while.

Later, I made a new survey of the tent to find the mouse, and I was lifting up the edges of the tent to expose folded over areas where the mouse could hide.  While doing this, I discovered a snake instead of a mouse.  It was dark grey, narrow, and about a foot long.  I went out where Rodgers and his daughters were sitting and asked, "Are there poisonous snakes in this part of Kenya?"

They became very interested.  "Yes. Why?"

"I found a snake in the tent."

They became even more interested.  "Show me!"  I led Rodgers and Elvina to the tent and pulled up the fold.  "It is what we call a house snake," Rodgers told me, "only a little bit poisonous."  He then sent Elvina for a stick.  He took off his sandal and killed the little snake, so that Elvina could scoop it up and carry it draped over the stick.  "They come looking for insects.  They don't bother people.  One could sleep in your bed and it wouldn't bite you."  We still felt better knowing that the tent was properly de-snaked.

Continuing our animal adventures, we were surprised to see some eyes looking up after using the toilet.  There has been a frog living in the toilet bowl for the last few days, using toilet paper as a lily pad.  Earline is convinced that it is trapped there.  How would it be if every time you tried to climb out, the monsoon comes and flushes you back down?  Not only that, it rains on you all of the time.  Even more surprising was that the frog population increased.  After using the toilet last night, there were two frogs looking back.

Mammals, reptiles, and amphibians.  Our African adventure is complete."