Construction of "health rooms" in schools
Zambia, 2020
Social Issue
Over the past years, many developing countries have made enormous gains in improving early childhood health and reducing under-5 mortality. Nevertheless, the health needs of children above 5-years-old continue to be critically overlooked. Unfortunately, illnesses in school-age children have a devastating impact on their health, learning, development, and future prospects. Nearly 50% of Africa’s population is under 15; the continent’s future, and that of its children, depend on their ability to stay healthy, learn effectively, and pursue their full potential.
Our Response
Starting in Zambia, Healthy Learners has developed a solution that connects school-aged children to primary care by expanding access to healthcare in schools. Over the past five years, Healthy Learners has worked closely with the Zambian government to develop, evaluate, and refine this model of school-based community healthcare. The Zambian government is planning to roll out this model on a national basis.
- Healthy Learners trains selected teachers (as school health workers) to provide health education, assess and triage students, make referrals to clinics, and facilitate bi-annual mass drug administration (MDA) programs for deworming and vitamin A. The Ministry of Health provides all deworming medication and vitamin A supplementation for MDA.
- School Health Workers use tablets equipped with diagnostic software developed by their tech partner, THINKMD, enabling accurate clinical assessments, integrated decision support, data collection, ongoing quality monitoring, and community health surveillance.
- Healthy Learners trains school administrators to oversee and manage the school health program and invests in community sensitisation to educate parents, guardians and community leaders about the program and health needs of school-aged children.
- Healthy Learners work with school administrators and the local government to establish health rooms at partner schools. The health rooms serve as locations where children know they can go when they are not feeling well to receive care from an School Health Worker. Their blueprint for the school health room has been adopted by the Ministry of Education as the national standard. The maintenance and medical supplies of the health rooms will be supported by the Zambian government.
Netri’s grant will contribute to Healthy Learner’s budget to fund the establishment of school health rooms at 20 new partner schools in Lusaka serving an estimated 28,000 children. The maintenance and medical supplies of the health rooms will be supported by the Zambian government.
Expected Social Impact
Healthy Learners has a network of 585 School Health Workers in 75 government-run schools with over 200,000 children.
An independent study conducted in 2019 by researchers from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health showed that self-reported illnesses fell by 38%, and deworming uptake increased from 41% to 84%,
In terms of impact attribution, this grant from Netri will fund the building of eight health rooms in partner schools, serving an estimated 11,200 children.