This is the blog for Rhona and Bobby Hogg's VSO experience in Uganda. In August 2008 we applied to do VSO and, following an assessment day in London last October, we were accepted as volunteers . Because of the strong Scottish links, we had set our sights originally on Malawi where we spent a week in June 2008 but joint placements are difficult to find and in February we agreed with VSO to open up the search. At the end of March we were delighted to be offered placements in Kampala, Uganda. We are to work for a HIV and AIDS initiative called Reach Out Mbuya (http://www.reachoutmbuya.org/) where, we hope, Rhona's community nursing experience and Bobby's IT experience will prove useful.

We are due in Kampala on 18th September and have committed to spend a year there. We are very excited about the prospect of living in a very different part of the world and working with Ugandans who, from many reports, are fun to be with. We expect there to be many challenges but our stay in Uganda should be immensely enjoyable.

We are indebted to VSO for giving us this opportunity. Our preparation, including 2 training courses in Birmingham, has been excellent and we are confident about the in-country support that we will get from VSO in Uganda. I understand that it costs VSO around £15,000 to support each volunteer. If you would like to make a donation to support our placements in Uganda please visit the Just Giving site through the link opposite.

Sunday 28 March 2010

Transport in Uganda

Although maybe not untypical of Africa the public transport options in Uganda are quite different from the UK. In our past blogs we have referred to some of the difficulties and dangers but we hope you find the following photos interesting and amusing.
There has been no passenger trains in Uganda since 1997 so most  journeys are made by the roads which range from good stretches ( some funded by EU money) to pothole ridden obstacle courses. Uganda is a relatively small country. roughly 250 miles wide by 300 miles - the the same area as the UK (91,000 sq. miles) according to the Bradt guide.  Country-wide travel by coach/bus has its dangers. The Post Office buses are the recommended services but generally the  buses are referred to as ‘flying coffins’ and travel at night is not recommended.


In the remote areas pick-up can be the only available option but if you are not sitting inside the journey can be precarious.



The taxi service is provided by 14 seat minibuses (referred to as matatus in Kenya). Outside Kampala they are not so well regulated but within Kampala the maximum number of passengers varies little from the regulation number of 14. Although chaotic they do seem to be very effective in moving lots of people and you rarely have to wait more than 5 minutes for one. 
 A lot of taxis have religious slogans on the back windows but I don’t know if they are more successful at avoiding breakdowns and collisions.








The old taxi park in Kampala.









Outside town we believe they can be very overloaded and you may be sharing your seat with a goat. 






 
Inside Kampala the Boda Boda motorcycles provide a taxi service that can beat the traffic jams. In earlier blogs we have mentioned some of the many accidents we have heard about but for many it’s the most convenient way to get about. We have not had the need or the desire to use them so far. They do provide some amusing sights as there appears to be nothing that can’t be carried on a Boda Boda.




 
A three-piece suite.















Bags of charcoal




 












Chickens














An improvised windshield

Boda boda drivers take a rest.













Children come and go from nursery.















Bicycles are also a popular form of transport . They provide a taxi service and are also used to carry an amazing variety of loads.

Matooke - a staple food











Pineapples


 Kleeneeze!
 
 Bicycle repairs.





















If you have no wheels you must carry your load. 

















The skills in carrying a load on the head are amazing and taken to an extreme at the Ndere Traditional Dancing Centre in Kampala.













 
Rhona and I have not seen a baby buggy since we arrived. We expect this is because pavements are few and the pedestrian ways are generally rough tracks. 

So until they can walk babies are carried in a traditional way.














 I thank our recent visitors for permission to use some of their photos.

Thursday 25 March 2010

Kampala Erupts

Rhona - 25th March
Life in Kampala has been a bit tense since a week ago last Monday when there were riots at Makerere University following the death of two students. There was a strike on Monday and then there was trouble at a student hostel, which a security guard tried to resolve by shooting three people with one bullet, killing two.

The following day there were student riots, and then on Tuesday night the Kasubi Tombs, a World Heritage site, was razed to the ground by fire with more rioters stopping the fire service from entering.



 
 We were at the Tombs three weeks ago with Donald and David. It was a nice antidote to the bustle of the centre of the city but it is off our Kampala tour for our future guests


 
Fortunately we are on the southern outskirts and the troubles were all on the north. We were pretty safe and unaffected but some VSOers live on the north and had to stay at home until the situation died down. There are elections due in May 2011 so there may be more trouble to come.
Today's news is of a further 2 student deaths.
However, we had a very nice evening on Friday with other VSoers in a boutique hotel on the north of the city and all was calm, apart from the sky which was lit up by lightning all night though there was no thunder or rain. The Emin Pasha was built by a safari company whose clients were not greatly enamoured by the big international hotels in the centre of Kampala and they certainly got this one right. It is very elegant with terraces to sit on and very nice music, very sophisticated and a great end to a busy week.
I have been spending time with the nurses and learning a bit more about the treatment of HIV/AIDS. I attended a group education session for clients who are starting antiretroviral therapy (ART). 

Clients who are HIV +ve but well are prescribed Septrin, an antibiotic which they take routinely once a day to reduce their chance of picking up opportunistic infections, to which they are susceptible. When the disease progresses to a certain level, they start on ART (for life) which involves taking heavy-duty tablets twice a day and they have to take them at exactly twelve-hour intervals to be effective. The medication makes people feel unwell, especially in the first few  months and particularly if they do not take food beforehand. Many people can only afford one meal a day and not always that. They have to come to the group education sessions along with their treatment supporter, a family member or friend who has agreed to help them to stick to their regime. The community health workers also visit them at home at least weekly to give them support. The session was very well done by one of the staff of the Adherence and Support Department who monitor and support people on ART and also those on TB treatment as well. In addition they look after pregnant women and their children up to the age of two years, who are enrolled into the PMTCT (Prevention of Mother To Child Transmission) programme.
I also attended the weekly meeting of the community health workers. They are all HIV+ve and clients of Reach Out  and each looks after a small number of families in their own community. They have a community leader who supervises them and they discuss clients and refer upwards if necessary. There is a strong religious element as well and they will often go and pray with clients who are very ill. It was interesting hearing about the problems they encounter in a country where there is absolutely no welfare state to provide a safety net for people in extremis. Clients of Reach Out are very fortunate that they are so well cared for and can be given food, although the World Food Agency have stopped their programme at Reach Out and food aid is decreasing generally. They also have community supporters who will look after clients who are very ill and have no family to care for. However, while our clients enjoy a Rolls Royce service, others in the same community who are not HIV +ve and those in other areas do not have access to even basic care, which does raise questions about equity of access to health care.

Wednesday 17 March 2010

My VSO Placement


Bobby - 16th March 2010

This is probably the most boring blog so far (no photos but I thought some flowcharts might be helpful) but being 6 months through our 1 year placement I thought I should record a bit more about the work I am doing. I am enjoying my placement and feel very lucky that there is a substantial job to be done.

I am working for (as is Rhona) Reach Out Mbuya HIV and AIDS Initiative. It started in 2001 with less than 20 clients and now has around 3,000. Since its start over 7,000 clients have been registered. Mbuya is a parish on the east side of Kampala on the Port Bell Road. Our house is about 3km further out on the Port Bell Road which  makes travelling to work relatively easy.
Reach Out is required to make regular reports to the Ministry of Health and funders. As the organisation grew the reporting depended more and more on spreadsheets and at some point it was realised that there would be benefits from establishing a Health Management Information System (HMIS) which would capture data from day to  day and generate the analyses for the required internal and external reporting.
In February 2009 Reach Out engaged a consultant/contractor to provide the HMIS using an MS SQL Server database and Visual Basic front end for the data capture. The contract was for 2 months starting  February 2009. When I arrived on the scene at the end of September 2 data capture screens (out of around 20) were in use.  The consultant was claiming that the system was substantially complete but Reach Out had not tested or implemented most of what had been delivered. This was not surprising as I discovered the only database established was the one Reach Out was using to key the live data into  - there was no test system. The system had been described/specified as a number of modules e.g. pharmacy, laboratory, medical (including Follow Up records, TB register, PMTCT register), stores, so I set about identifying all the issues/bugs which required to be addressed. I spent the 3 months up to Christmas working with the consultant trying to get him to fix the problems and address some of the other issues.
I think the basic problem was the specification was very loose and the consultant didn’t seem to be keen to do much analyses so in many cases what was delivered did not meet the requirements and there was little detail on what they were.
I had no previous experience of MS SQL Server but, when I established the test system, I was delighted to discover how easy it was to take an MS Access database and convert it into a front end for the MS SQL Server database. Importing the MS Access tables worked a treat and MS Access ODBC links were easily established. Around 70,000 Follow Up  records had been entered and MS Access link tables allowed us to start checking and using the data for the reports at the end of December. (A number of staff at Reach Out have some knowledge of MS Access)
Reach Out are trying to capture all the historical records going back to the start in 2001. As the data capture was way behind schedule and the consultant was “slow” in delivering I suggested as an interim measure that I create an MS Access database to capture the TB Register data. When the consultant delivered the VB screens we could convert to using them.
Christmas came and went and I was getting concerned at the amount of time I was wasting checking each delivered offering from the consultant only to find that a substantial number of the outstanding issues were not addressed and had to be followed up in the next delivery.
In January we had a meeting with some of the IT staff from CDC, Reach Out’s main sponsor, and I was very interested to hear that they were encouraging the use of MS Access as a front end to MS SQL Server as it gave the (more competent) users the option to change the data capture and add new fields to meet changing needs without having to further engage the services of a consultant.
A short step from that was the realisation that the time I was wasting with the consultant would be better spent developing MS Access front ends to the HMIS database. So we have abandonned any further development of the VB modules and I am now developing the HMIS system. I am enjoying this although my lack of experience with MS SQL Server can be a bit of a constraint.
I have had concerns that I wasn’t passing on skills to the staff but it’s not too bad just now with a few keen to learn from me.
I have a clear idea what I want to achieve in the next 2 months so that the last 4 months will just be consolidating the procedures and training – if only. There are signs of the next phase of requirements emerging but I will have to try not to get to involved or else I will never get home.
What do you think? Is this really boring? Please comment.

Monday 8 March 2010

More Safaris

 Rhona -
Our friends Donald and David from the UK have been here for twelve days and just left on Tuesday. It was great having them, and they packed a lot into their stay. Bobby was patrol leader and Donald youngest or “bim” scout of the Kingfisher patrol – I trust Donald was more deferential to his PL in 1964 than he is now! They arrived late at night so stayed in Entebbe and we drove down the following morning, delayed a little by torrential rain. However, the sun came out and we had a good tour of the botanic gardens with lots of birdwatching, then lunch in Gately Inn Entebbe (recommended) and then home to Kampala for walk through village and up the hill at the back of our house for an introduction to real African life and a good view over Kampala. On Sunday we had a trip into the centre of Kampala and the taxi park and market before escaping to the more peaceful Kasubi Tombs,

where the Kabaka kings are buried and their female descendants take turns to sleep even today.


On Monday they were off to Rwanda for gorilla trekking and returned latish on Thursday for a quick turnaround before we all set off to Lake Mburo for three days safari. On the road down we all had the opportunity to straddle the Equator.

Lake Mburo is very underrated, it has lots of wildlife, and is the only park in Uganda with zebras and impala, both of which were plentiful. There are no big cats, but we saw plenty of buffalo and 50 species of birds (Donald and Bobby were into making lists, maybe a throwback from the 1960s) - more photos at end of blog. We stayed in Mihingo Lodge which was very comfortable with fantastic food, which the owner attributes to the input of his Scottish mother-in-law.

 
Impala and Zebra at Lake Mburo

Yellow billed oxpeckers on a buffulo.













One of many Fish Eagles on the banks of Lake Mburo
 
















 
[Note - Bobby is extremely jealous of Donald and David who saw this Shoebill on the way to Jinja last Monday] 




  

The only negative aspect of our trip was as usual, the roads. On the way down we had an accident in heavy rain when the minibus in front of us braked hard to avoid a  boda boda and we went into the back of the minibus. We were going very slowly at the point of impact and we, who were in a very sturdy Landcruiser with a driver, were unscathed, but three of the passengers in the minibus had minor injuries (two had concussion and one probable cracked ribs). They were on their way to Bwindi for gorilla trekking but neither they nor the minibus were fit to continue, and with the delays at the police station they would not have got there in daylight. They were a bunch of physicians and some medical students over from USA working in Mulago Hospital, the big and grim tertiary referral centre for Uganda, plus another American who is working for a few months and is a colleague of one our fellow VSO ers. They were getting more than their “fair share” or statistically anticipated of road traffic accidents; the weekend before they were on their way to Jinja and were involved in a much more serious accident, with one of their party sustaining a severe laceration to her leg down to the bone, and drivers of two of the three vehicles involved pinned down for hours.
 We are supposed to be in the dry season but the weather is unpredictable, often hot and sunny but with a fair smattering of rain, some long downpours and some cooler days and nights. There has been a mudslide in the east of Uganda, killing nearly 400 people, in a village where the population has doubled in the past two years. The mudslide is being blamed on intense cultivation of steep slopes and removal of trees and grass with subsequent loose soil which does not absorb the water. The average family has ten children but polygamy is common and fathers having 26 children is not uncommon. The only way to address the population explosion is to educate girls so that they get interesting jobs but education in these poor rural communities is very poor (typically not beyond P7), so it is a vicious circle. Most of our women colleagues in Reach Out have only few children, (they are the lucky ones who have qualifications) despite being Catholic, but upcountry it is very different.
We had a slightly guilt-ridden day on Wednesday, having decided to miss Reach Out’s quarterly spiritual retreat, which consists of spending all day in church, with breaks for morning tea and lunch. We went to one before and it was really just too much spirituality in one sitting, although many people do seem to get a lot out of it. There are two church services in the morning with very long sermons and a full mass in the afternoon. As Reach Out parties are memorable affairs with a good programme and lots of structured interactive activities which make use of our colleagues’ innate abilities on the singing and acting front, it is strange that the spiritual retreat consists of being talked at by a priest. Anyway, we got on with work of which there is plenty.