Information about our link with the Episcopal Church of Sudan.







 

Medical Link
Find out how your donations can help us fund health related initatives in the Sudan...

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The Medical Link was set up in 1983 by Bishop John & Jill Baker as an offshoot to the Salisbury Sudan Link.

 

We serve the Episcopal Church of Sudan providing funding for health services to Dioceses ravaged by twenty years of civil war.

 

Focus upon distribution of primary health care kits, training of medical workers and funding of health awareness projects, mainly in southern Sudan.


Where does the money comes from?

  • Parochial giving
  • Private individuals
  • Collections from services presided over by visiting Bishops
  • Proceeds of special events – summer garden fête, concerts etc
  • Approximate annual income of £50,000

Click here The Bishops Garden Party for news of one of our events.

 

 

How do we know it’s being wisely spent?

  • By relinquishing control as late in the chain of delivery as possible
  • Insisting upon reports on usage of medicines, student performance etc
  • Visiting Sudan, establishing and maintaining trusting relationships with our contacts in the Episcopal Church of Sudan and other groups

 Who makes it happen?

  • In UK, Mike Maclachlan works as administrator with Dr Robin Saddler, who has taken over from Dr Alison Pinkerton as medical advisor. Both are accountable to a sub-committee of the Sudan Link Committee.
  • On-the-ground Supervisory Medical Committees in each ECS Diocese.
  • A pharmacy in Kampala, which sources and packs high-quality and keenly-priced primary health care kits prescribed by the World Health Organisation.
  • Apollo, a man who drives hundreds of miles over atrocious tracks to deliver our medicines.
  • Training institutions in southern Sudan, run by western agencies.

 What’s going on at the moment?

  • An effective government administration in the South (GOSS) means that our Medical Link must work in close co~operation with GOSS medical policy and not be seen as competing with it. Therefore changes will be necessary.
  • Almost certainly there will be less need for primary health kits and more need for training, especially midwives, South Sudan has the world's highest rate of maternal death in childbirth. Our policy has been moving this way for some while We will be pleased to partner the new administration .

If you would like to donate to the work of the Medical Link please click here

 

   
Contact: Mike Maclachlan
Email: sudan.medical.link@salisbury.anglican.org

Tel: 01722 411922
Fax: 01722 411990
Web Link: http://www.salisbury.anglican.org