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    The South Sudan HeraldThe South Sudan Herald
    Home»Humanitarian

    Mothers Trek Miles for Care as Floods Cut Off Clinics

    By The South Sudan HeraldNovember 27, 2025 Humanitarian 2 Mins Read
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    Floodwaters cripple local clinics

    In Rubkona County, relentless flooding has erased roads, submerged villages and swept away the modest health posts that once anchored community life.

    With drug stocks spoiled and buildings uninhabitable, simple fevers now threaten lives, especially for expectant mothers and children.

    Endurance journeys for antenatal care

    Twenty-one-year-old Nyandeng Nancy leaves Kaljak before dawn, wading through mud for two days to reach the temporary Nyaldiu Mobile PHCC.

    She recalls, ‘There is no medication at home, so I walk,’ lowering herself onto a bench, feet swollen yet thankful she arrived in time for a prenatal check.

    Battling illness on the road

    Thirty-year-old Nyadhuola Patai Jiol arrived dehydrated and faint, terrified of another miscarriage after days of diarrhea.

    Clinicians rehydrated her and supplied antibiotics; within hours her voice strengthened and she whispered, ‘I am happy with Health Link, God will bless you.’

    Health workers under mounting pressure

    Sexual and Reproductive Health Officer Juan Roy says patient numbers have tripled, reaching roughly 70 daily consultations.

    ‘Women come exhausted, sometimes carried,’ he notes, while midwife Achiro Evaline describes delivering babies by torchlight when rain pours through the canvas roof.

    Stigma complicates family-planning visits; many clients request discreet injectables to avoid community backlash, staff explain.

    Improvised lifeline amid shortages

    The mobile clinic lacks electricity, running water, a delivery bed or reliable diagnostics, yet staff improvise with manual blood-pressure cuffs and phone flashlights.

    Shelves sit half-empty, but determination remains full; workers rely on local volunteers to ferry supplies by canoe across flooded plains.

    Hope walking beside uncertainty

    Before dusk, Nyandeng seals her health card in plastic and starts the arduous return trek, knowing new floods could erase the path overnight.

    For Rubkona’s women, healthcare is measured not in appointments but in miles, endurance and the fragile promise that the clinic doors will still be open tomorrow.

    Akobo floods Bank of South Sudan Maternal Health
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