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Haiti / Zanmi Lasante
Zanmi Lasante (“Partners In Health” in Haitian Kreyol) is PIH’s
flagship project – the oldest, largest, most ambitious, and most
replicated. The small community clinic that first started treating patients
in the village of Cange in 1985, has grown into the Zanmi Lasante (ZL)
Sociomedical Complex, featuring a 104-bed, full-service hospital with two operating rooms, adult and pediatric inpatient wards,
an infectious disease center (the Thomas J. White Center), an outpatient
clinic, a women’s health clinic (Proje Sante Fanm), ophthalmology and
general medicine clinics, a laboratory, a pharmaceutical warehouse, a Red
Cross blood bank, radiographic services, and a dozen schools. ZL has also
expanded its operations to eight other sites across Haiti’s Central
Plateau and beyond. Today, ZL ranks as one of the largest nongovernmental
health care providers in Haiti – and the only provider of comprehensive
primary care, regardless of ability to pay, for more than half a million
impoverished people living in the mountainous Central Plateau.
Our community-based model has proven successful
in delivering effective care both for common conditions like diarrhea, pneumonia,
and childbirth that often prove fatal for Haiti’s poor and malnourished,
and for complex diseases like HIV and tuberculosis. A key to this success
and to the PIH model of care pioneered in Haiti has been training and hiring
thousands of accompagnateurs (community health workers) to prevent
illness, monitor medical and socioeconomic needs, and deliver quality
health care to people living with chronic diseases such as HIV and tuberculosis.
In each of our expansion sites, we have partnered with other nongovernmental
organizations and the Haitian Ministry of Health to rebuild or refurbish
existing clinics and hospitals, introduce essential drugs to the formulary,
establish laboratories, train and pay community heath workers, and complement
Ministry of Health personnel with PIH-trained staff. Clinics that previously
stood empty now register hundreds of patients each day across our nine
sites—Cange, Boucan Carré, Hinche, Thomonde, Belladère,
Lascahobas, and Cerca La Source in the Central Plateau plus two recent additions
in the Artibonite region, Petite Rivière and Saint Marc. In 2005,
ZL recorded more than 1.1 million patient visits at our clinical sites,
not including well over a million more home visits by community health
workers.
In 1998, Zanmi Lasante launched the world’s first program to provide
free, comprehensive HIV care and treatment in an impoverished setting.
Two years later, with support from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis
and Malaria, this pilot effort was expanded across central Haiti and became
known as the HIV Equity Initiative. The initiative is now a global model
for the delivery of community-based treatment for complex diseases within
the context of comprehensive primary care.
In November 2003, a lengthy article in the New York Times, datelined from
Cange, stated, “No program to treat people in the poorest countries
has more intrigued experts than the one started in Haiti by Partners In
Health.”
In the course of expanding our care of HIV-positive patients and their
families, we have also significantly increased our ability to identify
and treat patients with other diseases.
Women’s health has always been a strong focus of ZL’s outreach
activities, and is one of the four essential components of the HIV Equity
Initiative. One of ZL’s first projects was a women’s clinic,
Proje Sante Fanm, which offers family planning, pre- and post-natal care,
assisted deliveries and caesarean sections, vaccination of women and children,
and screening and treatment of HIV, other sexually transmitted infections
and cervical cancer. In 2005, Proje Sante Fanm provided clinical services
to 40,000 women and served hundreds of thousands more through outreach
in the countryside.
ZL has also been an incubator for other innovative programs, such as its Program
on Social and Economic Rights (POSER). PIH has long championed the
need for social as well as medical support for our patients. POSER addresses
the social inequalities that put our patients at increased risk of disease
by providing nutritional support, building houses, paying for school fees
and installing well caps or filtering systems to ensure access
to clean drinking water.
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