Utility Cycling - African bicycle ambulances are making a difference

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vey
04-15-08, 10:12 AM
http://www.bikeradar.com/news/article/african-bicycle-ambulances-are-making-a-difference-15807

Imagine it's four o'clock in the morning and you or your wife goes into labour, but there is no transport to help you reach the hospital. Or you suffer from a chronic illness that requires you to make frequent trips to a distant hospital, but you have no way to get there and you keep missing your treatments, making the illness even more resistant to medication. Or you fall off your bike and break your leg and, again, no transport – you have to wait until someone can help you, and that might take a few days.

Namibia in Southwest Africa faces enormous healthcare challenges, especially among its largely rural population. Its national HIV/AIDS infection rate stands at around 20 percent, and maternal mortality rates have doubled in recent years. The need for locally managed medical transport is more pressing than ever.

In a recent assessment of the link between transport and healthcare, the Bicycling Empowerment Network Namibia (BEN Namibia) found that people living with HIV/AIDS are hit hard by the lack of transport. Patients either miss their treatment because no transport is available, or spend most of their income (up to US$8 per month) on paying for lifts in private vehicles, leaving little money to pay for the food that is an essential part of their treatment. The situation worsens in an emergency, when rural dwellers may pay up to US$66 to reach the nearest hospital.

In order to change this picture, in October 2006, BEN Namibia launched a bicycle ambulance manufacturing plant in Namibia’s capital, Windhoek. Bicycle ambulances are ‘stretchers on wheels’ that attach to normal bicycles and tow a sick person or pregnant woman to a hospital or clinic where no other transport is available. In other African countries where bicycle ambulances are in use, there have been marked declines in infant and maternal mortality rates.

BEN Namibia has distributed 54 ambulances, and more are planned for 2008. The ambulances are delivered to community-based organisations in the rural North of the country. Healthcare volunteers receive training in use, maintenance and reporting on the performance of the ambulance. A management discussion also helps partners address issues like storage, access and covering costs of maintenance. Volunteers report that the ambulances have been very useful for their work, enabling them to take clients to hospitals, clinics, or even to the nearest road where they can take a lift if the health facility is too far.

The bicycle ambulance is not intended to replace motorised ambulances, but to fill a gap where no services are provided. Indeed, for most of Namibia, there is no public emergency ambulance system, and people often die because they can not afford to pay for private transport. Until Government is able to develop adequate policies and procedures on emergency medical transport, it seems that bicycle ambulances will have a role to play.

Individuals can support the delivery of more bicycle ambulances. BEN Namibia’s US partner, ITDP, can issue tax receipts for all US donations. For every US$480 raised, an ambulance can be delivered to a Namibian community, along with tools, training and ongoing field support.

Donations can be made through BEN Namibia’s website at www.benbikes.org.za/namibia.


badmother
04-15-08, 03:41 PM
I have seen the problems faced by peopel living "in the bush". Used to drive a pickup in the bush in a neighbouring country. My pickup was the only "ambulance" in the area, 2000 km2. The hospital was said to take care of 250 000 peopel, one doctor and my car (that was ment for a totally different job) was the only transport. AIDS, labour problems, snake bites, trafic accidents, peopel with big parts of the body burned after falling into the fire while having an epileptic "fit" and so on. This is no joke! :eek:

Cars is no help when roads are bad, no fuel for months, and you spend months trying to buy a tube for a tractor. I`we tryed it all for 3 yrs. Imagine those living theyr whole life in those conditions. :(

I worked with "appropriate tecnology" for many years, bikes is appropriate tecnology these countrys.:)

Buglady
04-16-08, 09:08 AM
That's a really neat idea. It sounds as though these "ambulances" are a little like the travois system the Plains Indians used (only with a lot less bumps!).


Elkhound
04-17-08, 11:56 AM
Why are they designed to have the passenger riding backwards? Some people find that nausea-inducing.

mparker326
04-17-08, 12:41 PM
I saw a documentary recently on PBS showing a similar concept with bikes in Africa. A relief agency was hiring locals with bicycles to deliver food to remote villages. This was the only viable transport as the roads/infrastructure had been destroyed by war & the rainy season. Each bike was loaded with 200 pounds of food on its rack and the rider rode or pushed the bike ~100 miles to remote villages.

strangeseraph
04-18-08, 07:49 AM
This is great! I think people underestimate the power of bicycles for use by goverment programs, such as ambulances and police. We have bike mounted police in my city and they are great! :) Ambulances could then get through congested city traffic to get to accident sites by using the sidewalk or shoulder of the road!

Elkhound
04-18-08, 08:24 AM
This is great! I think people underestimate the power of bicycles for use by goverment programs, such as ambulances and police. We have bike mounted police in my city and they are great! :) Ambulances could then get through congested city traffic to get to accident sites by using the sidewalk or shoulder of the road!

Perhaps not for patient transport, but paramedics on something like a Kona Ute, Surley Big Dummy, HPM Long Hauler, etc. could carry enough equipment to stablize the patient until the truck-ambulance could work its way through traffic.

wahoonc
04-18-08, 10:09 AM
Perhaps not for patient transport, but paramedics on something like a Kona Ute, Surley Big Dummy, HPM Long Hauler, etc. could carry enough equipment to stablize the patient until the truck-ambulance could work its way through traffic.

They are already doing that in some areas. IIRC London, UK does it and I know that some of our larger NC cities do it during festivals and fairs.

Aaron:)

thdave
04-18-08, 01:54 PM
This is great to hear. Love it.

spinninwheels
12-01-08, 08:32 PM
I ran across this article on the CBC website...

http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2008/11/27/f-rfa-edwards.html

it looks like bicycles are making a difference.

JeffS
12-03-08, 05:48 AM
Why are they designed to have the passenger riding backwards? Some people find that nausea-inducing.

easier loading, just like a normal ambulance.

crackerdog
12-03-08, 10:57 AM
Last spring our community (8,000) sent over 80 bikes to Ghana through a program in Seattle. Check your local area for programs like this.

Enthusiast
12-04-08, 03:44 PM
If you are near Chicago, check out Working Bikes. They have the largest foreign bike distribution network in the country. They send several shipping containers full of hundreds of fixed up used bikes to all parts of the globe.

I spoke with a guy who worked with BEN Namibia and he said that while people were often grateful for the ambulance, they often asked "Maybe you could get us a regular ambulance next time?" Bicycles may be an appropriate technology to us but these folks still put a high value on motorized transportation.

Elkhound
12-04-08, 07:59 PM
I'd ask them if they could count on a steady supply of fuel and the funds to pay for it. If the answer is "yes", then a motorized ambulance might well be appropriate. If not, it would be a white elephant.

badmother
12-05-08, 01:45 AM
I spoke with a guy who worked with BEN Namibia and he said that while people were often grateful for the ambulance, they often asked "Maybe you could get us a regular ambulance next time?" Bicycles may be an appropriate technology to us but these folks still put a high value on motorized transportation.
It does not really matter what they want, if it is impossible! I`d say stick to the bike ambulances! In countrys like that it is impossible to keep cars on the road for long, ewen if you`we got the cash. I`we sen ambulances parked on four bricks, all four wheels remowed. I spent six months trying to buy a tube for a rearwheel for a tractor. I had the cash (forex) and the contacts but still could not get it. I trained oxen and used them. Best development is a harness for the oxen so that they can get more power out of each animal instead of having problems when one of a pair dies.

If a police car break down and is left on the road the wheels is stolen within houers. Cars is working here becouse we have the roads, the cash, the fuel, tha spares and the knowledge to keep them running. They do not have that. A broken down car can be left "to die" becose they think it stopped due to witchcraft.

Bikes, donkeys and oxen is the way to go. Bad news for the donkeys and oxen!
`

Elkhound
12-05-08, 08:36 AM
Spelling and grammar are your friends.

badmother
12-05-08, 01:22 PM
Spelling and grammar are your friends.

PMS ing again are we??:D Or just grumpy?

The day you write and speak my language as well as I write and speak yours I`ll listen.

traveller1970
12-05-08, 02:53 PM
Badmother, 10 points!

Totally agree with you. Those idiots (luckily just few of them there) on the new continent never been out of their homestate and thinking Europe is part of Coney Island are just the worst thing one can imagine on our globe.

But surely understandably from a person with limited brain capacity to comment on the spelling of those who can manage in multiple languages in civilized world.

Just not to get too off-topic. Great issue the ambulance thing.

Elkhound
12-05-08, 07:02 PM
Me gusta mas leer el espanol bueno que el ingles malo. Anche piu l'italiano buono che l'inglese malo.

Antes que se juega el juego, se aprende las reglas; esto es un foro anglohablante, y una de las reglas es el ingles. Si quiere Vd. un foro sobre el bicecletismo en su propia lengua, se puede fundarlo.

Now that I have established my international credentials, I repeat: Spelling and grammar are our friends.

badmother
12-06-08, 03:01 AM
Du vokser det nok av deg en dag.

badmother
12-06-08, 03:06 AM
Badmother, 10 points!

Totally agree with you. Those idiots (luckily just few of them there) on the new continent never been out of their homestate and thinking Europe is part of Coney Island are just the worst thing one can imagine on our globe.

But surely understandably from a person with limited brain capacity to comment on the spelling of those who can manage in multiple languages in civilized world.

Just not to get too off-topic. Great issue the ambulance thing.

"Rulers of the world", soon bankrupt and approx 20% has got a pasport? Sorry the rest of you.

I should be careful. many of them came from scandinavia so we could be related:D:D

rbrian
12-06-08, 04:16 AM
Since we're talking about spelling, punctuation, and grammar, always a favourite subject of mine, I'd just like to say that badmother is doing very well - better than some who speak only English, and type only gibberish (not a reference to anyone here!). In fact, most of it is so good that it's only the curious apostrophes and substitution of V with W that really jars. If you type in capitals, in txt spk, with random acronyms, and too many Zs, nobody will notice the apostrophes!:D

badmother
12-06-08, 12:13 PM
I`we had comments on my w`s before. Somebody asked if the V`s was missing on my keyboard :D

Your v and w`s are pronounced "broader" than ours and you use w more often than us so I guess I write w to be on the safe side..

The rest I did not really get. I am blond you know.. ;)

Elkhound
12-06-08, 01:59 PM
Du vokser det nok av deg en dag.

Plattdeutch? Flemish?

traveller1970
12-06-08, 02:27 PM
Plattdeutch? Flemish?

Sorry Elkhound,
it's Plattdeutsch with "S".

If you'd like to to shine with your language skills please take some basic lessons first.
Grammar, dear Elkhound, grammar! :twitchy:
Copy-paste of some spanish texts is not really a big evidence of one's intelligence at last.

OK, I'll take a break and withdraw from this discussion as this won't lead anywhere. I just can't stand persons who think they are so much better than the others they need to comment on others' typos.

Elkhound
12-06-08, 07:30 PM
Copy-paste of some spanish texts is not really a big evidence of one's intelligence at last.

Actually, if you really knew your languages you would have been able to tell that part of it was Italian.

I am not specialist in the Germanic languages; my degree is in Classical & Romance Languages. Accordingly, the fact that I could recognize Low German--to which sub-family English also belongs [Gutt milke un gutt ches--gutt Engliche und gutt Freise. {I can't vouch for the precise spelling.**]-- when it see it is a point in my favor, rather than in my detriment.

daibutsu
12-12-08, 06:06 PM
This is the last straw, this site sucks.

Air
12-13-08, 09:48 AM
So this thread got way OT - if anyone's interested in talking without grammar lessons report it and we'll reopen and clean it up. Otherwise doesn't seem to be much of a point.