Bringing Canadian medical and patient care to Africa By John Bkila OAKVILLE BEAVER STAFF Chances are, any nurse will tell you when asked that a few minutes with a patient can make a world of difference -- and that's why in April several local nurses will be heading to some of the poorest areas in Kenya to help treat patients there. As part of Canadian Nurses for Africa (CNFA), 12 nurses and one support staff from Oakville, Burlington, Hamilton and beyond will be travelling to Kenya and setting up clinics to help treat those who cannot receive medical attention because of either cost or inaccessibility. The mission, which leaves April 27, will be CNFA's fourth. Among the group heading to Kenya is Jan Baker, an Oakville nurse of 25 years, who is joining the mission for the first time after learning about CNFA from a co-worker last summer and contacting the group's founder Gail Wolters. "I have been looking for something like the group Gail has developed for probably 30 years," said Baker, a Registered Nurse with Halton Healthcare Services and head of patient care for the renal (kidney) program at Oakville-Trafalgar Memorial Hospital (OTMH). "I looked at different organizations, but they tend to want a huge time commitment -- usually six months to a year. For me, that's really difficult to uproot and go for a year. I have a family... I don't want to be away from them for six months, but I still had this yearning, this need to help." Though this is Baker's first mission with CNFA, she's no stranger to Africa. When she was 18, she volunteered with the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) and helped work in a hospital clinic and build a school and latrines in West Africa. Baker said one of the reasons she chose to join CNFA was that it was a nurse-run group. "To be with a group of like-minded professionals is like being at home for me, and the fact that it's local nurses... I loved that it would be a community adventure," she said. "What also drew me to join, I think, was the one-on-one aspect. I know from all my years of nursing that a few minutes with a patient is going to make a difference... to have someone to hear them and teach or give them what it is they need." Wolters, who has also worked as an ER nurse at Joseph Brant Memorial Hospital in Burlington, formed CNFA in 2007 after participating in a Stephen Lewis Foundation (SLF) fundraiser where she met Aggrey Mulamba, a Kenyan-born Canadian. "Over a cup of coffee, we dared to dream of doing medical missions to the area of Kenya that he is from, Kakamega/Vihiga," Wolters said. "Aggrey takes care of the complexity of Kenyan politics, finds the best people for us to work with while there, and negotiates the clinic sites." The group completes field medical missions where a clinic is set up at a different site each day and treats people as they line up. 7 · Thursday, February 16, 2012 OAKVILLE BEAVER · www.insideHALTON.com saving lives: Canadian Registered Nurse Suzanne Power dresses one of the many untreated SUBMITTED PHOTO wounds seen at the clinics held by Canadian Nurses for Africa (CNFA) in Kenya. This will be the group's fourth mission to some of the poorest areas in the country. "We do our clinics in the rural areas -- in we try to make it as easy as possible for them to churches, usually, or whatever building is made attend our clinics." available -- we're not within a village or a town... Wolters said each year the organization has and that is to reach as many people as we can," seen an increase in the number of people who Wolters said. come to the clinic. "These people have no means of transportaIn 2009, the eight-day clinic treated 2,524 tion. They walk, and sometimes for miles, to patients and in 2010, 3,300 patients were come to our clinics. These are desperately poor treated in seven days. See Fundraiser page 10 areas. These people have absolutely nothing, so PUBLIC AUCTION High value diamonds seized at Airport by virtue of section 12 and 110 of the Customs Act. All importation duties and taxes have been paid. Supplemented with other fine jewellery rings solitaires, bracelets, necklaces, earrings, emeralds, rubies, sapphires etc. CUSTOMS EX-SEIZED HIGH VALUE DIAMONDS SEIZURE NO. CS4971-07-0926 WE MADE IT BETTER. NATURE MADE GRANITE. With the purchase of cabinetry & countertops from Granite Transformations May not be combined with other offers or discounts. Expires Feb. 29, 2012. FREE SINK ROLEX - CARTIER - PATEK - OMEGA - CHOPARD BREITLING - JEAGER - AUDEMARS - BREGUET - IWC - HUBLOT CERTIFIED SWISS MADE WATCHES 6 MONTHS NO PAYMENTS NO INTEREST O.A.C. Done in a day. Beautiful for life MONDAY 26th, 201 2011 MONDAY DECEMBER FEBRUARY 20th, 2 Auction at 2:00 P.M. - Viewing from 1:00 P.M. HOLIDAY INN AT BRONTE - OAKVILLE 2525 Wycroft Road (Q.E.W. & Bronte) For directions please call: 905-847-1000 All sales are final. No refund exchange or layaway. Payments: Visa, M.C., Debit, Cash and Certified Cheques. Some reserves may apply. Sale subject to additions, deletions, errors and omissions. 15% buyers premium & applicable taxes to be added. COOPER STERLING AUCTIONS. 416-800-1876 Only Granite Transformations uses ForeverSealTM which means our granite is more stain and scratch resistant than "ordinary" granite. And, our surfaces bond permanently over existing countertops, walls, showers and tubs, so you get lifelong beauty without the usual renovation mess! Most installations are done in a day and are backed by a lifetime warranty. Granite Transformations also offers cabinet refacing! For a FREE in-home design consultation and FREE sink offer, call us at: 1.888.232.1363 529 Speers Road, Oakville www.granitetransformations.ca © 2010 Granite Transformations. Some restrictions may apply. Please see store for complete details.