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Tue 13 Aug 2013
06:55
Last update on: 13 Aug 2013
The Namibian
Tue 13 Aug 2013
News    Opinions    Sport    Business    Entertainment    Oshiwambo    Archive    Top Revs    Letters   
News    Opinions    Sport    Business    Entertainment    Oshiwambo    Archive    Top Revs    Letters   
 SMS Of The Day * MINISTRY of Gender and Child Welfare, TEARS are rolling down as I write this SMS. The killing of women in Namibia is now like reciting a poem. Are we really getting the protection we deserve while women not being treated as part of this c
 Food For Thought * SO the Zimbabwe elections were free and peaceful and not free and fair?
 Bouquets And Brickbats * NURSES at Katutura Hospital must stop wearing those big plastic sandals at work because they are not the official working shoes. We want to see you looking smart and beautiful with your full uniform.
 SMS Of The Day * THIS nation is in dire need of a massive conference on housing. When we experienced a crisis in the education sector a crisis-control brain-storming conference was organised which resulted in the best deal ever for the Namibian child, nam
 Food For Thought * BOURGEOISIE has become a daily occupation if not the order of the day of the upper-echelons, President Hifikepunye Pohamba we urge you to revisit this unpatriotic geocentricism among your staff and the well-connected, for everybody to r
 Bouquets And Brickbats * COMMISSIONER of Prisons, can you please explain the strategies you use to appoint officers to certain positions? It is my observation that you are being fed with wrong information then you just promote individuals without making p
 SMS Of The Day * I THINK Paulus ‘The Rock’ Ambunda lost his belt because of this promoter and trainer. How can a world champion still be training at the Katutura Youth Complex where there is not enough equipment. I think they must follow the example of Ha
 Food For Thought * NAMIBIA Dairies are unable to match low prices of imported milk and this ultimately means the consumer will have to pay more for local milk. Look at the prices of the local chicken. All these profits are going in the pockets of a few in
 Bouquets And Brickbats * I AM pleased to hear that Cabinet has responded positively to the proposal of Namibia Dairies to support the industry. The restrictions which support the industry by reducing competition to ensure the survival of the industry is a
 SMS Of The Day * CEO’s golden handshakes. Somewhere on our statute books there must be a provision that if a board of directors suspends/dismisses a CEO without due regard to legal provision (substantive/procedural law) such board must carry the costs for
 Food For Thought * JACKY Asheeke was so right with her last column- why are the fathers of the dead children not being prosecuted? (Reference to the children who died in shack fires last week) Our justice system still protects men over women. In this cont
 Bouquets And Brickbats * ALEXACTUS Kaure, your column in Friday’s newspaper opened my eyes. One hardly finds impartial case study analysers in Namibia. Let’s not destroy the Polytechnic’s strong foundation (Tjivikua) as yet. At least wait until the transf
POLL
What do you think of the renaming and addition of regions and constituencies?

1. Long overdue

2. A waste of money

3. We have bigger issues

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NEWS - NAMIBIA | 2013-07-26
No privacy at Usakos clinic
Adam Hartman
ALMOST six months after the Presidential inquiry into the health care in Namibia expressed concerns about a ‘clinic’ housed in a community hall at Usakos, health workers continue operating from the premises.

According to the presidential inquiry report, people were uncomfortable with the arrangement because everyone could hear what their problem was. There is no privacy.

Even when The Namibian sought comment at the clinic last week, whispers were amplified to be loud enough for everyone in the large room to hear.

“This is where we have been put. Of course it is not as comfortable for the patients, but it’s not comfortable for us too. We are just waiting for the new clinic to open. In the meantime we have to do our work from here,” a nurse said.

The presidential inquiry team visited the ‘clinic’ almost a year ago and submitted its report to President Hifikepunye Pohamba in January this year.

Health workers and community members see light at the end of the tunnel, though. By the end of this year a new clinic will replace the structurally unsound facility in Usakos’ Hakhaseb location. The previous clinic was ‘written off’ because of “inexplicable” structural defects that made the building unsafe for use as a clinic.

The Usakos State Hospital in the town is also being upgraded – even though the building, which was inaugurated in 1990, is said to have been well maintained and managed compared to other similiar hospitals in Namibia.

The Hakhaseb clinic was built in 2002 at a cost of about N$1,2 million. It was officially opened then to serve the community which is about five kilometres from the Usakos State Hospital.

The clinic served as a basic health care facility where basic ailments could be treated and basic medication dispensed. More serious ailments were referred to the State hospital.

Less than 10 years later though, in 2011, large cracks started appearing in the building.

“We went to inspect it and immediately decided that it was unsafe for people; so we wrote it off and made plans for a new clinic,” community leader Ben Uiseb said.

The cracks were described as “unexplainable”. Geophysical tests were done in the area because of speculation that the building may have been built on a geological fault. This, however, was found not to be the case.

Those in the building business however alluded to the fact that the foundations of the ‘old’ clinic were not laid properly and that the earth on which it was built was not properly prepared as is the case with the new clinic – just across the road from the old facility.

A temporary clinic had to be opened until the new clinic, which will include staff accommodation, is completed – probably before the end of the year. Since the old clinic was closed in 2011, residents were forced to go to the temporary one situated at the back of a local kindergarten and comprising of several cubicles constructed of makeshift dividers.

The new clinic and staff accommodation is being built at a cost of N$9,9 million and is described by locals as a “hotel” compared to the abandoned clinic. It will also have doctors’ consulting rooms, which will be more comfortable for patients to discuss their health problems without “the whole town having to know” about them.

“It will be a much better structure because the land has been properly filled and compacted, and the foundations are deep,” a builder at the site said.

The first phase of upgrading the Usakos State Hospital is underway and includes doubling the size of the casualty ward and the introduction of an X-ray department. Costs for the first phase are estimated at about N$4,5 million.

The Namibian understands that the reason for the upgrade is to meet the need of emergency treatment in the area – especially because of the high rate of motor vehicle accidents on the B2 road between Karibib and Arandis.

Attempts to get comment from the Ministry of Health and Social Services ended with the ministry’s public relations officer - the only person officially mandated to find answers to media inquiries. A short list of questions were sent on Monday. By the time of going to press yesterday, no answers or comments had been received - even after several attempted reminders.

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