Maternity wing opened in Papua New Guinea clinic

Maternity wing opened in Papua New Guinea clinic

by
Asia-Pacific Church of the Nazarene
| 03 Nov 2022
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Wafa Clinic
Caption

The Wafa Clinic and its maternity ward lit by new solar power lights. Credit- Asia-Pacific Region Church of the Nazarene

Nazarene Health Ministries opened its maternity wing in its clinic in Wafa, Papua New Guinea, on 7 October 2022. Alongside the opening of the maternity wing, solar equipment was also installed in the clinic.

The maternity clinic provides a place for mothers to give birth in a clean environment with nurses and nurse aids to assist. The facility also provides antenatal care for expecting mothers and counseling and support for expecting and new mothers.

Wafa is a village located in the northern part of the Wafa River in Markham Valley of the Morobe Province in PNG and is home to one of the eight clinics operated under the Rural Health Services, which is a division under NHM.

The Wafa clinic serves about 35,000 patients per year. The population of the area surrounding the clinic is roughly 15,000 people. Many of the other clinics surrounding the catchment area are either not functioning, have no medicine, or have unreliable staffing, so thousands more walk for days to get to the clinic in Wafa.

This project at Wafa was one of the three maternity wings added to rural health clinics all around Papua New Guinea. The project included the installation of seven new solar power sets at five rural health clinic sites, ensuring reliable electricity, along with 12 staff houses that are associated with these clinics.

The project was made possible by a financial grant from TearFund. Greg Maurer, the NHM CEO, was instrumental in writing the grant proposal. Nazarene Mission Services managed the funding and completion of the project. Gabriel Mahisu, director of Rural Health Services with NHM, coordinated the project. Lastly, Philip Gawale, an employee of Nazarene Mission Services, was the site foreman who lived and worked in Wafa for five months to coordinate with the locals who constructed the maternity wing.

--Church of the Nazarene Asia-Pacific

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