Integrated approaches expand rural communities’ access to health services, reports our Staff Writer JAMES CHAVULA: Grace Chimkomola is a familiar face in Khong’onthero rural community on the western margins of Hewe Valley in Rumphi District. For the community midwife assistant (CMA), every second Thursday of the month is a busy day. Wearing a maroon uniform, she takes centre stage when community health workers meet in the rural locality along Malawi’s northwestern boundary with Zambia to provide essential services.
Chimkomola serves a rural population of 1 200, including 204 under-five children. She is one of 12 caregivers at Chisimuka Health Centre, about 80kilometres west of Rumphi District Hospital. The caregivers include a medical assistant, two CMAs and nine health surveillance assistants (HSAs).
“During community clinics, all CMAs and HSAs go to one site and share roles. Some register clients while others weigh babies, provide vaccines, family planning, as well as screening for malnutrition, high blood pressure and common illnesses in one place,” Chimkomola explains. The integrated approach has expanded her work beyond visiting homesteads with pregnant women, breastfeeding mothers and those with children under five, so they do not skip vaccines and routine hospital visits.
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Chimkomola also shares the benefits of HIV testing, blood pressure checkups, malaria prevention drugs, sanitation, balanced diets and antenatal visits. “The heart-to-heart talks encourage many women to seek antenatal care early and avoid skipping sessions,” she said. The community midwife assistant is one of 40 community healthcare workers in Rumphi District who received training to bring integrated life-saving services to remote communities.
In March 2025, Unicef, with funding from UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO), supported Rumphi District Health Office to train 16 CMAs and 24 HSAs on how to integrate sexual, reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health plus nutrition services. The frontline workers now provide coordinated and sustained care that addresses all aspects of patient health from pregnancy to early childhood. Chimkomola states: “With the new knowledge and skills, I confidently deliver different health services in my community and surrounding areas.
People who once had to climb hills and cross rivers to reach Chisimuka Health Centre no longer worry about the treacherous travel. We provide health services to them. They only go to the facility when they are critically ill.” The team provides multiple services in one place and refers suspected illnesses to skilled caregivers at the health centre for confirmation and treatment.
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