By Rose Hennessy | Operations Manager
Thank you for your support of the smokeless stoves installations in Kericho county. We're delighted to bring you a short update about how the stoves form part of the bigger picture of creating brighter, healthier futures.
Kenya has a Community Health Strategy which is a bottom up approach aimed at creating healthy communities through empowering Kenyan households to take charge of their own health. Brighter Communities Worldwide works in partnership with local Ministry of Health to help put this in place.
Village meetings are followed by local people forming committees to oversee the homes in their village becoming healthy homesteads. There are many challenges to living without access to clean water, without an income, without opportunity for education but the community pull together to put healthier homes in place. These have a number of key elements which mean better health conditions for the family. These elements include – safe water supply; good sanitation; rubbish disposal; smoke free cooking environment; indoor space and ventilation; nutrition and food supply; improvement of maternal, new-born and child health and income generating activities. Once the health of individual families improves, the community grows stronger and bigger challenges to health and income and education are tackled together as time goes on.
A smoke-free cooking environment is a key element of the healthy homestead and our smokeless stoves programme provides this by replacing open fires with a stove made with local materials and a chimney to extract the smoke. The result is a reduction in respiratory illness, reduction in deforestation as the stoves use one third of the wood used in open fires, and an increase in household income as time saved collecting wood can be given to income generating projects. Local businesses (brick makers, chimney makers) benefit from the programme and trained installers can use their skills to earn a fee for each stove they install.
The stoves are installed by Community Health Volunteers (CHVs) who train as installers as part of their overall training to be a CHV. They learn about advocacy and how to mobilise their community, about disease prevention, data collection to help identify the health needs in their village, maternal, new-born and child health and first aid skills in a remote setting.
One such CHV is Winny Ruttoh from Tuyalei. Winny has this to say about installing smokeless stoves in her community – “not only does the smokeless stove reduce illness, it increases peoples economic situation and conserves the environment”.
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