Jamaica Gleaner

Maverley residents receive healthcare from Rotary

-

FOR THE eighth year, scores of residents in Maverley, St Andrew, converged on the Source resource centre in the community to access a range of heavily subsidised health services and health informatio­n coordinate­d for their benefit by the Rotary Club of Trafalgar New Heights (RCTNH).

Bringing together the College of Oral Health Sciences at the University of Technology, medical doctors, the National Health Fund (NHF) and the Diabetes Associatio­n of Jamaica, the Rotary Club young profession­als provided some 150 residents with dental services, medical screenin – sugar, cholestero­l, blood pressure – and vision screening for a registrati­on fee of $100.

“The project seeks to fill a void by providing a range of services that would prove difficult to access all at once because of the cost and time to access such services,” RCTNH President Janelle Pantry-Coke underscore­d.

“Through partnershi­ps with non-profit groups, such as our long-time collaborat­ors, Voices for Jamaica, which operates in the community; our sister club, the Rotary Club of Liguanea Plains; UTech; corporate sponsors; and this year, the NHF; as well as by pooling our profession­al skills, we are able to offer services to the community,” Pantry-Coke explained.

CORPORATE SPONSORS

The club’s corporate sponsors were Colgate-Palmolive by Kirk Distributo­rs; Coldfield Beverages, National Bakery, Tastee Pat ties, Grace Kennedy, Wisynco, Seprod, Medical Disposable­s and Supplies Limited, and Hughenden Pharmacy.

She noted that constant violence also reduces the economic power of residents and their ability to afford healthcare services, hence the need for the health fair annually.

“As Rotarians, we recognise that developmen­t is a compositio­n of various human rights and amenities, one of which is access to healthcare,” Pantry-Coke said. “Therefore, a primary focus of Rotary is disease prevention and treatment, so that people, in especially underserve­d communitie­s, can have the opportunit­y to enjoy a better quality of life.”

She said that annually, more than 100 million people around the world are forced into poverty because of their inability to afford healthcare services, noting that similar links between poverty and access to healthcare have been made in Jamaica.

“If we can help to prevent lifestyle diseases by education and by offering services that would have otherwise been inaccessib­le due to cost, we can help to stem the cycle of poverty, one community at a time,” she said.

ADDRESSING PERSONAL SYMPTOMS

Pantry-Coke was supported by the executive director of Voices of Jamaica, Alecia Jones, who noted that the services provided many residents with an opportunit­y to finally confirm and address symptoms they had been experienci­ng.

“There were persons who had been having problems with their vision and did not have the opportunit­y [to confirm this] and did not know until they received free testing by members of the NHF team,” Miss Jones, who is also a resident of Maverley, pointed out. “So some have been able to go see an eye doctor to do further tests and receive treatment.”

She indicated that the health fair also provides many children with the opportunit­y to have their back-to-school medicals done, which could have otherwise proved costly to their parents and guardians.

“Persons with lifestyle illnesses, such as hypertensi­on and diabetes, were also able to benefit from advice from doctors about how to diet.”

“This is what the community needs,” she concluded.

 ??  ?? Dr Trudy-Ann Johnson, a member of the Rotary Club of Kingston, attends to a child during the Maverley Health Fair organised by the Rotary Club of Trafalgar New Heights recently.
Dr Trudy-Ann Johnson, a member of the Rotary Club of Kingston, attends to a child during the Maverley Health Fair organised by the Rotary Club of Trafalgar New Heights recently.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica