Health Issues
HIV/AIDS People with HIV face the
following social problems: By educating the population,
we can help eradicate the spread of HIV.


Sign in Zambia Says it all.
Zambia has been
hit hard by HIV and AIDS. The epidemic is fueled by
AIDS is blamed for decimating the
cream of Zambian professionals, including engineers and political
leaders. It kills around 100,000 people each year. More than a million
Zambians are now living with HIV and an estimated 300 more people are
infected daily. 40% of babies born to infected women are also infected.
Pregnant women tested at Nampundwe Rural Health Clinic were found to be
50% HIV positive. Pregnant Women alongside their
partners now receive voluntary counselling (VCT) at booking in
Nampundwe Clinic. Drastic reductions of HIV prevalence have already
been seen, with free condoms and increase of Anti-Retroviral medication
all having an impact. However, it is clear that stigma, gender
inequality and opposition to condoms remain deeply entrenched.
Because those who receive
treatment will live longer, the number of people living with HIV is
likely to rise unless there is a significant fall in the number of new
infections. Zambia will continue to face colossal challenges in the
fields of HIV/AIDS prevention and care, and will suffer the epidemic's
terrible impact for many years to come.
MALARIA
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“Malaria and HIV are two of the worst global health problems of our time. Together they cause more than 4 million deaths a year. Both are diseases of poverty, and both cause poverty. It is vital that diagnosis and treatment occur within 24 hours to prevent progress of symptoms that can cause death. HIV people must be considered as particularly vulnerable to malaria. Antenatal care must address both diseases and their interactions." Malaria can not only cause death if untreated, but regular attacks leave a person weak and anaemic, unable to work properly and open to other problems. |
![]() Malaria Information given here.
30 Mosquito Nets given here. |
We have now begun to sponsor the use of malaria testing kits to prevent the overuse of malaria medication and thereby preventing sensitisation of drugs and the build up anti-malarial resistance. |
MALNUTRITION
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Constantly we
are told by villagers that all they can afford to eat are one or two
meals a day of nshima- the maize meal porridge which is the staple diet
in Zambia. With anaemia at a rate of 40% and constant risk of worms and malaria, these people are in a recurrent state of malnutrition. Iron pills are not always available at the clinic. Lack of education, alongside poverty and poor resources have perhaps the largest parts to play in this equation. What Lemon Tree Foundation intends to do is to help to extend the health education to all the poor of the area, to help to encourage local employment and to increase personal wealth. We believe that teaching on nutrition is a priority in schools, clinics and the community. |
POLLUTION
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With ‘Green’
issues taking such a precedent in the Western world at the moment, the
‘Keep Zambia Clean’ campaign the Zambian government has promoted was a
good opportunity to help people to look at ways to combat the immense
problem of waste. It is evident that this problem is
escalating not just around Nampundwe, but throughout the country as a
whole. Piles of rotting rubbish around the streets and dirty plastic
bags billowing about are everywhere. At present, most households just make a pit in their back gardens to burn all this litter together, giving off noxious fumes from the burnt plastic and wasting the valuable vegetable debris. Lemon Tree Foundation promotes the teaching on Green issues throughout the community-in schools, clinics and the villages. As there is no refuse collection service, we look at ways to try and help to reduce the amount of plastic use, as well as composting available vegetable waste. Although we subscribe to the advice to separate the different kinds of rubbish, unfortunately, as there is no collection of plastic, glass, metal or paper or recycling, there is no option but to land fill - not a very healthy alternative! |
HYGIENE
![]() ![]() Home made village "tap" made from plastic bottle and sticks. |
“Five Fingers”
is the term given to the method of eating the staple diet of Nshima-a
maize meal porridge eaten daily. Although people often rinse their
hands at the table with water, they are not dried and no soap is used.
Added to this is the fact that most of the toilets are open air
latrines which have no washing facilities, the many animals that are
around food as it prepared outside in the rural areas and lack of
rudimentary hygiene education means that risk from diarrhoea and
dehydration due to poor hygiene is high. Babies and children are particularly at risk. As villagers have to collect their water from a common borehole, it is important that this is protected from farm animals. One of our "Most Urgent" priorities is to provide local boreholes for villagers to access clean water without having to walk long distances. Toilet taps appeared in many rural locations due to a big push at "World Toilet Day" when visiting dignitaries held a special meeting to promote the building and use of toilet taps, and awareness of risks of infection by not washing hands. This simple yet effective contraption is sure to save many lives. We support teaching on hygiene as a main concern, and the showing of the importance of Hand Hygiene to people in the villages along with the issue that there are easy ways to make washing facilities from a ‘tippy tap’ at their latrines. By teaching their children from an early age, the risk of stomach bugs is decreased dramatically. |
SANITATION
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No sewerage
system in the villages means that most households have an open air
latrine. Lemon Tree Foundation regularly support the teaching around the provision of healthy sanitation and promote the use of ‘VIP’ latrines (which have funnels to prevent contamination by flies) and the more eco-friendly use of ‘Thunderbox toilets’, which not only are more hygienic, but can be utilised to create compost. We see it as a concern that the people living in rural areas are focused on to improve sanitation, and work in conjunction with the local environmental health officer and community health workers. |
TUBERCULOSIS
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What is Lemon Tree Foundation doing about Tuberculosis ?
Educating the population not to spit or cough and sneeze with an uncovered mouth, is a zero cost method of helping to prevent Tuberculosis. Whilst vaccines are issued to children when possible, health education is of paramount importance. |
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CHILDBIRTH
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a high risk of sexually transmitted Infections and unwanted pregnancies
around Nampundwe. Although we support the teaching on abstinence, the fact that most teenagers start having sex aged 12, means that contraceptive advice is really necessary, and donations of condoms go like hot cakes! Obviously, there are concerns over the encouragement of underage sex with distribution of condoms, but we know that education is the key here again, to promote a shift in social attitude towards sex. There are 448 expected deliveries in Nampundwe a year. Much time is taken up by screening and counselling the women for HIV. Anaemia is rife at 40% prevalence and often no iron to treat it. Twins and breech are regularly delivered at the clinic as the women cannot make it to Lusaka in time to deliver. All the women lie on their backs, reluctant to mobilise as we advise them in the UK. Women bring a ‘chitenge’ (cloth used as a wrap around skirt-cum-baby sling) to lie on as there are no sheets on the beds. Because of the risk of water being cut off, there are big containers of water around the one delivery room and a one bar electric fire to warm cold babies. Women after delivery walk back home with their babies after an hour or two’s rest, sometimes for miles. |
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All the staff
in the local clinics are very conscious of the risk of blood
contamination, and amongst the list of equipment that the women are
told to bring in with them in labour are a bottle of bleach, a cord
clamp, a pair of clinical gloves, a roll of toilet paper, a plastic
sheet and a razor blade to cut the cord. There is no analgesia to use for the women in labour. What should be a happy and joyful occasion is overshadowed by the lack of equipment, staff and transport. |
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The traditional birth attendants look after
most of the women in the community and have very little equipment,
sometimes having no gloves or even light to conduct a delivery. One TBA
had to drag a woman out of her hut and conduct a delivery in the
moonlight as it was the only source of light! Hence we have donated
them all hurricane lamps and wind-up torches. |
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EDUCATION
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Although education for children is compulsory and highly prized by Zambians, most of the older rural population are illiterate. It becomes very difficult for children to attend school if the family is struck with illness, especially given the prevalence of HIV/AIDS. Many children are forced into the care of their parents and siblings. With state schools having up to 85 children
in a class, however well meaning the teachers are, the education has to
suffer. We support regular visits to schools in the community
where they receive health education on a variety of subjects, and
we see it as a priority in our work. |
POVERTY
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More than 70 percent of Zambians live in poverty, and unemployment is a serious problem. Millions of Zambians live below the World Bank poverty threshold of $1 a day. In a country that depends so heavily on agriculture, the loss of so many bread-winners through HIV and other health problems is having a catastrophic effect on the farming sector and on society in general. Some of the roads in Zambia are just impassable, especially in the rainy season. This makes it doubly difficult for subsistence farmers to get their wares to market even if they have transport. In 2006 Zambian farmers lost out on subsidised agricultural inputs when tough World Bank and International Monetary Fund conditions were imposed. Farmers are being urged to diversify and end their over-dependence on maize. HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis are themselves major causes of poverty. (WHO 2000). |
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Our intentions
in Lemon Tree Foundation are to support locals to grow grow foods such
as soya beans and sunflowers, so that they can promote the growth
of plants for essential oil production such as lavender, tea tree,
thyme, geranium, lemon and eucalyptus.
Our vision to support the local provision of
free health care and education, along with aromatherapy through
community health personnel, will have a great impact in increasing the
people’s physical condition to improve the prospect of helping people
out of the poverty trap. The relationship with education being supported by the Lemon Tree Foundation and the ability of local people being skilled enough to improve their lives will be felt for generations to come. |
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