Healthcare shouldn’t be a privilege. Too many people in Ghana struggle for this basic right, but I’m excited about the care we’re providing to expectant moms and their babies. I recall a recent example of good news that brought a smile to my face.
It was about 3 p.m. I heard motorbikes roaring towards The Clinic of Hope in Kasuliyili, Ghana and a man rushing to help a woman. The pain was written on her face as she staggered towards the maternity room, followed by a midwife. What seemed like five minutes later, a baby cried and smiles spread across the faces of the men waiting outside.
Azara (below), 32, had just delivered her third child, Jemila. She later told me how the birthing experience was better this time, because she got help from a healthcare professional. She learned this was important through The Clinic of Hope’s community outreach program.
It’s a similar story for many women who have delivered at the medical centre, which Christian Children’s Fund of Canada (CCFC) had built in 2009. Before then, women who needed professional help to deliver their baby were carried in a donkey cart, a bicycle or a motorbike for between 12 and 30 kilometres to the nearest medical centre. Many women and babies died.
In fact, World Bank stats show the maternal mortality rate for Ghana was at 315 per 100,000 live births in 2015. The rate has improved from 500 per 100,000 live births in 1990. I’m proud to see CCFC helping change the story and make significant contributions to improving maternal health in the country.
The Clinic of Hope, funded by Francesca Young of Toronto (above), has been a part of that evolution. It has brought health services to the doorsteps of more than 7,500 people in six communities.
And, now with new staff quarters, the clinic is open around the clock; it even has solar panels so it can operate without electricity during occasional power outages.