Latest update February 8th, 2025 6:23 PM
Sep 22, 2017 News
Guyana will roll out its telemedicine programme in five regions next year, Public Health Minister, Volda Lawrence, said yesterday during a courtesy call to her office by new Canadian High Commission to Guyana Lilian Chatterjee.
Finance and Telecommunications Ministries are firmly behind the distance medicine novelty which will target Regions One (Barima/Waini); Six (East Berbice/Corentyne); Seven (Cuyuni/Mazaruni); Eight (Potaro/Siparuni) and Nine (Upper Takutu/Upper Essequibo).
Telemedicine, also called ‘e-health’ or ‘telehealth’, allows healthcare professionals to evaluate, diagnose and treat patients in remote areas using telecommunications technology, removing the need for face-to-face meetings with doctors or nurses.
When this programme is launched it will cut dependency on the current Medivac services for interior residents, Lawrence told Chatterjee who promised to “look into this, more, to see if there are opportunities”.
The Canadian envoy said for her, public health is “very important” and she is excited to team up with Minister Lawrence.
“I am at the disposal of my government and yours,” Chatterjee said assuring that her tenure here will continue “our good relations with the government of Guyana,”
Chatterjee has accumulated a vast array of expertise in the area of development honed from her attachment as a specialist at the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA). There, she helped design and implement some of the initiatives enjoyed by Guyana and other developing nations.
Minister Lawrence conveyed Guyana’s gratitude to Canada as one of the nations that has helped us “achieve our objectives” and predicts that Chatterjee’s incumbency will produce more “positive results” between the two friendly nations.
The Public Health Minister told the Canadian diplomat that Maternal and Child Health (MCH) weighs heavily on her agenda and she wants a follow-up meeting to brief her on ongoing initiatives in the sub-sector.
Lawrence used the opportunity to give Chatterjee a panoramic sweep of ongoing MCH initiatives in the hinterland regions targeting the country’s indigenous populations who are currently being trained as Community Health Workers (CHWs) to ensure there are well-trained personnel in all villages to help monitor and evaluate pregnant women.
The programme, according to Dr. Ertenisa Hamilton, MCH Officer, is envisaged to reduce maternal, neo-natal, infant and child deaths here.
Guyana’s maternal mortality ratio currently stands at 121/100,000 while the infant mortality ratio stands at 23/1,000 Dr. Hamilton said referring to a recent MOPH Annual Report by Chief Medical Officer (CMO) Dr. Shamdeo Persaud.
Pregnancy-induced hypertension (high blood pressure) and post-partum haemorrhage are chief killers of Guyanese pregnant women, while respiratory infections and pre-mature births kill the local new-born cited in the local statistics, Hamilton said.
She said delays in seeking help, sloth in arriving for help and further holdups in receiving appropriate emergency care conspire to cause the deaths of Guyanese pregnant women.
The current MCH initiatives which have been backed by Canadian, UNFPA, PAHO/WHO support have seen the reduction of maternal deaths in Guyana, Hamilton said.
Chatterjee told Lawrence that she is “very impressed with how knowledgeable you are in the sector since you have only recently been appointed,” to the Public Health Ministry.
Feb 08, 2025
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