Story
and photographs by Julie Dubois, Assistant to the National Coordinator at
Tostan Guinea
Our
year-end fundraising campaign has begun, and this year, the Greenbaum Foundation
will match every gift received, which means your impact will be instantly
DOUBLED! As a part of our campaign, we will spotlight different stories from Community Management Committees (CMCs) - democratically selected groups in
each community trained in project development and management. CMCs plan and
carry out local initiatives, laying the foundation for community-led change and
ensuring the sustainability of the Tostan program. Contribute to sustainable development by donating today!
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The renovated health center of Koba M'bendia. |
Koba M’bendia is a community near Basse, Guinea that began Tostan’s
holistic Community Empowerment
Program (CEP) in 2005. As an essential part of the three-year
program covering human rights, hygiene and health, problem solving, and project
management, communities form Community
Management Committees (CMCs). CMCs are 17-member leadership bodies designed
to organize and carry out awareness-raising events and lead community development
projects.
In the community of Koba M’bendia, the CMC succeeded in
improving the health of their community by renovating and raising awareness
about the local health center. Before the CEP, community members did not
frequent the clinic. The health center was seen as the “property of the doctor”
and community members considered the nurse a stranger. As soon as someone
became sick, they preferred to be treated by the local healer with traditional
or folk medicine.
After learning about health and hygiene in the CEP, such as
germ transmission and common diseases, participants gained a better
understanding of the importance of visiting a trained medical practitioner.
Realizing that the clinic was in need of a renovation, CMC members began going
door to door in Koba M’bendia and the neighboring village to raise awareness
about the center. Thanks to their encouragement and insistence as well as the
financial support of the World Bank, the center was renovated in 2008.
Residents of Koba M’bendia financed 10 percent of the renovation and finished
the project, painting and decorating the clinic.
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CMC members with their children. |
The CMC is now part of the Health Center Management Committee,
which is in charge of awareness-raising activities. Women now give birth at the
health center, children receive regular vaccinations, and community members
consult the nurse for health concerns. Already, there is a visible decline in both minor and fatal illnesses because
of the community’s increased awareness and access to the renovated health center.
The success of the health center of Koba M’bendia has drawn
patients from nine neighboring villages, showing both its success but also a
greater need for more health posts in rural Guinea. Unfortunately, the clinic cannot support everyone at its
current capacity, but the CMC of Koba M’bendia uses social mobilization
activities, such as inter-village meetings, to encourage other communities to
invest in the creation of their own health centers.