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Since 2001 Seke Rural Home Based Care has been implementing home based care and palliative careinterventions to improve the quality of life for people affected and infected by HIV. SRHBC relies heavily on volunteer caregivers who are the backbone of the organisation. There are a total of 1023 caregivers and all of them have been trained in Home Based Care but only 145 have been trained in palliative care due to limited resources. The caregivers assist in identification, referral and monitoring of HIV positive clients through adherence education and monitoring. They are also responsible for coordinating support groups at community level.

The organisation is also involved in OVC care through addressing education, Health and social protection needs of children. The Education component comprises of direct school fees payment and payment of fees through proceeds from School Development Committee income generating activitieswhich were funded by SRHBC. The Health interventions include School Health Assessments, Adolescent Sexual Reproductive Health for in school youths and assistance for HIV positive children using the Integrated Management of Peadiatric HIV AIDS Care and Treatment (IMPACT) model. The IMPACT model was piloted in Seke District by Seke Rural HBC and was very successful. The model has been documented and handed over to the Ministry of Health at national level which is now cascading the model to other District of the country. Social protection interventions include psychosocial support groups, support for child protection committees and counselling for children and their families. The organisation mainstreams livelihoods and gender in all its programming.

Monday 8 September 2014

Article from USAID

One  of our success stories.









A Staunch Defender of Rural Children Living with HIV

USAID-supported field officer works tirelessly to provide home-based care to Zimbabwe’s young
Mai Paraziva works with the Seke Rural Home-Based Care program to increase access to health care for rural children/ Credit: Children First
“This work needs more than money, more than desire for a salary — it’s a sacrifice,” Mai Paraziva says.
Mai Paraziva’s children can attest to the fact that she is not the typical mother and grandmother. For one thing, she spends most of her days riding a motorbike around rural Zimbabwe – rain or shine, fair weather or foul.
As a field officer for a local NGO, Seke Rural Home Based Care (SRHBC), Mai spends her days and nights tending to the needs of children sick with HIV/AIDS. For more than ten years, she has worked closely with nurses and local clinics to imple- ment a USAID-funded program that aims to increase access to health care for HIV positive children.
Mai serves as the link between clients and services in the rural areas where communication by phone is unreliable and unreal- istic. From the beginning, her work has been a labor of love. When she first started work in 2000, Mai conducted home visits on foot with a nurse. She carried a bag of medicines and blan- kets on her back, walking up to 25 km with only a drink and two bread rolls to sustain her for the day.
Since then, with USAID support, the organization has acquired motorbikes, which have allowed Mai to travel up to 160km through narrow and rough village footpaths. “At first, I was scared I wouldn’t have the stamina to push the bike. I can now ride with one hand, legs up, no problem,” she says.
Before USAID intervened, vulnerable and marginalized children were excluded from many basic social services, as well as from psychosocial support. Under the program, home-based care- givers are trained to identify sick children in their communities and encourage them to go for HIV testing.
SRHBC, in conjunction with local clinics and hospitals, provides a wide array of treatment, logistical, and other-care services to improve the lives of hundreds of orphans and vulnerable chil- dren in Seke District. Its focus on monitoring and psychosocial support has begun to fill in some of the gaps in social and emo- tional support for vulnerable children. “This is a serious issue,” Mai comments. “Our children are our future, our tomorrow. There is no way to fill in the gap of parents. We just have to keep continuing to help them until they grow up.”

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