Dr Brightson to the rescue -Maternal deaths reduce at Dodowa hospital

Dr Brightson (third right) showing NMSI team and visitors around the Danme West hospital facilitiesWhen Dr Kennedy Brightson asked for a transfer to Dodowa in the Dangme West District, he had no idea what he was in for.

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“I didn’t even know where the district hospital was. I had never stepped foot here. I even got  lost on the way”  said Dr Brightson, the Medical Superintendent of the Dangme West District Hospital.

Three years later,  Dr Brightson’s dedication to work and a drive to safeguard the lives of pregnant women has endeared him and his team to hundreds of women who have given birth in the green, hilly community 40 miles east of Accra.

“My motivation is the joy of putting a smile on these women’s faces,” said Dr Brightson, who studied medicine in the Ukraine and has a post doctoral qualification in Maternal and Reproductive Health.

Maternal health is high on the agenda of the Ghana government, which pledged along with other countries worldwide to the Millenium Development Goal (MDG) of reducing maternal mortality by 75 per cent between 2009 and 2015. For Ghana this means bringing down deaths from its current level of 350 per 100,000 live births to 185.

Dr Brightson says his personal involvement has been a decade long and tough journey. Following his medical training in the Ukraine, he returned to Ghana in 1997 when he began his residency at the country’s flagship Korle Bu Teaching Hospital.

It was only after his appointment to head the maternity wing of a hospital in Maamobi, a densely populated, low-income neighbourhood in Accra, that the country’s high rate of maternal deaths really struck home.

“Coming from a humble background myself, I identified with these pregnant women. I went to see them in their homes to educate them about maternal health,” Dr Brightson said.

In March 2010, Dr Brightson said he was transferred to Dodowa armed with the zeal to continue the drive at his new location. But the hospital was severely lacking resources.

“The theatre was unused and unprepared. We were doing zero surgeries,” Dr Brightson said, describing the hospital when he first arrived.

Save A Woman, Save A Family

The most common causes of maternal mortality in Ghana are well-known - haemorrhage, infection, high blood pressure, unsafe abortion, and obstructed labour.

Most maternal deaths are avoidable, if access to antenatal care in pregnancy, skilled care during childbirth, and care and support in the weeks after is readily available.

Which is why Dr Brightson urges all women to seek ante-natal care as soon as they realise they are pregnant.

Dr Brightson attributes the hospital’s flourishing maternity and labour practice to an “incredible team” who has supported him to literally carve out the tiny maternity and neonatal unit from one end of the corridor of the main hospital.

“None of my theatre nurses live in Dodowa or has cars so when there’s an emergency and I’m called in, I call them up and they get out of their beds and onto the road, no matter what time it is,” Brightson said.

As word spread rapidly about Dangme West hospital’s success rate, attendance at the 50-bed facility soared, tripling within the last three years.

“We saw over 42,000 patients in 2012 up from 13,000 in 2009,” Dr Brightson said.

The hospital has been hugely successful but three maternal fatalities in the last three years is still one too many, Dr Brightson said.  

After the deaths of the first two - due to loss of blood during delivery - the hospital strengthened its blood supply system.

“We have never lost a patient due to blood since,” Brightson said.

New District Hospital Means More Lives Saved

For Dr Brightson and his team, news of a new 120 -bed to replace their overstretched facility is an “answer to prayer.”

Dodowa is to be the first of six new district hospitals to be built under a contract signed between the Ministry Of Health and NMS Infrastructure Ltd in November 2012.

NMSI seeks to deliver requirements-driven solutions for national social infrastructure projects in Healthcare, Education, Energy, Affordable Housing and Water & Sanitation.

The others will be built in Sekondi, Kumawu, Abetifi, Fomena, and Garu-Tempane.

A seventh hospital - The European Hospital in the Takoradi Metropolitan District - is also due to be upgraded and re-equipped by NMS Infrastructure under the same project.

Each hospital has been uniquely designed to custom fit its location by a team of experts from the United Kingdom (UK) and Ghana.

By Amba Mpoke-Bigg/Daily Graphic/Ghana

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