Ms.
Baguma Samalie is an In-charge at Rwengaju HC II. Samalie a lady in her mid
thirties has proven to be hardworking and committed to saving lives in Rwengaju
parish Busoro Sub County, Kabarole District. Supported by five other staff, Samalie
has through thick and thin managed to keep the HC effectively running and
growing.
Apart
from reporting for duty everyday at 8:00am to 6:00pm which is not the case with
most of today’s Health workers, Samalie has gone ahead to use her personal
savings and salary to implement several activities at the HC especially the outreach
activities like immunization.
Samalie
who is around two years old at the HC revealed to the RWECO monitoring team on 27.06.12
that she and her staff had offered to use their own savings to run the center,
with the hope that they would recover these funds when Government sends the
HC’s PHC funds. Such love for the people and commitment at work is what I find
inspiring and tongue tying as well.
Whereas
government is failing on its role to provide adequate PHC funds to HCs coupled
with its delay, it has gone ahead to cut the national health budget year after
year, and also deny some HCs their PHC arrears; Rwengaju HCII is one of them.
According to the HC In-charge the HC serves a population of over 9000 people, receives
between 20-40 people per day and 18milllion shillings PHC funds per year.
Unfortunately this money comes in late or doesn’t even come at all, for instance
Samalie revealed that “as much as PHC
funds are expected to be quarterly and 1900000 million shillings per year, we usually
receive around 850000 shillings only which also comes in late, like after 2
quarters or even nothing at all; for example we have not received PHC for
almost a year now. We were forced to use our own savings to keep the Center
running, hoping that we shall recover it, unfortunately when i followed up with
the DHO in early June, he told me to forget that money-the arrears. He said
that government does not have money to even fund current programs so demanding
and expecting arrears becomes even more difficult”
The HC In-Charge talking to the monitoring team at the HC. |
Samalie
revealed that she finds the situation and the DHO’s communication very
demoralizing and scary, “I do not know
how we shall keep working with inadequate funds. And now that we can’t even
recover our previous monies, I do not think we the staff can continue funding
the HC, Government should do something” Samalie remarked.
Looking
at the amount of PHC funds received versus the total population of Rwengaju
parish, it is clear that each person gets less than 3shillings of the PHC
funds; an amount so small to save a life, not even treat minor diseases.
With the limited
support government is giving to the Health sector and Rwengaju HCII in
particular, it goes without saying that even the self motivated and hardworking
staff at the HC will lose interest in their work and let things/services and
lives ‘go to the dogs’. There is need
for continued advocacy and lobbying of the government by development partners,
and health practitioners to increase the health budget and PHC
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