Kwale community health promoters get bicycles for easier movement

The CHPs advocate for underserved individuals or communities to receive services and resources to address health needs.
More than 100 community health promoters (CHPs) in Kwale County have been issued bicycles to enable their swift mobility while on duty.
Kwale has 1671 CHPs, divided into 168 Community Health Units (CHUs), which advocate for underserved individuals or communities to receive services and resources to address health needs.
More To Read

They were given the bicycles under the AMREF-World Bicycle Relief Community Health Promoters Motility Program at the county headquarters on Tuesday.
Speaking at the flagging-off ceremony, Kwale County Secretary Sylvia Chidodo said the county has made key strides in ensuring health services are enhanced at the grassroots level.
"CHPs have become an integral part of the country's health system. At the grassroots level, they disseminate vital information on nutrition and hygiene, while championing general disease prevention measures," Widodo said.
She added that by addressing health challenges right in the villages, these health promoters contribute significantly to reducing the burden on the overall healthcare system.

Chidodo further reported that they have strengthened health services by equipping the CHPs with tools such as medical kits and digital mobile phones for data collection reported in the Afya Nyumbani Dashboard, monthly stipends, and bicycles to encounter mobility challenges across the county.
The CHPs have been acting as a bridge to connect locals to the health centres, she said, adding that the CHPs are close to the community so it is they who identify problems before medical doctors".

Chidodo noted the lack of access to health facilities in some areas because of long distances and high transport costs.
"If we take this service to the people, we have a higher chance of saving lives," she said.
County Health executive Francis Gwama and his Public Service Administration and Agriculture counterparts, Karuwa Tsiwezi and Roman Shera, respectively, and chief officers Mjimba (curative) and Athman Mwashando (preventive) also attended the event.
Top Stories Today
- A woman’s battle with addiction and recovery in Nairobi slums
- Columbia University suspends more than 65 students over pro-Palestine protest
- Eastleigh traders choke under congestion, crumbling roads
- Putin calls for Ukraine peace talks, Zelensky demands ceasefire first
- Zanzibar veteran journalist Charles Nkwanga dies at 66
- Eastleigh mosque raises alarm over raw sewage on Second Avenue
- MFA Lanet becomes first national girls’ school to offer aviation technology
- 20 killed, 50 injured in drone strike on prison in West Sudan
- Ministry of Health wants Treasury to deduct health workers’ dues directly
- State bans quarrying activities in Malindi village after death of three people
- How your spice rack could boost your immunity
- Congo gold miner halts operations in tax dispute with M23
- Turkana to take over Sh2bn infrastructure project
- State moves to sign pacts on medical evacuation for Kenyan officers in Haiti
- Violence, child malnutrition in Sudan soar by 1,000 per cent
- Mass registration exercise offers relief to Mombasa residents seeking ID issuance
- China, Russia pledge to join forces against bullying, power politics
- Nairobi County to clamp properties, evict rent defaulters from Monday
- Ruto sidelines governors with new Sh11.47 billion road fund
- Cold showers: The wellness trend making waves, but are they for everyone?