By Air Force Tech. Sgt. Andria Allmond Combined Joint Task
Force Horn of Africa
DJIBOUTI CITY, Djibouti, Aug. 28, 2017 — Members of Combined
Joint Task Force Horn of Africa and Camp Lemonnier helped mitigate the
likelihood of disease transmission at a local youth center here Aug 22.
Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Samantha Ward, center, assigned
to the Camp Lemonnier Emergency Medical Facility, and Army Maj. Donald Dais,
443rd Civil Affairs Battalion Functional Specialty Team Environmental Health
officer in charge, test water samples at Caritas Djibouti, a mission providing
humanitarian aid and education to Djiboutian children living on the streets, in
Djibouti City, Djibouti, Aug. 23, 2017. The team checked for chlorine levels
and retrieved samples to test for bacteria, in addition to conducting a food
handling and sanitation tutorial. Air National Guard photo by Air Force Tech.
Sgt. Andria Allmond
Led by Army Maj. Donald Dais, 443rd Civil Affairs Battalion
Functional Specialty Team Environmental Health officer in charge, the unit
conducted food-handler training, environmental health assessments, as well as
tested multiple water sources for chlorine and bacteria levels at Caritas
Djibouti -- a mission providing humanitarian aid and education mostly to
Djiboutian children living on the streets.
“The [Camp Lemonnier] chaplains had asked me to go to
Caritas with them to do an assessment the last time they went,” Dais said.
There, he identified some improvements that could be made to
areas such as food-handling methods and sanitation, and created and taught a
tailored class to educate and inform the Caritas volunteers in an effort to
intercept the onset and proliferation of disease.
Health Appraisals
Dais and his team also conducted water purity testing and
evaluated the sleeping conditions as part of the health appraisal.
“We don’t have a specialist here that can do what [the U.S
military] can do to check our water,” said Alain Djeudi, a Caritas kitchen and
food service volunteer. “We must be sure that there are no diseases here; we
must keep everybody healthy.”
Djeudi said that many of the children that come to Caritas
Djibouti are ill, refugees from areas like Somalia and Ethiopia. Often times,
they arrive at the mission with both wounds and illnesses. This creates a
scenario in which Caritas attempts to not only treat the acute affliction, but
also halt the spread of infectious diseases from spreading to other children
and eventually progressing into the local community.
Therefore, Dais’s disease prevention program has the
potential to positively affect the entire region, helping shape the environment
while maintaining freedom of movement in the joint operating area of East
Africa.
Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Samantha Ward, assigned to the
Camp Lemonnier Emergency Medical Facility, assisted Dias during the assessment.
“It’s important that we realize that what we as U.S.
citizens consider the correct way isn’t always the best way for the people of
other regions in the world,” Ward said. “What we’re here to do is see what can
be done to assist them in implementing what works best in this environment.”
Dias echoed Ward’s sentiments, noting the dual role they
played in the Caritas visit.
“We are here to conduct ourselves as not only professionals
in the field of public health and disease prevention, but we are also serving
as ambassadors,” he said. “In that role, we are committed to doing the very
best for our regional partners, while remaining mindful of the host-nation
culture.”
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