Sr. Breege Breslin, baptised Brigid, was born in Ballina, Co. Mayo, Ireland on May 3rd, 1931. She was the seventh child in a family of twelve children, six boys and six girls. All her brothers and sisters pre-deceased her with the exception if one brother, Joe.
Brigid was educated locally in Ballina, first in the local National School and then in the Mercy Convent School for secondary level education. When she was eighteen, she moved to Dublin and found employment in the General Post Office. She had two brothers also working in Dublin at that time, so she had family nearby. She enjoyed life in the city and was a sociable, out-going person, but the idea of a religious vocation was at the back of her mind.
Brigid joined MMM in March 1955. By this stage her older sister, Mary (Sr. Gemma), was already in MMM but Breege always insisted, “Gemma being in MMM had nothing to do with my joining the Congregation”.
St Mary’s Medical centre is an integrated faith based health facility in the Catholic Diocese of Eldoret established by the Medical Missionaries of Mary (MMM) in 2000 by Sr. Patricia Hoey. The health facility was established with the aim of providing basic quality care as there were little medical services available to the residents of Kapsoya, Chepkoilel and their environs at that time. The entry points were the churches, schools and door to door VCT. The Medical Centre was registered with MOH in November 2002.
The facility is community focused offering a range of services:
St. Mary’s Medical Centre also provide rehabilitative services under the Outreach Department which continues to center around the following:
St. Mary’s also works together with the St. Patrick’s on child Safeguarding and protection:
Location: St. Mary’s Medical Centre Kapsoya is situated in Kapsoya Estate next to Kapsoya secondary school along ElgeyoMarakwet Road 5 km from Eldoret town – Ainapkoi Constituency of UasinGishu County – Kenya. Kapsoya location has approximately 38, 421 people.
St. Mary’s is surrounded by slums, squatters and brewers. Generally, people of St Mary’s catchment area are petty traders, casual laborers and some have no income at all. Most people have no meaningful regular source of income. For these people to access medical care when they are ill or support for their family with the basic needs becomes extremely difficult
Teenagers, especially girls, need a lot of support. They are more vulnerable to early pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections. Many of the families that we care for live in a one roomed rented mud house. Children of all ages share the same sleeping space.
We would like to continue with this good work in Eldoret as many people appreciate the quality services given over the years by MMMs. It has been a challenging year due to Covid-19; we learnt that as we care for others, we have also to care for ourselves as staff so that we can continue the good work.
The community is engaged in the three ministries namely; Riara Ministry-Kibera, Vocation animation and study. There are five sisters in the community two are working in partnership with Mirror of Hope Community Based Organisation, three are studying and one sister is responsible for vocation promotion.
Riara Ministry: This is a new initiative and the first of its kind in the Congregation that MMMs are working in collaboration with one of the AMMMs, who runs a community based organisation called Mirror of Hope CBO in one of the urban slums in Kenya. There are two sisters working in this Project.
Mirror of Hope CBO office is located in Kibera. The organization is currently running the following programs for women and youth in the community namely:
Mirror of Hope CBO office is located in Kibera. The organization is currently running the following programs for women and youth in the community namely:
Vocation Animation: One of the sisters is responsible for vocation promotion in Kenya. She is supported by the sisters in the community and in the country. She is also in touch with other MMM sisters in the congregation who sometimes refer prospective candidates to her that contact them through the internet. There is a vibrant network of vocation animators in Kenya (Kenya Association of Vocation Animators) which she works in collaboration with for vocation promotion in schools, higher institutions and parishes.
Working with Mirror of Hope CBO which deals with young people is a good opportunity for her to attract vocation as well as impact meaningfully in the lives of the youth. COVID- 19 pandemic has affected vocation drive, she was unable to move around for vocation promotion and to visit prospective candidates.
Study: There are three sisters on full time studies and one sister on part time study, doing an on-line course in counselling psychology in Riara Community. One sister is doing Nursing at Daystar University Nairobi, another in Catholic University of Eastern Africa (CUEA) studying Social works and lastly a sister studying Religious Formation at Tangaza, who is finishing her program this year. Their studies are going well in spite of the challenges of the pandemic.
MMM Mukuru Health Centre offers a wide range of services both at the facility level and at the Community. They are as follows below:
Maternal child health:
Antenatal clinic for pregnant mothers (ANC). All mothers are encouraged to do HIV tests and if any of the mothers is positive, they are immediately transferred to the PMTCT clinic to be managed properly to ensure that the baby is given birth to as HIV negative.
All the above are carried out by registered nurses and are supported by Community Health Volunteers (CHVs)
Outpatient Department(OPD):
We have consultation rooms where clients are being seen after which prescriptions are made according to the illness. These services are carried out by Clinical officers.
Labratory:
We have a routine laboratory with proper equipment where tests are carried out as required. We also run a TB lab where tuberculosis tests for clients who present with the symptoms are carried out. In doing this, we have a Biosafety machine to process sputum and this has made our work easy over the years. These are done by professional staff who are qualified as Laboratory Technicians.
TB/HIV Departments :
This is where clients who are infected with either TB or HIV are attended to and put on treatment.
We do the Direct Observation Therapy (DOT) for TB clients to ensure that drugs are well taken by the clients. We provide milk and food baskets for clients who are on intensive care, this will enable them take their drugs with ease and reduce the pill burden.
HIV clients are also on food baskets especially those who are needy and cannot afford a meal. Food helps them to take their medication without reactions. They also often suffer from the lack of a balanced diet. There is a daily adherence counselling session for all clients present so as to encourage them to live positively and not default in taking their medication.
Both HIV and TB clients undergo regular psychosocial support to help them accept their status and leave a positive life. We also have support groups in which they belong to and participate monthly with other members. In that forum, they are able to share their experiences and learn from each other regarding coping mechanisms amidst other things.
We have weekly workshops in households and schools on Counter Human Trafficking (CHT). The outcome of this is that when community members suspect any trafficked child, they refer them to our facility and then we do a follow up to rescue the child and where possible, reintegrate the victim back to his or her family.
HTS Centre:
We run a HIV Testing and Counselling (HTS) Centre where clients walk in and request voluntarily to be tested for HIV and if positive, they are counselled and put on care and treatment.
Pharmacy:
We have a Pharmacy dispensary where medication is dispensed according to prescription for clients. This is handled by a certified pharmacist.
We run a health record unit where we collect data daily for analysis which helps for managerial decisions for the growth of the facility. The data collected feeds into the agenda of interventions to be conducted in every department at the facility and health zones at the wider community.
Social office:
It is engaged in listening to all clients that present with psychosocial challenges which includes cases of HIV and GBV. Thereafter the clients are referred to the various departments or institutions that can help deal with their issues or further manage them. We also work with communities to empower them to make informed decisions about their lives in the footsteps of Paul Freire, where we encourage communities to come up with initiatives that will help them solve the challenges that they have as far as health and development is concerned. It will be good to note here that survivors of GBV and victims of human trafficking are given priority at our facility and when we rescue them, they are put in safe houses as we follow up on counselling sessions for them as well as legal interventions as the case may be.
Community engagement:
We engage the youth around our catchment area on sanitation and hygiene. One of the activities we carry out with them is monthly clean up inside the slum as well as garbage collection from household after which the youth in turn separate what needs to be disposed from what can be recycled and then it is sold out to buyers and income is gotten to do small businesses to fend for themselves. This is really thriving.
We also engage and work with community health volunteers and village elders in the different interventions at community level because they are the gatekeepers and we can always get valid information from them as to how to work better and breach gaps where needed. We do a lot of outreaches on HIV/TB/GBV/CHT interventions as well as, these are done in households.
We also go to schools for health programs and our talks are on different messages according to the trends. Through the school health program, we get connected with young girls who have dropped out of school due to pregnancy, and so we are able to help them with counselling sessions and safe spaces until they give birth.
We have a program called WE MEN CARE. This is to bring men on board to be champions of safe health care. We do this by encouraging the pregnant mothers to come with their spouses so that as the mothers are being attended to, we can engage the men by educating them on how to take care of their wives during and after pregnancy amidst other things. We also use that opportunity to carry out HIV testing for the couples present.
Specialized Ministry, Rwanda: Sr. Martine Makanga MMM
Although part of the Nairobi community (Prof Saitoti Rd), I am now responding to Christ’s healing mission in Rwanda since January 2021 employed by the Ministry of Health. My mission is three-fold:
Rwanda has a population of 13.1M. It has four referral hospitals (King Faisal, the Rwanda Military Hospital, Kigali University Teaching Hospital and Butare University Teaching Hospital) and also the Ndera Neuropsychiatric Hospital.
My work base is at the Military or Kanombe Hospital which receives referrals from 10 Districts from the east of the country.
It is a challenging mission. Workwise It can be very demanding with sometimes long days in theatre. But I am free at week-end to rest, pray and do personal house work.
But what moves me and gives me energy?
B. Free Pediatric Surgical Camp in Pointe-Noire – Rep of Congo)
For the past few years, I have been invited yearly for 2 weeks to my archdiocese of origin of Pointe-Noire to operate freely some 100 very poor children aged 0 to 15. The camp is organized by the Diocesan Caritas, local medical teams and the petroleum company Chevron who pays for the anesthetics, all needed drugs and my fare to the Rep of Congo. At the end there is a thanksgiving Mass with the Archbishop. This is always a wonderful experience. The poor indeed hear the Good News.
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In Kasina we run an integrated ministry which includes a Health Centre with maternity services and PHC outreach and development programme in 72 villages in our catchment area.
We offer the following services:
The Bishop of Dedza Diocese is the proprietor and legal holder of Kasina Health Centre. In accordance with the Constitution of the Diocesan Health Commission, KHC is governed by the Diocesan Health Commission Board, whose members are appointed by the Bishop.
Kasina Health Centre (KHC) started providing health services in 1946 under the administration of the Missionary Sisters of Africa. In 2005 the administration and day-to-day management of KHC with its PHC/Outreach programme was entrusted to the Congregation of the Medical Missionaries of Mary. MMM added the Outreach Development Programme to their services in 2008. In 2007 KHC built and opened an HIV Testing and Counselling Centre. PMTCT services commenced in 2008.
In 2011 an ART (Antiretroviral Therapy) clinic was started for the provision of ARVs. In 2014, Visual Inspection with Acetic Acid (VIA) Clinic for screening for cervical cancer was initiated.
Kasina Health Centre provides a 24 hour service, 7 days a week.
Health Service Delivery area
The District Health Office allocates the health service delivery areas of all health facilities in the district. The catchment population for KHC according to its health profile is 35,863 people, 4.6% of the district population.
The Health Centre is situated in Dedza District, one of the mountainous areas of the country, bordering Mozambique. It is 40 Km. north of Dedza Town, the district’s capital, where the District Hospital is situated. Dedza District Hospital and Nkhoma Mission Hospital, 12 Km. north of Kasina, are the referral hospitals for KHC.
Our Health Centre was chosen as one of the rapid Covid19 testing Centers in Dedza district.. During our palliative home visits, we discovered that one of the villages in our catchment area were having a number of individuals suffering from leprosy. We organized a workshop on leprosy for the staff in conjunction with the District Health Officer and we intend to do more awareness on leprosy in the villages in our catchment when we have the means.
We are really doing our best in providing health care to the people in our catchment area however, we are limited in many areas due to financial constraints. Most of the people have no ability to pay for care.
In our mission Lilongwe; the sisters are all engaged in extraordinary Eucharistic ministry- Distribution of Holy Eucharist during mass and teaching children catechism.
In the ministry, we are all engaged in health care with specific services:
Home based care: Visiting, health educating, providing health foods and supplements, clothing and shelter where needed for homebound sick, physically challenged children and frail elderly on a weekly basis.
Counselling in the facility for support group members who access the facility services.
Meeting with support groups in the six outstations of St Kizito Chigoneka Parish counselling and health educating them, helping them with income generation programs in the form of rotatory loaning system. Passing on the skills of complementary care. Total number of beneficiaries’ 102.
We are working with home based care volunteers 73 volunteers, in the six out stations. We help by orienting them and facilitating them to knowing and practicing National Palliative Care Policies. They are also beneficiaries of the rotatory loan system. We organize workshops for their capacity building.
In the facility, the unit provides aromatherapy, hand sanitizer plus cream for preventive measures in the presence COVID-19. Dietary management for poor nourished patients.
The unity is very much involved in effective wound management and passing on complementary therapy skills to the staff.
In the parish, working with pious societies like St Vincent De Paul and Divine Mercy groups/individuals in caring for the destitutes, hungry and poor of the outstations.
The unit advocates for the adoption of the poor by those who can. Two clients are already adopted. 3 new houses built and 3 repaired.
The unit cooperates with individuals like Christina Lymn, an Irish woman who built two houses for two clients and supported one of the two with income generating activity. Miss Maja Lopert, an Austrian, who sponsors the upkeep of all our needy clients.
St Kizito Integrated Health Centre provides staff and transport for the Programme.
The Programme is registered with Palliative Care Association of Malawi (PACAM) and a member of National Task Force.
The sister responsible for the unit is Sr. Chinyere Anyaorah
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MEDICAL MISSIONARIES OF MARY HEALING CENTRE WAU, SOUTH SUDAN
The Medical Missionaries of Mary Healing Centre (MMM HC) is a corporate ministry. All four sisters in the mission work in this project which has different activities. There is the clinic which takes care of minor illnesses as well as preventive care, especially health education. It is an expanded program on immunization, antenatal care to pregnant women, social and sustainable development and the administration of the facility.
Who is involved?
The Medical Missionaries of Mary sisters in Wau work in collaboration with the state ministry of health who supplies vaccines for immunization of children. We collaborate with UNICEF, OXFAM, and the directorate of water utility, they have been supporting the MMM HC with personal protective equipment during this pandemic. They continue to supply face masks, chlorine and soap. We collaborate with the Catholic facilities by sharing information and sometimes medication nearing expiry. The health coordination office of the Catholic Diocese of Wau has been of great support too through Action medeor as we receive donations of medicines for the facility. The health coordination office also writes projects to support staff welfare by paying the stipends for some medical and paramedics of the Catholic facilities of which MMM HC has also benefited.
The MMM HC is located at a place called Eastern Bank some three kilometers away from Wau town across the Jur River. This area has a population of over twenty-five thousand people (25,000) who are mostly returnees from some war torn states within South Sudan. The MMM HC operates five times a week while field work under the social department is done twice a week and this takes care of some elderly people in the catchment, malnourished and sick children and demonstrates gardening to improve nutrition.
This community is still a long way from understanding that illness is a natural cause and improved hygiene will lead to improved general well being of a person. The community is slow to embrace some services offered like expanded programs on immunization and the need for pregnant women to attend antenatal clinics.
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The Medical Missionaries of Mary came to Nangwa in Hanang District, Manyara Region in 1985.
Our present ministries are as follows:
1. Outpatient Dispensary – which has a lab and pharmacy and ultrasound services.
Presently 3 sisters are working there with 15 lay staff, one who will be retiring in June 2021. We provide treatment 6 days a week.
2. RCH ( Reproductive Child Health ) Services- Antenatal and child welfare clinics are held 4 days each week at the dispensary. This is a free service in collaboration with the government who provides vaccines and a fridge. We also go to 6 villages on a monthly basis. Three to six staff are involved depending on the size of the clinic. We collaborate with government staff on two of our mobile clinics. HPV vaccine is provided by the government for 14 year old girls to prevent cancer of the cervix and we take part in Vitamin A and deworming campaigns, normally held twice a year.
3. Social/ Economic/ Pastoral Activities- Donors have provided money for poor and handicapped children and for widows. An income generating project for a group of widows to raise pigs has been started and the pig house is almost built. Malnourished children are given food supplements and we have also helped TB patients with food.
CAPACITAR – Trauma Healing and Transformation Ministry: Sr. Genevieve van Waesberge MMM
CAPACITAR is an International network of solidarity to promote the wellness and healing of persons and communities. It began ‘spontaneously ‘in Nicaragua when Patricia Cane facilitated an Arts festival with people traumatized by the on-going conflict – many of them had lost family members or friends or had themselves received death threats. In the evenings, Patricia used movements and other modalities for her own self-care; seeing this, the people asked her to teach them what she was practicing. After a few days feeling better, able to sleep, they exclaimed: “ Patricia what you taught us is ‘CAPACITAR’’! Capacitar being a Spanish verb meaning to empower, to give life. This led Patricia to study psychology and do a PhD in Multicultural Wellness.
In 2005, I was in Butare, Rwanda, responsible for a Center for Traumatized Women. A Maryknoll sister gave me Patricia Cane’s book ‘Healing and Transformation’ saying: ‘This will help your clients!’. She introduced me to Costasia Mbogoma, a Tanzanian teacher who had earlier followed a Capacitar session with Patricia Cane in Ngaramtonis. Costasia came to Rwanda and gave a workshop to our staff. Everyone was excited. I then invited Patricia Cane who came from the USA to train us as Trainers for two years. She brought with her Antoinette, a Rwandan sister who had found great healing through the Capacitar workshops. End of 2009, as I was leaving Rwanda to return to Tanzania, Patricia asked me if I could be available as an international Trainer for East, Central and West Africa.
Since 2006, I have facilitated workshops in 13 countries: Rwanda, Burundi, DRC, Uganda, Senegal, Nigeria, Cameroon, Gabon, the Central African Republic, Sudan, South Sudan, Kenya and Tanzania and in France.
Participants have been many and varied: traumatized women, widows, children, teachers, prisoners,religious and priests, OSB &,Cistercians, survivors of the 1997 Buta Massacre in Burundi, refugees, internally displaced, HRD, WLUM activists (women living under Moslem law), UN staff and soldiers in Burundi and South Sudan, police and soldiers, female and male former child soldiers, survivors of LRA abductions, kidnappings and of torture, mental health, medical and paramedical staff, university students and lecturers.
2020-21. Due to Covid-19, I cancelled invitations from Nigeria, Gabon, Eastern Cameroun, C.A.R, DRC, Kenya. I went only once to Goma in DRC to mentor Trainers and in Tanzania, I facilitated 4 workshops with ICOF (Inter-congregational On-going Formation Program organized by SMA, MAfr and CSSp). There were 40 male and female missionaries from Ghana, Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Liberia, Mauritania, Angola, Zambia, Malawi, Tanzania, Mauritius, Kenya, Uganda, Canada, Poland and the Philippines
Pharmacy Training Centre: Sr. Zita Ekocha MMM
A proposed training course for pharmaceutical assistants in Arusha, Tanzania is another innovative project of MMM. The need is great. Tanzania is a young country with a growing population. The 2012 census gave 44.9 million and the projected 2019 figure is nearly 61 million. Training in all aspects of health care is among the Government´s priorities and, of course, is of special interest to MMM.
Since 2008, MMM Sister Zita Ekeocha has been involved in a joint Purdue University/ Kilamanjaro School of Pharmacy project to train to certificate level pharmaceutical personnel. The programme is officially known as “Capacity Building Program in Biotechnology Innovation and Regulatory Science (BIRS) in Africa. Since 2014 it has been also offering courses at degree level. Eamonn Brehony, MMM Associate, is
Due to strong culture and beliefs some ethnic groups in the Arusha and Manyara Regions do not attend modern medical services. These groups make use of local herbs as first line treatment measures before seeking modern medical care. While this has been the pattern in the past, things are changing. With increasing education and urbanisation more people are using pharmaceutical products to treat illnesses. However there are challenges with the increasing use of ‘western medicine’. Unqualified personnel issue drugs, especially antibiotics, without knowing much about these drugs. There is a high percentage of counterfeit drugs. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends proactive measures to ensure the provision of safe and effective medicines in sub-Saharan Africa. The WHO advocacy provides guidelines for scaling up training for health care workers. Furthermore, it emphasizes quality, not just quantity, of the training modules to be employed in the effort to build competencies for these professionals. It is in this context that this project is being planned – a context of increasing use of ‘western medicine’ by an increasingly urban population but without sufficiently qualified dispensers of drugs.
In 2019 MMM carried out a needs assessment survey around Arusha. It became clear that training in pharmaceutical services was needed, starting at the lowest level, the training of pharmaceutical assistants. Soon the Government will make it mandatory for all pharmacies to have at least one trained staff at this level in order to be registered. By training pharmaceutical assistants we are also addressing other development goals
Youth unemployment has become a concern in Tanzania with nearly 2.4 million unemployed people – most of them young – representing 10.7% of the population and the situation is more critical among urban youth. The lack of sufficient employment opportunities for young women further complicates the situation . Experience has shown that this type of training is often undertaken by women, aiding their empowerment.
This project is the first step in a much bigger scheme! We carry forward following our dreams to improve and implant good health care in Tanzania. We are exploring with other organizations, universities and the church authorities ways to follow on from the basic level into higher academic qualifications and perhaps initiate a pilot project for the production of quality drugs for Tanzania. This bigger project will be Tanzanian owned and controlled, important for long term sustainability.
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We collaborate with the Good Samaritans and a volunteer from local Government Council 1, by giving health/ life skills talks to youth in parish and schools as well as visiting the elderly. We take the elderly and children with disabilities to hospitals for medical care and rehabilitation centers respectively. We got funds from MMM Small Projects for nutrition supplements to 23 families. Michael’s House is supporting us to bring hope to the destitute elderly by paying for their medical care, providing food supplements and starting Income Generating Activities. We had initiated literacy classes to disadvantaged young women but covid-19 made us stop them for now.
Location: This ministry is located in Mawanga Village, Makindye Division, Kampala District in the Central Region of Uganda. According to the Catholic Church, it is based in Munyonyo Uganda Martyrs’ Minor Basilica of Kampala Archdiocese.
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