USAID helps rebuild Jaffna psychiatric ward
[TamilNet, Wednesday, 01 June 2005, 10:56 GMT]
US Agency for International Development (USAID) has provided a grant of US$225,000 to rehabilitate a new psychiatric wing at the Tellipalai Hospital in Jaffna, a press release issued by the US Embassy in Colombo said. USAID is an independent agency that provides economic, development and humanitarian assistance around the world in support of the foreign policy goals of the United States.
Full text of the press release follows:
THOUSANDS IN JAFFNA TO BENEFIT FROM IMPROVED HEALTH CENTER AND
SANITATION FACILITIES
Project to improve psychiatric care in conflict-affected district
Colombo, June 1, 2005: One thousand outpatients and 60 inpatients
each month will now have access to a rehabilitated psychiatric ward
in the Thelipallai Hospital in Jaffna thanks to a grant from the
United States worth $ 225,000. In addition, 300 displaced families
in Jaffna, half of which are headed by women, will benefit from newly
constructed sanitation facilities and access to clean water. The
American-financed project also trained fifteen Internally Displaced
young men in concrete casting and pre-fabrication skills to construct
latrines to service formerly displaced families returning to
Thelipallai, Jaffna, Kopay, Point Pedro and Chavakachcheri.
Representatives from the United States Agency for International
Development (USAID) participated in a ceremonial re-opening of the
upgraded hospital wing and toured sanitation and clean water
facilities in Jaffna on Wednesday, June 1st. Mike DeSisti, Country
Representative for USAID's Office of Transition Initiatives, said,
"Despite the clear and immediate needs of tsunami-affected
communities in Sri Lanka, it is important that we remain mindful of
the tremendous toll of 20 years of conflict - not only in the North
and East but elsewhere on the island as well. Access to quality
mental health care services is critically important. The American
people are pleased to play a part in assisting Sri Lankans to rebuild
communities and restore normalcy to their lives."
The combined hospital and water-sanitation project was implemented by
Community, Habitat, Finance (CHF), a U.S.-based non-governmental
organization, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health, German
development agency GTZ, the United Nations High Commission on
Refugees (UNHCR), the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the
World Health Organization (WHO).
USAID's Office of Transition Initiatives (OTI) program seeks to
generate greater support for a negotiated peace settlement through
small-grant activities that aim to increase collaboration and
participation among diverse groups, or to create awareness and
increase understanding of key transition issues. Since USAID
initiated the program March 2003, OTI has signed 385 small-grant
agreements - mostly with local organizations - totaling more than
$10.4 million.