Tag: PHIM-Event

  • Mentorship and Supportive Supervision for Laboratories that support Surveillance of disease outbreaks for Emergence preparedness and readiness.

    Mentorship and Supportive Supervision for Laboratories that support Surveillance of disease outbreaks for Emergence preparedness and readiness.

    Clinical laboratories in Malawi form the foundation of evidence-based patient treatment and care. They are a fundamental component of disease surveillance, diagnosis and monitoring at every level of the healthcare system. Microbiology is one of the services offered by clinical laboratories to guide clinicians in antibiotic prescription and monitoring of antimicrobial resistance trends among pathogens of medical importance.

    Laboratories require competent human resources, material support, continuous supervision and mentorships to carry out tests and produce good-quality and reliable results. In Malawi, the District Public Hospital and Christian Health Association of Malawi (CHAM) laboratory services have suffered from inattention and chronic under-development with minimal resources for microbiology services.

    Recently the Government of Malawi, Ministries of Health through the Public Health Institute of Malawi (PHIM) has increasingly prioritised the quality of microbiology testing services by incorporating the implementation of quality management systems improvement and capacity-building activities into laboratory service work plans.

    Laboratory officer happily showing the intended result from culture.

    One of the improvement strategy is to train more laboratory staff in basic microbiology and to scale up number of laboratories that could conduct microbiology testing.

    Mr Yollam Chavula , Principle Laboratory Scientist responsible for technical microbiology work at NPHL and team.

    Miss Khumbo Maseko a microbiologist at NPHL demonstrating culture and sensitivity tests at one of the laboratories in Malawi

    Mr. Hurry Milala observing how a mentored laboratory staff performs drug sensitivity testing.

    PHIM through National Microbiology Reference Laboratory (NMRL) holds a critical role in rapid response to infectious diseases. Among its mandates, the NMRL leads Malawi’s laboratory microbiology-based surveillance and disease control services through the detection of pathogens using microbiology techniques. It has a plan to have a network of district and Mission laboratories capable of conducting culture and sensitivity testing to confirm disease outbreaks.

    It is for this reason that NMRL planned to conduct supportive supervision and mentorship for 9 laboratories including Machinga, Chiradzulu, Phalombe, Mulanje DHO, Mulanje Mission, Nsanje, Chikwawa, Malamulo mission and Nguludi (ST Joseph mission).

    The activity involved the preparation of culture media, doing quality checks for the prepared culture media, and culturing patients’ samples. The activity also involved organism identification, drug sensitivity testing (AST) and how to report results.

    Staff from NPHL attending morning handovers as a means of sensitisation to utilise microbiology results in the patients’ management.

    The team also had an opportunity to attend daily district hospital morning reports as a means of sensitizing clinicians and nurses to use laboratory as evidence in the management of patients.

    Commenting on the activity, the deputy director Mr Joseph Bitilinyu Bangoh who is also the head of the National Public Health Laboratory, highlighted that microbiology activities play a crucial role in patient management, outbreak investigations and disease surveillance. He again said that no surveillance is complete without a laboratory and that laboratory workers need to be vigilant when it comes to disease investigations. He sympathetically said that sometimes Public Health issues go without answers, citing a recent Neno outbreak and conjunctivitis that cost mortality and morbidity among children attending primary schools. He further said that emergency outbreaks like the Neno disease need to be responded to rapidly by the laboratory so that intervention are mitigated and implemented promptly.  He encouraged those who went for mentorship and supervision to work hard and provide quality mentorship skills so that microbiology in Malawi gives proper answers to outbreaks and other health needs. He promised the team that he was in support of the activity and in his capacity as deputy director PHIM, he would make sure that NPHL is involved in all disease surveillance and outbreak investigations.

  • Researchers Gather in Zomba to Address Healthcare Waste Management in Malawi.

    Researchers Gather in Zomba to Address Healthcare Waste Management in Malawi.

    The Workshop Focuses on Health Workers’ Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices.

    A group of researchers, public health professionals, and experts convened in Zomba, Malawi, to address the critical issue of healthcare waste management. The workshop, which aimed to develop a comprehensive manuscript on health workers’ knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding this, highlighted the importance of innovative solutions to protect public health and the environment.

     

    The workshop brought together a diverse group of stakeholders, including academic researchers, government officials, and representatives from healthcare institutions. The collaborative approach fostered a rich exchange of ideas and expertise, contributing to the development of evidence-based strategies for improving healthcare waste management practices in Malawi.

  • Training Of Laboratory Officers on Fortification Of Food Products Testing In Malawi.

    Training Of Laboratory Officers on Fortification Of Food Products Testing In Malawi.

    Mr Joseph Bitilinyu Bangoh standing in the middle front row, having a group photo with the participants and facilitators.

    The Public Health Institute of Malawi with funding from UNICEF conducted an initial training of the laboratory officer working at the Chemistry, Haematology, Nutrition and Influenza Reference Laboratory, a department of the National Public Health  Laboratory(NPHL). The meeting was opened by the Deputy Director responsible for NPHL Mr Joseph Bitilinyu Bangoh who, in the opening remarks, thanked the organizers of the training and the facilitators. He shed more light on the importance of the training in certifying food fortification by industries in Malawi. He further highlighted the activeness of the PHIM in many disease outbreak responses and the mandate it has in tackling issues of public health importance, seeing as an example current work on the Mpox outbreak threat. He further encouraged the participants to take the course seriously as the public looks up to the laboratory to safeguard the consumption of safe and nutritious food in Malawi.
    Days went unnoticed as the journey on fortification testing went very interesting

    The coordinator of the training workshop Mr. Henry Limula, Chief laboratory Scientist responsible for The Chemistry, Haematology, Nutrition and Influenza Reference Laboratory, in his speech emphasised the importance of determining the level of fortification of food. He hailed the collaboration PHIM has with stakeholders and partners in Malawi. He told the participants to put much of their effort into understanding the testing protocols.

    Mr Henry Limula, head of the Chemistry, Haematology, Influenza and Nutrition
    National Reference Laboratory.

    The training aimed to empower laboratory officers with the knowledge and skills required to conduct food fortification tests.

    Laboratory officers testing food products during training.

    Fortification of sugar, oil, wheat, and maize flour became mandatory in Malawi, and a gazette of standards was published in 2016. Edible oil is fortified with vitamin A. Raw, refined sugar is fortified with vitamin A. Maize and wheat flour is fortified with Vitamin A and Iron. Salt is fortified with Iodine. The training comprised 3 days of theory and 2 days of practicum.

    The Ministry of Health (MOH) through the Environmental Health Directorate manages food fortification monitoring nationwide through district market and household surveillance. Samples are collected, quarterly, and tested at the National Nutrition Reference Laboratory (NNRL) at the Public Health Institute of Malawi. Results are sent to MOH with copies sent to districts For decision-making, reports are generated and shared with the National Fortification Alliance, and nutrition technical working group, and these feed into the National Nutrition Committee.