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HOPE Gesundheitsarbeiter

HOPE CAPE TOWN outreach programme
Information



Mfuleni

Sponsorships:
The Westin Grand Hotel Cape Town
KFD Trier
CatholicCare Milnerton&Brooklyn

Babalwa Lumko (HOPE Community Health Worker)

Babalwa Lumko has joined HOPE Cape Town in July 2007. She was born in Johannesburg and moved 1996 to the Western Cape.
Babalwa is 25 years old and mother to a son. She lives with her parents and her brothers and sisters in Mfuleni now.
She volunteered for Love Life in 2005 and consequently for Sothemba before becoming a HOPE Community Health Worker.

Luvuyo Funani was born and attended school in Cape Town and has been employed by HOPE Association since 2005. His language skills in English, Xhosa, Tusutu and Afrikaans are very useful in a working day, especially for interpretation between the doctor and the client.  In addition his training in leadership are important in the clinic environment.  In the clinic, Luvuyo works as a clerk and a counsellor. His experiences in working with teenagers and counselling them about issues like HIV, Aids, TB, drug abuse for “Love Life” before he worked for HOPE Association are very useful for him and his clients.  Dealing with MTCT (Mother to Child Transmission) clients has also become one of his particular tasks in the clinic. Because of his friendliness and his good advice, Luvuyo has become a respected a well-known  HOPE Community Health Worker.

Mfuleni Clinic

This municipal and provincial clinic with 10 consulting rooms was built in 1989 employing 15 nursing sisters with a full-time doctor from Monday to Friday from 7:00 to 16:30 to treat the clients.  Nevertheless the waiting time to see a nursing sister is long.  Common illnesses like HIV, TB and teenage pregnancy are treated.  Daily this large facility receives approximately 350 patients. About 90 clients are tested for HIV per month. The clinic has a special programm for HIV infected mothers and their babies to avoid transferring HIV positive status to the infants ((about 70 babies are in this program).

Mfuleni Community

The area got its name from the Xohsa word meaning “by the river”. The Community is situated on the east bank of Kulis River (approximately 30 km from Cape Town). People started to settle there in the 1960’s. In the beginning it was a transit area for migrant labours.  The first houses were built in 1976 and most of the dwellings are houses or brick structures with a yard (44%), however, there are also informal shacks without water and electricity supply (36%).  . Today the population is about 23,00 people; the majority are black Africans (91%) largely from the Eastern Cape with the result Xhosa as the predominant language (84%), followed by Afrikaans (9%) and English (2%). The community has 2 high schools, 3 primary schools and 8 kindergardens with good attendence and a low drop out rate. Most people in Mfuleni have completed Grade 11 (42%). The unemployment rate is very high (over 40%) the employment focused in elementary occupations (42%). The average income of an Mfuleni household is in the R0-19,200/year range (78%). Other social issues in Mfuleni include theft, gangs, teenage pregnancy and drugs.

Statistics: City of Cape Town Census 2001 at http://www.capetown.gov.za/censusinfo/Census2001

township impression

township impression

Babalwa

Babalwa

 

 

© 2000 - 2008
HOPE CAPE TOWN Stiftung
HOPE CAPE TOWN Association (e.V.)
P.O.Box 19145
Tygerberg 7509
South Africa

Stiftung:
Public Benefit Organisation No beantragt
Association:
Public Benefit Organisation (SA) No 18/11/13/4709
Non Profit Organisation (SA) No 031-599NPO