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Outstanding Senegalese Health Workers Honored at Second Annual Health Worker Awards Ceremony

Every day, we at IntraHealth International encounter health workers who inspire us. But every so often, someone stands out—a health worker whose passion, commitment, and resolve leave us in awe.

That’s why IntraHealth joined Senegal’s Ministry of Health in Dakar to honor a group of individuals whose hard work, determination, and steadfast spirit of teamwork have changed the health of an entire nation.

These awardees were nominated by their communities and colleagues for going above and beyond the call of duty. Each has made tremendous contributions to the health care system in Senegal, where there are just four nurses and midwives for every 10,000 people, and one physician for every 14,000—far below the World Health Organization recommended minimum of 23 providers for every 10,000 people.

Senegal—and the rest of the world—could use more health workers like Ibra, Fatimata, and the Bakel District Health Team. Join us in honoring them as they move their country toward greater health and wellbeing every day:

Dr. Ndoye

Dr. Ibra Ndoye

Dr. Ibra Ndoye, Pauline Muhuhu Leadership Award

For 28 years, from 1986 to just one week before our 2014 awards ceremony, Dr. Ibra Ndoye served as executive secretary of the National AIDS Control Commission in Senegal.

From the very beginning of the AIDS epidemic—and Senegal’s first confirmed case—he has helped lead Senegal’s fight against HIV, and even made Senegal one of the first African countries to use anti-retroviral medicines to control the virus. The prevalence of HIV infections among Senegalese adults is just 1.7%. 

Ndoye spearheaded Senegal’s early response to HIV, including vigorous preventive action, care for AIDS patients, and mobilizing people at all levels—including teachers, soldiers, sports associations, women’s groups, religious leaders, and nongovernmental organizations—in those efforts.

“Thirty years is not three days,” Ndoye said as he received the award. “Senegal’s success came about through perseverance and steadfast determination. When we started, we were all young doctors who didn’t know that failure was an option.” 

Fatimata Diallo Camara

Fatimata Diallo Camara

Fatimata Diallo Camara, Frontline Health Worker Award

Fatimata Diallo Camara has been a nurse midwife at Colette Senghor Health Post in Ziguinchor, Senegal, since she earned her diploma in 1980. Throughout her career, she has worked tirelessly to make sure her clients have access to high-quality family planning and maternal health services.

Fatimata has been a tireless champion of reproductive health, and has worked diligently for more than 30 years to ensure that her clients have all of the information they need to get the method of contraception that they want, For the past year, she has participated in the TutoratPlus program supported by IntraHealth, serving as a coach and mentor to other family planning providers in Zinguinchor.

“Becoming a health worker was never an easy choice,” Camara said at the ceremony. “But I knew that I had to do it. It felt like a calling.”

 Bakel District Health Team

Dr. Yaya Baldé

The Bakel District Health Team, Health Innovation Award

Bakel is a rural, sparsely populated district in northeast Senegal where half the population of 96,000 is under 15 years of age. There is no hospital—just one health center, 19 health posts, and seven health huts. Working in those facilities are two doctors, three pharmacists, eight nurse midwives, and 23 nurses and nursing assistants. They, along with 52 community health workers, care for all 96,000 people in Bakel.

But the Bakel District Health Team is known for consistently offering high-quality care despite the challenges. They mobilized their communities to face a cholera epidemic. They created a district blood bank. They offer free HIV counseling and testing in all their health posts. And they’ve made great progress in improving maternal and child health in the district.

“We focus on leadership and management,” said district medical officer Dr. Yaya Baldé, who received the award on his team’s behalf. “It’s all about teamwork. We still have shortages of health workers, but we have been able to work closely with the communities, especially through health committees, to come up with solutions. We have been successful because we are really targeting the communities’ priorities, including child survival, malnutrition, and reproductive health.”

Celebration in Dakar

Over 150 representatives of the Senegalese government, the private sector, civil society, donor agencies, and other stakeholders gathered in Dakar to honor the awardees.

For 14 years, IntraHealth has worked with the Senegalese government to strengthen the country’s health system and make high-quality care available to more of the population. Senegal suffers from an acute shortage of health workers, though the government has vowed to change that—another cause for celebration at the ceremony in Dakar.

At the Third Global Forum on Human Resources for Health last year, the Senegal made a new formal commitment to improving health and wellbeing across the country, including by:

  • Recruiting 5,000 health workers by the end of 2015, with a focus on hiring women
  • Addressing geographic disparities in access to personnel and health care by providing incentives to workers who are posted in underserved areas
  • Allocating additional resources to communities for the recruitment of community health workers
  • Improving the quality of family planning services and reaching a modern contraceptive prevalence rate of 27% by 2015

“IntraHealth is proud to be a key health and development partner in Senegal,” said Pape Gaye, president and CEO of IntraHealth, at the awards ceremony. “Senegal has taken on a new vision of development, and is serious about addressing longstanding challenges to health and development, including health workforce challenges.”

The health worker awards celebration took place February 17 during IntraHealth’s Annual Global Leaders Meeting, which gathered 40 leaders of the organization from 14 countries. IntraHealth’s first health worker awards ceremony took place in Uganda in 2013.

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