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The Ndlovu Medical Centre was founded as a small health facility in 1994 after seeing a high number of people succumb to AIDS in the area. Today the clinic boasts its own pharmacy, X–ray machine, laboratory and a successful maternity program which includes a prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission program.
The clinic has earned itself a good name from the local community. It is well-recognized for giving a second chance to people sent home to die by conventional government hospitals, particularly those with AIDS.
Soft-spoken, Lettie Msiza, 27, from Mashikana village is one of these. She was admitted to Ndlovu Medical Centre in 2004 when her immune system had collapsed and she had large sores on her back that made it uncomfortable to sit.
“My aunt brought me here after the government hospital told me to go home. I don’t know why they sent me home because I was seriously ill. I could not do anything except lying down on my stomach,” she said.
Although she is still confined to a wheel-chair, she is much better than when she was first admitted at the clinic. She now works as an administrator at the clinic.
"Working while in hospital is helping me a lot because I sometimes forget that I am sick and it makes me feel like all other normal people, “she says.
Herbert Bholotini is a counselor at the clinic. Before that he was also a patient at Ndlovu Medical Centre. What he has learned through his experience as an HIV positive patient visiting different clinics, he says, is that “in most clinics they just ask you what’s troubling you and then, they give you Panado”.
“I do not remember being asked to take the HIV test in these other clinics. Not so long ago, I had an HIV-positive patient (from a government clinic) who came here in January. That patient was told to come back in March. But he is sick. His CD4 count was 60. Just imagine if they keep on taking that patient up and down - where is he going to end up?
The outstanding work done by the clinic caught the eyes of Becton and Dickson Global Technology company. It recently donated a CD4 count machine to the clinic. The Managing Director of the company, Peter Mehlape, says the machine will help the clinic to carry on doing its “extra-ordinary job” of serving Elandsdoorn community.
“They have done something out of the ordinary. I have never seen it anywhere in the African continent. The set up here is very unique in that it is very effective. The reach is beyond an average clinic,” said Mehlape.
Dr Templeman reckons that there should be more clinics of a high quality standard in rural areas because it is where the majority of people who need health care reside.
“Don’t do it only in big centers and in urban areas, but bring back care there where suffering is most and that is in rural areas. The highest prevalence, the highest amount of useless deaths because there is no access to care,” he said.
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