The Belgian Development Agency, Enabel
through her Enabling Health in Acholi (EHA) Project with funding from USAID,
has donated 3 state-of-the-art ambulances to the Ministry of Health for the districts
of Amuru, Omoro and Nwoya.
Tom Vanneste, the Enabel in Uganda Resident
Representative handed over the ambulances to Dr. Jane Ruth Aceng, the health
Minister at the Ministry of Health headquarters today.
The over 850 million worth ambulances
have been refurbished and equipped to the recommended specifications for Type B
ambulance as per latest MOH guidelines, meaning they are able to provide basic
life support services like oxygen therapy, nebulization, monitoring of vital
parameters and automatic external defibrillation. The equipping and upgrade was, for the first
time, locally implemented in close collaboration
with the MOH Emergency Medical Services (EMS) and the engineering department.
The ambulances are expected to transport
acutely ill and injured patients both from the community and from lower level
facilities to hospitals which can handle them, and these in addition to a few
in the region will avert unnecessary deaths happening due to delayed or missing
emergency services. The most common emergency situations happening in
communities include maternal emergencies, children with acute illnesses and
road traffic accidents.
In the Acholi region an
assessment showed that there are few functional ambulances and the available
ones are not properly equipped, prompting the Enabling Health in Acholi Project
(EHA) to purchase 3 new vehicles and equip them as per the Ministry of Health latest
standards.
A function emergency system
requires a lot of coordination and communication at the scene, recognition of
the emergency, transport with an appropriate vehicle and care during transport,
and emergency care at the receiving facilities, similarly the facilities have
to ensure availability of appropriate equipment, staff and medicines for
treating the emergencies.
The National EMS Policy 2021 sets
clear standards and guidelines for establishing regional based coordination
systems and fully functional ambulances as one component of the EMS system. There
is need for the districts and facilities to ensure maintenance and running
costs, and establishing the regional coordination system as per MOH policy.
Enabel, the Belgian development
agency implementing and coordinating the Belgian international development policy
in Uganda, has been supporting the public health system for several years,
including the emergency and referral services, and will continue to work with
the hospitals and districts to ensure acutely ill patients receive appropriate health
care.
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