Muhima Hospital. Rwanda's Ministry of Health is banking on the planned
expansion of health facilities at the Cell level to reduce the high
fertility rates. PHOTO | CYRIL NDEGEYA | NATION
Rwanda's Ministry of Health is banking on the planned expansion
of health facilities at the Cell level to reduce the high fertility
rates, which are driving up population growth.
The
trend, which is mostly attributed to weaknesses in family planning
campaigns, is linked to an increase in demand for maternal and neonatal
services at health facilities nationwide. This calls for an expansion of
existing health infrastructure and equipping them accordingly.
Experts
are cautioning that the new measures are needed to reduce fertility
rates as currently, the country faces the risk of its population
tripling in the next 30 years, which might undermine its ambition to
become a lower middle-income country by 2020.
Specifically,
the fertility rate needs to reduce to at least 2.3 children per woman
by 2035 from the current 4.2 children, if the country is to realise its
goal of increasing per capita income from $700 to at least $12,000 by
2050.
The government said it will focus on intensifying
efforts to increase access to family planning services. This includes
addressing geographical barriers by increasing the number of health
facilities countrywide.
Diane Gashumba, the Minister of Health told Rwanda Today,
that the government plans to set up and operationalise health posts at
all the 2,148 Cells nationwide. The drive is expected to reduce the
distance covered by residents to access health facilities.
Efforts to reduce the high fertility rates have in the past been
hampered by a rise in teen pregnancies, while demand for family
planning methods has largely remained unmet due to inefficiencies and
hesitation by health facilities associated with the Catholic Church.
Health posts
Figures
from the Ministry of Health show that about 150 health posts need to be
built over the next seven years. There are currently 501 facilities
offering services like curative outpatient care, child immunisations,
health education and a few rapid laboratory tests.
While
the exact cost of the expansion is yet to be disclosed, officials say
it will require multi-sectoral collaboration especially with local
districts. The health ministry is also banking on the support of its
different partners to safeguard past achievements and keep track of
targets.
Rwanda ranks among the few countries that
attained the highest declines in maternal deaths and those of children
under five years globally over the past 10 years.
However,
with an increased life expectancy of 66 years, high fertility rates
resulting in population increase, demand for maternal and neonatal
services at health facilities is rising, piling pressure on existing
infrastructure and equipment.
The United Nations
Children’s Fund (Unicef) plans to provide equipment used in the
provision of maternal and neonatal services in about 17 hospitals in 12
districts and which are dealing with huge demand and caseloads.
Select facilities
Ted
Maly, Unicef Rwanda Representative told this paper that they will
select facilities like Muhima hospital, one of Kigali’s busiest District
health facility, which doubles up as a maternity hospital.
These
facilities will get equipment meant for “both monitoring and treating
some of the most common complications babies face during the early
stages of birth.”
He added that Unicef will also
provide mentorship and training for doctors, nurses and midwives in
specialised skills in maternal and neonatal health.
Data
carried out in 2015 shows that despite a rapid decline in infant
mortality rates in the past 10 years, the number of babies who died in
the first 28 days of life was 40 per cent of total child deaths
registered.
Heineken Africa foundation committed Rwf600
million ($702,000) for equipping and rehabilitation of Gisenyi and
Kacyiru hospitals.
The Ministry of Health said seven maternity wards have been built, expanded and equipped over the past three years.
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