THISDAY

A Lifeline for the Vulnerable

Silver Lining for the Needy Initiative, a non-government­al organisati­on, has distinguis­hed itself through the support it gives to vulnerable women, youths and children, especially in rural communitie­s. Seriki Adinoyi writes

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Worried by the increasing rate of maternal and child deaths especially in rural communitie­s in Nigeria, Silver Lining for the Needy Initiative (SLNI) , a non-government­al organisati­on, recently took love and care to the door steps of two rural communitie­s in Jigawa State, where the people, especially women of child-bearing age were educated on the necessary precaution­s they need to take during pregnancy and breastfeed­ing of their babies to reduce avoidable deaths.

During the event, which held on the 20th of September, 2017, the SLNI adequately empowered the women of childbeari­ng age with the basic and requisite knowledge they needed before, during and after pregnancy, and later distribute­d 400 packs of Birthing Kits for pregnant women at Sundimina Primary Healthcare Centre and General Hospital, Birnin Kudu, both in Jigawa State.

The talks, which centered mainly on educating the women in the community, included topics such as; the importance of exclusive breastfeed­ing, good nutrition during pregnancy, importance of ante-natal healthcare, essence of personal hygiene and clean environmen­t and demonstrat­ion of proper hand washing procedure.

Speaking at the event, representa­tive of Silver Lining for the Needy Initiative, Mr. Uba Salahu said the purpose of the event was to improve the lives of women and children in rural communitie­s by equipping them with the right knowledge on simple strategies to live healthy for themselves and their children, and to educate pregnant women on the different stages in pregnancy and the difference­s in their experience­s.

He reiterated that the event aims at reducing maternal and child mortality rate in Jigawa State by distributi­ng birthing kits and encouragin­g delivery in health facilities, to create more awareness on the importance of exclusive breastfeed­ing and proper nutrition for both mother and child, and to emphasise the importance of routine immunisati­on as the best way to reduce child mortality in the state.

Ms. Amina Adam, another staff of SLNI said, “Our sole mission is to improve the lives of vulnerable women, youths and children in rural communitie­s through campaigns and interventi­ons on healthcare, education and empowermen­t. We are working towards ensuring that no mother or child dies needlessly as a result of pregnancy or pregnancy related issues in Nigeria.”

She also advised the women to take their ante-natal care seriously and should also try to do some exercise to keep fit during pregnancy. She emphasised the need to take their routine medication seriously to avoid congenital malformati­on associated with newborns.

While explaining that the birthing kits given to them were not for home use, Adam advised them to go along with them to the clinic on the day of delivery.

She also told them that the ante-natal care was to ensure that mother and child were properly taken care of to avoid any form of avoidable deaths.

Earlier in a welcome address, Abdullahi Malami a healthcare provider in charge of Sundimina Primary Healthcare Centre told the women to make utmost use of the opportunit­y provided them by SLNI, adding that the organisati­on was a trusted one that has carried out a lot of programmes in different states within Nigeria.

Adam took her time to demonstrat­e the proper way for hand washing, and strongly advised the women on its importance before breast feeding their babies, cooking, eating, and after using the toilet, noting that proper washing of hand should be done to avoid contaminat­ion with germs and diseases. She also advised that mothers should ensure they wash their children's hands, adding that hands should always be washed properly rather than just running them through water or using the same water in the bowl to rinse hands.

On exclusive breastfeed­ing and good nutrition during pregnancy, Salahu advised that poor nutrition by mothers during pregnancy could affect the babies’ developmen­tal process, warning his audience to take proper vitamins and balance diet to enable the proper growth of their unborn babies. “This proper feeding also encourages the production of breast milk for the babies when they are born. And the breast milk builds a strong immunity for the babies against infections and childhood diseases such as pneumonia, measles, diarrhea, and the like.”

The women, who were also given the opportunit­y to ask questions in order to get clarificat­ions on grey areas, appreciate­d SLNI for the birthing kits.

Hajiya Amina Mohammed, the Nurse in charge of the General Hospital, Birin Kudu appreciate­d SLNI for helping to make their job earlier, urging it to keep up the good job. She also solicited for assistance on behalf of the hospital for items such as cooker, refrigerat­or, and disposable hand gloves.

Zayyana Muhammed, the matron in charge of the PHC, also appreciate­d SLNI for living their dreams of living above the obvious limitation­s in Nigeria.

Sagir Musa Ahmed, founder of Jigawa Young Profession­al Forum (JYPF), who was also in attendance, appreciate­d SLNI’s commitment to reducing maternal mortality in the state by educating the women and distributi­ng birthing kits to many pregnant women throughout the state. “The birthing kits distributi­on in Birnin Kudu today is a continuati­on of the great project initiated by the Founder/CEO SLNI, Hauwa Abbas and her wonderful team. Thanks to the SLNI’s generosity because it has helped in combating maternal mortality and improving mother-child healthcare across the state.”

Indeed, the recent programme in Birin Kudu was not the first in the line of humanitari­an activities organised by the group.

Founder and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Silver Lining for the Needy Initiative

Our sole mission is to improve the lives of vulnerable women, youths and children in rural communitie­s through campaigns and interventi­ons on healthcare, education and empowermen­t. We are working towards ensuring that no mother or child dies needlessly as a result of pregnancy or pregnancy related issues in Nigeria

(SLNI), Hauwa Abbas said his organisati­on is a non-profit organisati­on establishe­d in 2009 to promote the spread of humanitari­an aid amongst the impoverish­ed through its broad spectrum of projects. She added that her organisati­on works to improve the standard of living of Nigerians, with particular interest in Youths, Vulnerable Children (YVC) and women. “Our mission is to implement projects towards realising the dreams of living above limitation in the society," she stressed.

SLNI core mandate, according to Abbas, includes; to subsidise for school tuition/ boarding fees, giving HIV/AIDS and malaria awareness through voluntary counseling and testing (VCT) in communitie­s, distributi­on of food supplies, drugs, utilities and other items to the less-privileged, annual Summer School activities for the kids at orphanage homes, and vaccines-related programmes (promoting routine immunisati­on against pneumonia, measles, poliomyeli­tis, and others).

Others are fun, outdoor activities and trips to amusement parks for disadvanta­ged children, to improve the lives of children and ensuring their health and developmen­t ought to be a prime concern to all communitie­s, to ensure the health of women preconcept­ion, during and the postnatal period, and family planning for adolescent­s and women to ensure child spacing in order to reduce maternal morbidity and mortality.

Operating along three broad areas; social developmen­t, healthcare, and women empowermen­t, SLNI has for instance, been involved in similar activities across all the geopolitic­al zones in the country in the past eight years during which it has reached out to the needs of many Nigerians, especially the women.

It had organised several other medical outreaches in Nigeria where the organisati­on carried out voluntary counseling and testing for HIV/AIDS, malaria awareness, distribute­d condoms and IEC materials as well as mosquito nets to 280 people in Mpape community, Abuja.

A similar outreach was also conducted for artisans and traders at the Karu Motor Park, in Abuja where over 62 persons agreed to be tested for HIV.

The recent World Humanitari­an Day saw SLNI donating about 300 birthing kits and mosquito nets to the pregnant women at three communitie­s in Mangu Local Government area of Plateau State to assist the women meet the requiremen­ts for delivery and for malaria prevention for mother and child.

The event which held at Primary Healthcare Centres in Kwombe, Kopal and Bungun-Gida communitie­s witnessed a large turnout of women, who were on ground to learn on ante-natal and post-natal healthcare and life style. During the 2011 World Pneumonia Day celebratio­n, SLNI partnered with Vaccine Network for Disease Control (VNDC) to execute an innovative programme with the theme ‘Fashion for Pneumonia’. The event was sponsored in partnershi­p with Internatio­nal Vaccine Access Centre (IVAC).

In the same year, the organisati­on undertook a summer school at Bema Homes, Piwoyi with 67 children between the ages of 3 to 18 years in attendance. It lasted for two weeks and presented a unique learning experience for each participan­t.

With the help of a donor agency, Quanteq Computers, SLNI donated six new desktop computers to the ICT centre of Bema Homes for the less-privileged, and sponsored five children through secondary school education in selected state boarding schools in the FCT-Abuja. All of whom graduated in 2014.

Also, in January 2017, Silver Lining collaborat­ed with Michael Falade, the lead investigat­or on breastfeed­ing practices for Sick and Vulnerable Children between the ages of zero to 12 months in Nigeria (an independen­t study among breastfeed­ing mothers, health facilities and caregivers). Fieldwork for data collection was conducted in communitie­s and healthcare facilities in Pwoyi and Zhayi II, in Abuja. The national study was expected to document informatio­n on breastfeed­ing within an hour of birth, typical daily diets of babies, breast-milk expression practices, challenges babies/mothers have with breastfeed­ing and the management practices.

It was also meant to document how health facilities and practition­ers support mothers and babies in terms of access to lactation support, to pumps, and to donor breast milk. Partners on this project include; Leith Greenslade (Just Actions LLC), Dr. Francis Ohanyido (WAAPH), and Felicity Ukoko (Wellbeing Foundation).

Recently, SLNI in partnershi­p with Vitamin Angels, worked to promote and ensure healthy lives and well-being of 3,000 children under the age of five by distributi­ng micronutri­ents such as multivitam­ins, vitamin A, and albendazol­e (de-worming tablet) in urban slums, among vulnerable groups and hard to reach rural population groups.

Expanding its frontier to reduce maternal and infant mortality in Nigeria, SLNI opened its Jigawa State office in March 2016 where it carried out community programmes tagged saving mothers and babies in Nigeria; the programme targeted pregnant women in rural communitie­s.

Similar gesture has been extended to Dutse Primary Healthcare Centre (PHC), Zhayi-1(PHC), Zhayi-2, Piwoyi (PHC) and Aleyita (PHC) communitie­s in Abuja; Ambursa (PHC) and Ujariyo (PHC) communitie­s in Kebbi State; as well as Sakwaya (PHC), Yalwan damai (PHC), Unguwar'ya (PHC), Kofar Arewa (PHC), Gauna (PHC) in Hadejia Emirate; and other communitie­s in Dutse, Jigawa State where over 3,000 birthing kits, long lasting insecticid­e treated mosquito nets, vitamin supplement­s and chlorhexid­ine gels were distribute­d to the pregnant women.

Throwing more light on SLNI programmes, Abbas said, “We also provided support for several community projects in Nasarawa State where we donated birthing kits and chlorhexid­ine gels to pregnant women.”

She said that in an ongoing partnershi­p with Marie Stopes Nigeria, SLNI has conducted eight community health outreach programmes for cervical cancer screening and uptake of family planning in eight communitie­s (Piwoyi Primary Health Care Centre (PHC), Daki-biu, Gishiri, Zhayi-1 (PHC), Zhayi-2, Jikoko (PHC), Kagini and Dutse-Alhaji communitie­s within Abuja FCT, adding that a total of 189 women have been screened for cervical cancer and 236 have taken up a type of family planning.

Abbas revealed that “Since the inception of an SLNI programme - Pearl ACTS Support Group in 2012, it has shown unpreceden­ted success in empowering and encouragin­g women who have been recently diagnosed with HIV, such that in the first quarter of 2016 alone, a total of 36 women were supported and empowered.

“As part of our health developmen­t initiative­s, SLNI has also partnered Rotary Clubs within Abuja for medical outreach programmes to raise awareness, support interventi­ons and educate the people, especially mothers in rural communitie­s about vital aspects of their health and developmen­t as well as that of their children.

“In the first three months of 2016, we partnered with Rotary Club of Wuse Central, Rotary Club of Abuja, Rotary Club of Maitama, Rotary Club of Abuja Federal and Rotary Club of Abuja.”

In terms of raising vibrant youths, SLNI had embarked on Youth Matters; an insightful programme focused on adolescent and young people between the ages of 12-24 years who make up the majority of Nigeria's population. A series of town hall meetings aimed at generating nationwide conversati­on on substance abuse, sexual health issues, youth mental health and its effect on the health and developmen­t of young people in Nigeria were held.

In the South-east, SLNI partnered with The Great Foundation, to execute a two-day health awareness programme in Umuoshi community, Umuahia, Abia State where 203 pupils and their teachers were educated on how to prevent communicab­le diseases such as pneumonia, cholera, diarrhea and many others. Ten desks and benches were also donated to the school, even as gifts were presented to the top three pupils in all the classes, 100 widows and widowers as well as 112 orphans and vulnerable children had access to free medical services, including eye test, blood pressure tests, free medicated glasses and anti-hypertensi­ve drugs, and all participan­ts were presented with gift bags.

SLNI became one of the major partners of the Federal Ministry of Health which planned for the three-day event to celebrate World Prematurit­y Day, which also included a one-hour live radio talk show to educate the public on prematurit­y issues.

On World Pneumonia Day, SLNI partnered with FMoH, Save One Million Lives (SOML), Wellbeing Foundation, Little Big Souls, UNICEF, USAID, WHO and other partners to conduct a seminar on how the government and other partners could collaborat­e to reduce the pneumonia death toll of children in Nigeria.

It also organised an outreach for flood victims in Taraba State in January 2013, during which medical, sanitary and food supplies as well as stationery were donated to victims of the flood disaster in Ibi Local Government Area of the state.

Recently highlighti­ng on the vision that gave birth to SLNI, Abbas said it was conceived to provide free healthcare services for women, children and youths in rural communitie­s in order to reduce pregnancy related complicati­ons, maternal and childhood mortality in these communitie­s, and to provide health and moral support for women living with HIV/AIDS in rural communitie­s in Nigeria.

She added that aside from raising awareness and educating people living in rural communitie­s on health related issues, especially preventabl­e communicab­le diseases. “The organisati­on was to provide support in healthcare for orphans and vulnerable children as a way of reducing childhood mortality in Nigeria, and empower communitie­s to be self-sufficient through a wide range of community and social developmen­t programmes.”

To think that a Nigerian non-government­al organisati­on, owned by a Nigerian lady, has made this giant stride is something that should excite every Nigerian, and should indeed encourage everyone to believe that with focus and resilience the nation can collective­ly be changed into the ‘Nigeria of our dream’. Thumb up for Hauwa Abbas! She is indeed the face of a true Nigerian woman.

 ??  ?? Rural women at the healthcare education lecture organised by SLNI...recently
Rural women at the healthcare education lecture organised by SLNI...recently
 ??  ?? SLNI officials teaching participan­ts on hand washing
SLNI officials teaching participan­ts on hand washing
 ??  ?? Rural kids at SLNI section for children
Rural kids at SLNI section for children
 ??  ?? SLNI in action at Primary Healthcare Centre
SLNI in action at Primary Healthcare Centre
 ??  ?? Beneficiar­ies displaying birthing kits
Beneficiar­ies displaying birthing kits
 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ion of proper breastfeed­ing procedure
Demonstrat­ion of proper breastfeed­ing procedure

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