“Many times, a child’s struggle against hunger begins before he or she is born because the mother is undernourished. Making sure prenatal care and proper nutrition are available for expectant mothers in need is a critical part of ending childhood hunger.”
- Hector Elizondo

Ethiopia: Maternal and Child Health

Remote and mobile - women and children at risk

The challenge

Children growing up in the nomadic communities of the Maasai in Kenya and the Afar in Ethiopia face their own particular challenges.

These communities move regularly with their livestock according to the availability of water, pasture and other resources, and often in remote areas at great distance from essential services such as health care.

Women and children are at greatest risk in the hours around childbirth. Mobile communities and uncoordinated service provision means that pregnant women are left without antenatal care, so if things go wrong, there are no clear pathways for referral.

Lack of access to maternal and child health care means a high infant mortality rate, high maternal death rates, and poor health and nutrition for the surviving children.

The spread of disease is more likely as people move across the country, and children are vulnerable to diarrhoea, measles, malaria and HIV/AIDS.

Small and geographically dispersed, these nomadic populations face unique development challenges, where the exchange of goods and services and the maintenance of social networks are inherently fragile because of long distance, economies of scale and harsh environments.

Our response
Our response

Extensive problems require an extensive response. With help from substantial funding from AusAID, Anglicord is embarking on a major project over five years to address these challenges, building on the strengths of its previous work in the Afar region.
With its project partners, Anglicord will, under the Australia Africa Community Engagement Scheme (AACES):

  • Train local health workers in basic maternal and child health services to improve pre- and post-natal care for women and children.
  • Increase access to water and sanitation
  • Increase access to adequate nutrition for women and children.
  • Improve literacy rates among women and children.
  • Develop sustainable income generating activities for women.
  • Reduce the spread of HIV and AIDS through awareness campaigns.
  • Influence policy changes at the local and national level to increase access to services beyond the life of this project.
At a glance
Project partner Melbourne: Nossal Institute and Australian Volunteers International (AVI) Ethiopia: Afar Pastoralist Development Association (APDA) Kenya: Mothers Union (MU)
Location
Ethiopia: Afar Region Kenya: Eastern and Rift Valleys
Target populations Women and children in the nomadic communities of the Maasai (Kenya) and Afar (Ethiopia)
Project start 2011
AusAID contribution AU$ 950,000
Anglicord target (2011/12) AU$ 128,000