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  • Title: A retrospective review of maternal and child health services at the Albert Schweitzer Hospital in rural Haiti.
    Author: Wallace CE, Marshall FN, Robinson C.
    Journal: Bull Pan Am Health Organ; 1982; 16(1):7-16. PubMed ID: 7042019.
    Abstract:
    For the past 25 years the Albert Schweitzer Hospital in Deschapelles, Haiti has been providing a wide range of maternal and child health services to the people of its rural district. Numerous special services for mothers and children have been added over the years, but these began to realize considerably greater potential with the creation of the hospital's Community Health Department in 1967. This department has carried out numerous preventive health programs and services designed to accommodate these groups' special health needs. Attention is directed to neonatal tetanus control; surveillance, treatment, and prevention of malnutrition; and other maternal and child health services (school programs, immunization activities, prenatal and postnatal care, family planning, the midwives' program, the "cord-cut" unit, the low birth weight project, and dispensaries and health agents). In 1967 the hospital began to develop programs especially designed to control neonatal tetanus. Communities were immunized systematically. By establishing outdoor immunization clinics at the hospital and at major marketplaces in the district and by working with traditional midwives, these programs were responsible for a sharp decline in the incidence of neonatal tetanus. Malnutrition has remained the most frequently occurring health problem among children in the hospital district. Several services and programs have been established throughout the years to meet the identified needs. These include the following which are described: the nutrition clinic; courtyard education; "weigh-ins;" nutrition recovery centers; the 3-day center at Deschapelles; nutrition intervention and case follow-up program; and malnutrition treatment. The hospital's family planning program has gradually increased its use of community education to reach the population and to try to gain acceptance of the need to space and limit births. This community education has been disseminated by dispensaries, mobile health team workers, public health nurses, and physicians. Implementation of immunization, health surveillance, health education, and improved tuberculosis control activities have produced gratifying reductions in overall maternal and child morbidity and mortality in the Schweitzer hospital district.
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