Providing primary medical care in rural areas of eastern Indonesia is impossible mainly due to a lack of health care providers, limited access to health facilities, and no road or vehicle to get there.
To reduce the mortality linked to this significant health problem, Fair Future and Kawan Baik has developed a unique, innovative and revolutionary approach. Thanks to the Primary Medical Care program, it is now possible for people living in very rural areas to receive primary medical care via health workers whom we train.
On March 28 and 29, 2023, our teams went to the #rebuildmbinudita site, where we have worked since 2019. We pre-assessed the teachers and other volunteers participating in the program for access to primary medical care.
A reminder, perhaps on the Primary Medical Care (PMC) program: This program, unique in the world, is set up for all the inhabitants of regions where no healthcare centre or medical resources are present or accessible. We put the responsibility on ordinary, unprofessional people to provide medical care, and medicine, care for injuries, and save lives.
Fair Future and Kawan Baik train the teachers of the most isolated schools for several days via a book comprising fifteen modules for the care of sick or injured patients (click on this link to see this book we have created from the scratch piece). They also become health workers in their isolated and rural villages. And an important person, moreover a woman #womanempowerment.
This pre-assessment is done in a particular context because the participants in the PMC program here are numerous: They are indeed eight, including two teachers. Mbinudita is an exception in this program because we have been working on it for more than four years. Here in this vast village, we have built a new school, #sdmbinudita, which today includes more than 100 students and the network of access to clean water and sanitary facilities #waterconnections which is also huge.
We wish you a beautiful day wherever you are. Remember to take care of yourself and everyone you love. It is the most important.
Alex Wettstein – Fair Future Foundation – 02.04.2023, in Rumah Kambera socio-medical base camp.
Images of this PMC assessment on the site. East Sumba, Mbinudita village
Providing primary medical care in rural areas of eastern Indonesia is impossible mainly due to a lack of health care providers, limited access to health facilities, and no road or vehicle to get there.
To reduce the mortality linked to this significant health problem, Fair Future and Kawan Baik have developed a unique, innovative and revolutionary approach. Thanks to the Primary Medical Care program, it is now possible for people living in very rural areas to receive primary medical care via health workers whom we train.
On March 28 and 29, 2023, our teams went to the #rebuildmbinudita site, where we have worked since 2019. We pre-assessed the teachers and other volunteers participating in the program for access to primary medical care. Together we review and discuss the more than two hundred cases of various illnesses or injuries treated under the primary medical care program by health workers in this village alone. We also take stock of what will happen next week to accurately assess the supply of new equipment, drugs and medical devices.
We also tell them that three will be part of a “test” screening program for high blood pressure and, in this case, the “prescription” of treatment and an appropriate medical procedure.
A reminder, perhaps on the Primary Medical Care (PMC) program: This program, unique in the world, is set up for all the inhabitants of regions where no healthcare centre or medical resources are present or accessible. We put the responsibility on ordinary, unprofessional people to provide medical care, and medicine, care for injuries, and save lives.
Fair Future and Kawan Baik train the teachers of the most isolated schools for several days via a book comprising fifteen modules for the care of sick or injured patients (click on this link to see this book we have created from the scratch piece). They also become health workers in their isolated and rural villages. And an important person, moreover a woman #womanempowerment.
This pre-assessment is done in a particular context because the participants in the PMC program here are numerous: They are indeed eight, including two teachers. Mbinudita is an exception in this program because we have been working on it for more than four years. Here in this vast village, we have built a new school, #sdmbinudita, which today includes more than 100 students and the network of access to clean water and sanitary facilities #waterconnections which is also huge.