Reaching out to people in need
Already early in the morning it is hot as we pack up in the desert. Also, the strong wind is no big help for us. Rather, it constantly blows the fine desert sand in our faces, while we load our supplies into the off-road vehicle. And it will stay like this for the whole day. For the inhabitants of this area, however, this is one of the least of their problems. We are in North Horr, a very remote place in Northern Kenya, where the nomadic pastoralists have been particularly hard hit by the historic drought that has plagued the region for years. Five consecutive seasons have brought far too little rain for man and their animals. People have to watch their animals die because they cannot find enough water or grass to survive. And for the people this also means hunger, because they live on what the animals give them. The nomads depend on the rain, but it has been absent for a long time. And it is very questionable whether it will ever return in sufficient quantity.
“Medair’s emergency response has come at a time when the people are in dire need of assistance. Every morning, more than 50 % of women and children must walk more than 2 kilometers to access the nearest water source,” shares Maureen.
As WASH project manager, she has been tirelessly traveling in Marsabit County for months. In close communication with local communities and authorities, she has found ways to help local people in this difficult situation. “Surface water dries up quickly after the rains,” Maureen continued. “Ground water is the main source of drinking water. Most water pumps installed to pump groundwater are broken here. Many boreholes have collapsed during the drought, mostly due to lack of maintenance, and have been abandoned. These circumstances have led people to look for alternative sources such as unprotected wells, which are not safe. We distribute water treatment chemicals to treat water in households. We are also currently planning to repair damaged water points and train water user associations to manage them.”
Most families in North Horr are pastoral nomads and travel around the desert. Grass and water drive them from place to place. Reaching migratory nomads with targeted assistance is therefore not easy. When our vehicle is fully loaded, we set out to meet them. With a mobile clinic on four wheels, we bring nutrition services in the vast desert to those who urgently need this help and hardly manage to take the long and expensive journey to visit one of the few clinics or hospitals in the region.
“The problem for people here is the long distances they have to travel to get help,” Stephanie explains as she sets up her desk at one of the eleven sites where Medair is stationed with the mobile clinic. She is a nurse in North Horr and part of our emergency response team.
“Imagine somebody cannot come to a health facility when he or she is sick, when the child is sick. Whenever we go to outreach, we look at the mothers, the children, the pregnant and they do not have to walk far but we come and treat them at their place, at their homes. With the outreach, we are improving the situation on the ground a lot. If you have an outreach, you can look after the people and the children. Without an outreach, children often will not get help because their parents are illiterate and will not bring them to a health facility. With the outreach, we can go and see who needs our help.”
Fatuma is a mother of four and needs help with her sick daughter today. Like most here, her family makes a living from animals, but almost all of her livestock fell victim to the drought. “We used to sell animals to have money to reach the hospital by motorbike. But due to the severe drought the animals passed away and therefore we have no money to get to the health facilities. As my child was sick and I wanted to take her to the clinic, I was informed that due to the crisis, fuel prices increased and the ride with the motorbike became even more expensive. That makes it harder for me to get help for my children.”
Her daughter will be admitted to Medair’s nutrition programme to receive treatment for her malnutrition. For the next weeks, Fatuma will receive therapeutic food for her and can feed her at home. Every two weeks, the mobile clinic will stop close to Fatuma’s home to treat patients and to monitor the progress of her daughter until she is well enough to be discharged.
If there are no additional medical complications among the patients in the nutrition programme and the families follow the medical advice, patients usually recover quickly even from severe active malnutrition.
Boru’s son Ibrahim is now almost completely cured. The treatment has worked very well for him, and the little boy loves the sweet high-calorie therapy food, which tastes almost like peanut butter and contains many important nutrients. His mother is delighted that she came to Medair’s clinic when the mobile clinic team first visited her. “Since my child is in your nutrition programme, I can see constant progress. The situation is improving, and he is gaining weight gradually. I am glad to see my child gaining weight again. When I see the progress, I am so happy about that”, she says gratefully with a relieved smile on her face.
If sufficient rain ever falls again for the nomads of Marsabit, it will be a tough road ahead for families in the remote desert of Northern Kenya. Medair’s mobile nutrition clinics provide vital access to basic nutrition services for the people. In an inclusive approach to outreach, Medair works closely with local health authorities, whose staff participate in Medair’s programme, while also providing health services such as child immunisations or health training to volunteers and the community. By joining forces, Medair is able to bring a broader range of services to people for whom any other help would otherwise seem almost inaccessibly far away.