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Resources

District Laboratory Practice in Tropical Countries

This detailed book (464 pages) is aimed at medical staff working in district laboratories and those who train them. It contains details of managing and equipping laboratories, health and safety aspects and numerous clinical and parasitological tests (with a large section of colour photos). It emphasises the need for integration with community health services. Details are available on planning a training curriculum for laboratory staff. Can order from:

Tropical Health Technology, 14 Bevills Close, Doddington, March, PE15 0TT, UK.

Women’s Health Library

This is a special offer of a library pack of six books which will provide community health workers with the latest information on a wide variety of women’s health problems. They include

  • Where Women have no Doctor – recently published and providing a health guide to identify common medical problems and treatments
  • Helping Mothers to Breastfeed
  • Setting up Community Health Programmes
  • Nutrition Handbook for Community Workers
  • Training Manual for Traditional Birth Attendants
  • Freda Doesn’t get Pregnant – an easy to read book for young girls, to help them understand the risks of becoming pregnant.

The set of six books is available at a special low price of £30, including postage, from :

TALC, PO Box 49, St Albans, Herts, AL1 5TX, UK.

How to Make and Use Visual Aids

Visual aids are important all over the world to help teachers, trainers and development workers to communicate effectively. This book shows how to make visual aids quickly and easily using low cost materials. The techniques described have all been well tried and tested by volunteers with VSO, the publishers. The ideas are easy to use with plenty of practical hints and tips. The book encourages the use of local materials and techniques. Among the ideas included are card games, puppets, masks, models and toys. There is a useful list of contacts for advice, free catalogues and other materials.

Available from TALC, see address above.

New books on livestock and their care

The Christian Veterinary Mission have just published two new books called Raising Healthy Sheep and Drugs and their Usage as additions to their useful series on raising healthy animals. This brings the total to nine (including pigs, cattle, sheep, goats, fish and rabbits).  CVM will consider making books available to mission agencies, agricultural libraries and development agencies in developing countries. Requests for the books should be typed on letter headed paper from the organisation.

CVM also publishes an International Animal Health Newsletter quarterly. Raising Healthy Poultry, Rabbits and Goats are also available in Spanish. For further information, please contact:

Dr Leroy Dorminy, Christian Veterinary Mission, 19303 Fremont Ave N, Seattle, WA 98133, USA. E-mail: missionvet@aol.com

Farmer to Farmer Extension: Lessons from the field
by D Selener, J Chenier and R Zelaya
Published in 1997, 150 pages

This book is the result of two workshops in Honduras and Ecuador, held to document and analyse the experiences of several rural development projects. Most of the information comes from the point of view of farmer promoters, based on their many years of experience. Part One looks at many aspects of the work of farmer promoters (extension workers). Part Two looks at five case studies from Mexico, Nicaragua and Ecuador. The book would be of interest to development workers using participatory approaches to development. It is available in Spanish and English and can be ordered from:

IIRR, AP 17-08-8494, Quito, Ecuador.
E-mail:
daniel@iirr.ecuanex.net.ec

Resolviendo Conflictos en Pareja (Resolving Conflicts as a Couple)

This short, straight-talking booklet in Spanish, written by a Brazilian psychologist, goes directly to the heart of marital difficulties. It identifies the main source of conflict as the refusal to accept each other as different. It describes how easily couples can retreat into hurt silence and grow apart. It gives practical advice on how couples can appreciate their differences, learn from conflict and grow stronger through it. This 11-page booklet is one of a series produced by EIRENE and included free for subscribers to their quarterly bulletin.

EIRENE Internacional – ALAPF, Casilla 17-08-85-72, Quito, Ecuador.

Selecting Medical Supplies for Basic Health Care

A list of essential drugs has provided a useful guideline for many health personnel in deciding priorities when ordering drugs. However, no similar list is available for medical supplies to complement that for drugs. ECHO are just reprinting these guidelines to help medical personnel make practical decisions when ordering supplies with a limited budget. The booklet costs £3 (including postage), but a copy is available free of charge to health personnel in third world countries who have no access to foreign exchange. A second booklet in the series called Basic Technical Maintenance of Medical Equipment will also soon be available.

ECHO are a leading supplier of low-cost medical drugs and supplies to clinics and hospitals around the world. Write to:

ECHO, Ullswater Cres, Coulsdon, Surrey, CR5 2HR, UK.

 
Building up your library 

Fixtures and fittings

 

Make shelves, using wooden boards and bricks. You can use blocks of wood held up with stones as bookends until a carpenter can make wooden ones. Instead of stones, you could use painted pebbles. If a number of people will be using the library, make sure it is open at regular times for people who want to come and read. Keep some chairs or mats for people to sit on. If space is limited, a cupboard can be used for the library books and locked up when not in use.

 

Divide the library into sections

 

This will make books easier to find. Use letters and a colour code to indicate each subject. For example, if your library is on health issues, you could use the following sections:

 

MCH

Mother and child health

Red

IND

Infectious diseases

Blue

DAT

Disability and appropriate technology

Purple

HAE

HIV/AIDS education

Orange

NCG

Nutrition and child growth

Green

MSO

Medicine, surgery and obstetrics

White

HCS

Healthcare services

Yellow

EC

Education and communication

Brown

 

 

Divide the sections with wooden blocks, marked and painted with the correct colours. Mark the books on the outside cover and inside. Give each book a section number and write this after the letters. For example: MSO 2. If you have several copies of the same book mark them as: MSO 2A, MSO 2B and MSO 2C.

 

Keep a register

Divide an exercise book into sections and write down all the books you have. If people borrow copies, write their name down as well as the date they should return the book. Decide together on a borrowing policy for books. Maybe one person can borrow two books at a time and keep them for up to three weeks. Decide if you will use penalties if people do not return books on time.

 

 

Use a box for people to place their returned books. Mark them into the record book and then place back in the right section.

 

Finally

 

Keep a lookout for interesting books you can add to the library. Charging a small contribution for the use of the library may enable you to buy a few really useful books each year. Some organisations will also support groups building up small libraries.

 

Adapted from useful information from TALC, who provide several collections of books to set up health libraries at low cost.


This page was last updated on 16 August 2005