Fiji Sun

MSF provides paediatric support for Kiribati

- -MSF Australia

Médecins Sans Frontières/ Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is providing paediatric support on Kiribati as the remote Central Pacific nation finds itself without any specialist paediatric­ians.

Facing one of the highest mortality rates in children under five globally, Kiribati’s Ministry of Health and Medical Services, approached MSF at the end of last year with an urgent request for temporary paediatric support. This was to allow the country time to recruit a consultant paediatric­ian after its last remaining paediatric­ian left.

Under the arrangemen­t an Australian-trained paediatric­ian, Dr Joanne Clarke has been working at the national referral hospital, Tungaru Central Hospital, since arriving in Kiribati’s capital, Tarawa, in mid-January.

Dr Clarke who has previously been on assignment for MSF in South Sudan and Afghanista­n, said it was hard to escape the stark connection between the increasing impact of the climate crisis on Kiribati and the declining health of the country’s children.

“The encroachme­nt of the sea on Tarawa in particular means that even in the capital people are living

in increasing­ly overcrowde­d and unsanitary conditions.

“The high salination of the water means people can’t grow fresh vegetables or easily access clean water, and in turn the poor diet means there are high rates of diabetes, coexisting with increasing rates of malnutriti­on, especially in children.”

Dr Clarke said due to the low water table and ground level wells, recent heavy rains had led to an outbreak of paediatric diarrhoea that was putting some malnourish­ed children at extreme risk. “Children with malnutriti­on are so vulnerable that an episode of diarrhoea is enough to tip them over to the point where they need hospital care.”

MSF’s medical humanitari­an assistance in Kiribati was formalised in October last year. MSF is supporting maternal and neonatal health on the main island of Tarawa, as well as on the remote Southern Gilbert Islands.

With the country covering an immense geographic­al area – mostly ocean – access to healthcare is often difficult. Kiribati has one of the lowest rates of access to primary care making pregnant women and children particular­ly vulnerable.

The country’s remoteness has also proven a barrier for i-Kiribati doctors wanting to access postgradua­te training and upgrading to specialise­d areas such as paediatric­s which can only be accessed at great expense offshore.

 ?? Photo: MSF Australia ?? Kiribati paediatric intern Dr Moannara and MSF’s Dr Joanne Clarke examine’s three-week-old Faustina at Tarawa’s Tungaru Central Hospital.
Photo: MSF Australia Kiribati paediatric intern Dr Moannara and MSF’s Dr Joanne Clarke examine’s three-week-old Faustina at Tarawa’s Tungaru Central Hospital.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji