Feature

A day in the life of one health worker in Sierra Leone

By Dr Sandra Lako

It’s 6:45 am on a Monday. As I head out the door, I put on a cloth mask and make my way to the paediatric outpatient clinic at the Aberdeen Women's Centre in Freetown. Unlike many places in the developed world where outpatient services have switched to telemedicine, here in Sierra Leone due to limited connectivity we are still doing in-person consultations. It is the only way to keep essential health services going, which is vital in a country with some of the highest maternal, child and infant mortality rates in the world.

The everyday health realities COVID-19 has eclipsed in Sierra Leone

By Makalay Saidiatu Sonda                                              

“This is a failed resuscitation attempt tonight to save a new-born whose mother had had an obstructed labour at the Mosongo Health Care Centre in Njala for over two hours. We did not have the paediatric resuscitation tools, not even oxygen for a successful resuscitation. The mother survived… It was a joint effort of staff at the health centre and Njala University Hospital…”  

Fare thee well, Dr. Minkailu Bah!

By Ibrahim Jalloh (Jallomy)
The tragic news came in disbelief : Dr. Minkailu Bah passed on in the early hours of Monday, May 18, 2020. As the morning grew old, it became a confirmed reality that the man who served Sierra Leone as Minister of Education for almost 11 years was no more - totally consumed by death.

Trapped in my kitchen during a raging Freetown storm

By Mary Morgan

I couldn't batter down the door, I couldn't jump out the window, I couldn't phone anyone for help and no one was hearing my cries. There’s nothing like a real lock-in situation to put the current restrictions in perspective.

Here's the long version:

Pages

Top