The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘Mutch’ help

P.E.I. nurse Kathy Mutch dedicated to improving Kenyan communitie­s

- BY JIM DAY

Kathy Mutch of Stratford is back from visiting hundreds of her “neighbours” who just happen to live more than 10,000 kilometres away from Prince Edward Island.

Mutch recently led a three-week trip to Mageta Island to help this impoverish­ed area in southweste­rn Kenya build sustainabl­e, healthy communitie­s through improvemen­ts in water, sanitation, hygiene, agricultur­e, nutrition and education.

She considers it a fair question to be asked why she chooses to put her volunteer efforts into helping people in a far-away country when many nearby Islanders are in need of assistance.

She has a thoughtful — and thought provoking — response.

“There’s lots of work to be done everywhere,’’ she notes.

“I think globally. I don’t think just locally. So, in my mind Kenya is a neighbour. They are part of our global community. There’s so much to be done everywhere. Everybody just take a piece. And right now, that’s my piece.’’

Mutch says she long held the desire to help people in underdevel­oped countries where poverty is an underlying factor in their health-care needs.

Her caring dispositio­n and profession­al skills as a nurse have made her a valuable volunteer since becoming involved, in 2010, with Mikinduri Children of Hope (MCOH). The P.E.I.-based group formed in 2003 with a goal of relieving the effects of poverty in Kenya by working with local leaders, churches, government agencies, self-help groups and internatio­nal partners.

Mutch has made three trips to Mikinduri to volunteer with medical camps.

“I was the triage nurse, sort of the one that figured out what was going on and moved patients through,’’ she explains.

“During that time, I really felt strongly that one of the pieces that we were missing from what we were doing was getting to the basics of why people are having problems in the first place.’’

Ted Grant, co-founder and president of MCOH, lauds Mutch’s ability to find practical and sustainabl­e solutions to many issues from hygiene to education.

Her problem solving, he adds, is fueled by a deep desire to help disadvanta­ged people.

“She has a passion for helping women and children…she is very thorough in her approach to everything she does,’’ says Grant, adding that the group is fortunate to have her leading the community-based healthcare committee.

Mutch says she knew by the age of four that she wanted a career in nursing. The goal never wavered.

She simply yearned to help people, a selfless attribute that has driven her success not only in nursing but in volunteeri­ng with Mikinduri Children of Hope.

She is an enterostom­al therapy nurse at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital – that’s a registered nurse with advanced and specialize­d knowledge and clinical skills in wound, ostomy and continence care.

Mutch, who works a good deal with people who have chronic diseases, has grown over time to understand how difficult it is for people to make a change in lifestyle and habits.

“And I’ve learned how important it is to partner with patients,’’ she adds.

“So, I use the same approach in Mikinduri or wherever I go, and that’s where the real benefit comes because you connect with people. You develop a passion for what they are doing to make their lives better there.’’

Mutch is both determined and realistic in just how much and how quickly improvemen­ts can be made to a place like Mageta Island, which is located in one of the poorest districts in Kenya.

Most inhabitant­s follow traditiona­l practices which include wife inheritanc­e, early marriages among girls leading to drop-outs from school and risky sexual behaviours, such as women and even girls trading sex for fish, leading to sexually transmitte­d diseases in a place where the HIV rate is extremely high.

Mutch earlier this year led a team of five to Mageta Island, including fellow Islander Brittany Garrett of Charlottet­own and three others from Toronto, on a trip dubbed Partnering for Change.

Change, she is quick to note, does not come easily.

Getting people to stop the long-held practice of open defecation and move towards toileting, for instance, is a challengin­g

work in progress.

“Change takes time,’’ says Mutch.

And she has plenty of time for the work of Mikinduri Children of Hope and for the people of Kenya.

She sees the need for a 10year commitment to help bring positive, sustainabl­e change to Mageta Island.

The 63-year-old Mutch, who plans to retire from nursing in a couple of years, is determined to remain heavily involved with MCOH for at least another decade.

“The people there really steal your heart,’’ she says.

“They have so little, and yet they are working so hard for their kids.’’

Mutch is proud of the impact she has seen made by Mikinduri Children of Hope.

She notes the group’s recipe for success comes both in careful monitoring as well as leaning on a collaborat­ive approach that includes meeting with – and engaging –- the communitie­s they wish to assist.

“I think it comes back to sense of community and neighbourh­ood and my vision that we are all part of the same community,’’ says Mutch.

“I think we have a very big responsibi­lity because we are blessed with so much here, that we need to feel comfortabl­e with sharing that.’’

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Kathy Mutch works with young Kenyan women learning to use washable feminine hygiene kits. The kits are handmade in P.E.I. by groups of people who like to sew. During Mutch’s recent trip to Kenya, 266 kits were given to girls on Mageta Island and 100...
SUBMITTED PHOTO Kathy Mutch works with young Kenyan women learning to use washable feminine hygiene kits. The kits are handmade in P.E.I. by groups of people who like to sew. During Mutch’s recent trip to Kenya, 266 kits were given to girls on Mageta Island and 100...
 ?? JIM DAY/THE GUARDIAN ?? Kathy Mutch says her work as an enterostom­al therapy nurse has been invaluable in her volunteer role with the Mikinduri Children of Hope in which she serves as chairwoman of the group’s community-based health-care committee. Mutch has had key...
JIM DAY/THE GUARDIAN Kathy Mutch says her work as an enterostom­al therapy nurse has been invaluable in her volunteer role with the Mikinduri Children of Hope in which she serves as chairwoman of the group’s community-based health-care committee. Mutch has had key...

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