Jamaica Gleaner

Tavares Gardens gets shot in the arm for new school year

- Judana Murphy/Gleaner Writer judana.murphy@gleanerjm.com

RESIDENTS OF Tavares Gardens and adjoining communitie­s in St Andrew benefited from a range of free services on Thursday as Encounter Ministries Internatio­nal staged a health fair in the community with the support of a number of organisati­ons.

Pastor Munroe Allen said the church has been hosting fairs for the past four years in the communitie­s of Sandy Park, Jarrett Lane, and Standpipe.

The community was chosen as this year’s venue because the church has a worship centre at the Tavares Gardens Primary School.

“We have been working alongside the principal and the school, in particular, to impact and transform the lives of community members. Our ministry is not just about the spiritual, but it’s about the holistic man,” Allen said.

He added that a daily vacation Bible school was held for children during the week.

“We have impacted over 150 students each day, so they come and we provide activities for them.

We feed them and engage them in wholesome spiritual and social activities,” the pastor added.

School medicals were offered, primarily to students of the school, but alumni who required medicals for entry to high school and members of the Haile Selassie High football team also benefited.

Principal Terrian Nisbeth lauded the church for its initiative.

“We have found that over the years, we have had medical situations arising during the academic year, and we are unable to handle matters as we would want to because we are uninformed, and so we have asked the parents to ensure that this informatio­n is provided to us,” Nisbeth explained.

The Kingston and St Andrew Health Department provided vaccines to children whose immunisati­on records were not up to date, and dental education sessions were held throughout the day.

Care packages containing food, diapers, and sanitary items, donated by Abundant Life Born Again Church based in Georgia in the United States, were distribute­d to community members.

A naturopath­ic doctor was also on site to prescribe alternativ­e medicine for adults, while the Heart Foundation provided counsellin­g and blood-pressure screening.

Evangelist Sandra Mills said the event could not have been possible without the sponsorshi­p and assistance of the College of Oral Health, Kirk Distributo­rs, Colgate, Access Medical Services, the Ministry of Health and Wellness, and the volunteers who helped to keep things organised.

South West St Andrew Member of Parliament Dr Angela Brown Burke was pleased to see the partnershi­p of the church and the community.

“For communitie­s like ours, there is just so much help that we need, and I think that it is a wonderful initiative. Some persons came and got some food stuff, and I don’t have to tell people in Kingston what is happening with the poverty level, so every contributi­on in that sense makes a big, big difference,” she said.

 ?? KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Senior public health nurse for Kingston and St Andrew Health Department Joyce Morgan-Powell administer­s a vaccine to seven-year-old Lesha-Miah Nunes while her mother, Mesha-Gay Lawrence, comforts her at the Tavares Gardens health fair on Thursday.
KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Senior public health nurse for Kingston and St Andrew Health Department Joyce Morgan-Powell administer­s a vaccine to seven-year-old Lesha-Miah Nunes while her mother, Mesha-Gay Lawrence, comforts her at the Tavares Gardens health fair on Thursday.
 ?? KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? South West St Andrew Member of Parliament Dr Angela Brown Burke (centre) in discussion with Terrian Nisbeth, principal of Tavares Gardens Primary School, and Pastor Munroe Allen, organiser of the health fair.
KENYON HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER South West St Andrew Member of Parliament Dr Angela Brown Burke (centre) in discussion with Terrian Nisbeth, principal of Tavares Gardens Primary School, and Pastor Munroe Allen, organiser of the health fair.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica