Volunteers will spend their mornings at one of the multiple healthcare projects listed below:
Clinic assistance: The clinics in the area suffer from serious shortages of staff, so the nurses greatly appreciate any assistance volunteers can provide to decrease their workload and ensure more efficient and effective treatment of patients. You may be volunteering at clinics with outpatient services, HIV and TB services, maternity services, and pharmacies. Your duties here may include:
- Filing patient records
- Observing patient care and seeing how healthcare services function in Zambia
Home-based care: The bed-ridden and immobile patients of Livingstone are visited at home for their treatments. Most of these patients suffer from long-term, debilitating diseases such as HIV, tuberculosis, or malaria. Volunteers will accompany local caregivers to provide treatment. Here you may be required to:
- Provide comfort, care, and advice
- Inform patients about the importance of hygiene, nutrition, diet, and adhering to medication regiment
HIV education and health talks: Health education is the first step in preventing disease and promoting healthy choices and lifestyles. With the help of local staff, volunteers will facilitate community courses to deliver important healthcare information. The syllabus topics include:
- HIV/AIDS awareness
- Basic hygiene
- Importance of healthy living (diet and exercise)
Elderly home: This elderly home is poorly funded by the government and the residents often have no family or caretakers to look after them. Here, you will have a wide variety of roles including:
- Providing the residents with a friendly face and opportunity to socialize
- Conducting health talks on personal hygiene and health
- Encouraging mobility for those residents in need
HIV education in prisons: The inmate population is one that is at high-risk and extremely vulnerable for contracting and spreading HIV/AIDS. Here, you will have the opportunity to partake in the following:
- Spread awareness about HIV/AIDS and how to prevent it
- Educate inmates about how cope once infected
- Addressing the stigma of HIV/AIDS
Please note that this specific project is only available to volunteers who are selected by the on-site project managers. Eligibility will be based on criteria such as past medical experience, ability to communicate well with others in English, maturity, and age.
After your morning medical tasks, you will have the option to participate in other community projects throughout the area. These include:
- Building and construction projects: You will be building classrooms for childhood education initiatives.
- Farming: Help the community work towards self-sufficiency by working on a sustainable farming initiative.
- Reading club: Help children after school with reading and literacy.
- Art club: Plan your own arts-and-crafts projects to nurture creativity.
- Adult literacy club: Help young adults in the community improve their literacy and ultimately find employment.
- Senior living home: Assist the staff in providing care for people without families to look after them.
- Afterschool clubs: Play with preschool-aged children after school.
A typical day: After breakfast, your work day begins at 7:45 am at one of the morning projects. After a one-hour lunch break at 11:15 am, you will take part in one of the afternoon community projects until 5:00 pm, when you will be taken back to the volunteer house for dinner. Evenings and weekends are free and can be spent as you wish.
Important Dates: As we work within local communities, our projects are affected by the school terms. Local partners take time off to spend with their families on public holidays and our school/education-based programs are structured slightly differently during the school and exam holidays. Some of our projects may be put on hold whilst the kids are on leave, but there is no shortage of important and rewarding community work to be done here.
Read more about Top 5 Reasons to Volunteer with Communities Abroad