CMAM NURSE – LIBEN – CARE Ethiopia

Health Care

CARE Ethiopia

CARE Ethiopia

CARE started working in Ethiopia in 1984 in response to severe drought and famine that devastated the population and claimed the lives of nearly one million people. Since then, the organization’s activities have expanded to address the root causes of poverty and vulnerability.

In 2008, CARE Ethiopia’s office moved from a project-based approach to a more focused and strategic program-based approach. Over the eight years since that transition, CARE Ethiopia has implemented a series of programs with successful outcomes, while simultaneously impacting the policies and practices of government, serving as a thought leader amongst NGOs, and bringing transformative change to rural communities. These broader and deeper impacts go beyond the direct impacts of its programs and are a result of CARE Ethiopia’s overall country strategy, which enables CARE to design for scale.

CARE Ethiopia works in various sectors but has particularly targeted the following:

·         Food Security and Resilience

·         WASH         

·         Nutrition

 

·         Sexual and Reproductive Health and

 

·         Emergency Response as cross-cutting (focusing on the above sectors).

CARE is an international NGO with local staff and community partners in more than 90 countries. We create local solutions to poverty and inequality, and we seek dignity for everyone every day and during times of crisis.  These solutions have a broad range, from clean water to access to education; from microfinance to ensuring that everyone has nutritious food; from agriculture and climate change to disaster response. CARE puts women and girls at the center of everything we do because they have proven to be the best hope for creating lasting change in the world.  Our staff live where they work, which makes us effective at understanding the challenges they face. We’ve been doing this for over 70 years, since World War II. It started with the world’s first CARE Package® of food for the post-war hungry in Europe.  Our work today is as important as ever, we believe that poverty and inequality are historic injustices that we can end within a generation, for good. If you share our core beliefs: poverty is an injustice; poverty is solvable; and together, we have the power to end it, join us.

I JOB SUMMARY:

The purpose of the CMAM Nurse/ Junior Nurse position is to provide overall technical, organisational support and play a support and facilitation role for community based management of acute malnutrition in communities. she/he is assigned, includiing technology and best practices awareness creation and linkages and behavioral change through education, information and communication. She/he supports people’s empowerment, collective action and solidarity, social cohesion and inclusion as well as gender equity. Facilitates and encourages active participation of and networking between individuals and communities in recognizing problems, identifying solutions, and implementing project activities related to the identified solutions. Establishes and maintains close working relationship with communities and community organizations in her/his working area in order to ensure that the nutrition messages are disseminated and understood at all levels. Build capacities of the community and institutions.  S/he works closely with woreda, Kebele, Village-level task force leaders and local government development agents.

II RESPONSIBILITIES AND TASKS

Job Responsibility #1 Technical Support  and facilitate community action planning and targeting

  • Support and facilitates emergency nutrition  program participants in the identification and prioritization of project beneficiaries as per the national protocol
  • Facilitates community meetings and community action plan (CAP) preparation and ensure that the participation of each community groups in problem identification, planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of TFP
  • Ensures CARE’s key program principles of accountability, empowerment, non discrimination are followed in community analysis and action plans;
  • Facilitates community based nutrition assessment and analysis and targeting along with Community Nutrition Volunteers (CNVs), Health development armies and responsible body from the Kebele’s;
  • Supports and facilitates the development of action plan for their respective OTP/SC sites;
  • Supports and facilitate the development of action plan for their respective OTP/SC sites
  • Assesses health, nutrition, hygiene and sanitation related problems;
  • Reviews the plan with the partners and representatives of the community and including her/his supervisor at kebele level;
  • Prepares final action plan by breaking down in to quarters and months and submit it to her/his supervisor and make sure the same is done at health facilities with OTP/SC.

% of Time:  30%   

Job Responsibility #2:  Facilitate implementation of project activities and monitoring

  • Support and facilitate the establishment of new OTP/SC sites and strengthen the existing OTP/SC sites.
  • Supports community mobilization of beneficiaries along with CNVs, and Health development armies;
  • Facilities, organizes, and builds skill and knowledge of care takers on appropriate feeding practices, basic hygiene and sanitation
  • Ensures that activity implementation is informed by CARE’s core rights-based approaches and principles, gender equity, and community level advocacy in particular;  
  • Provides technical and organizational assistance to CNVs, Health Development armies, kebele, and village representatives and community members;
  • Supports regular capacity assessment activities conducted for health institutions;
  • Holds demonstration and awareness creation sessions on health, nutrition, hygiene and sanitation in OTP/SC sites, and supplementary food distribution
  • Arranges/facilitates cross visits and conducts capacity building on site trainings for Health Extension Workers (HEWs), nurses, Health development Armies, and CNVs;
  • Builds capacity of CNVs, Health Development Armies and committees, undertakes participatory monitoring of project implementation works, and records lessons learned and reports to her/his supervisor.

% of Time: 35%    

Job Responsibility #3:  Strengthen partnership, institutional linkages and working relationship

  • Selects CNVs, and other volunteers  from the community together with with relevant government stake holders/partners and arranges training for them along with the CMAM supervisor  ;
  • Represents CARE at woreda and  kebele (s) level as a member of the health task force ;
  • Strongly works to make the plan of the project to be part of the plan for the kebeles
  • Closely works with  primary health care facilities; health posts, health centers  CNVs and communities at kebele  and village level to ensure adequate linkages are established.

% of Time: 15%     

Job Responsibility #4: Reporting and Learning

  • Support quality recording and documentation of nutrition data in OTP/SC sites
  • Prepares weekly, monthly and quarterly reports and submit it to her/his supervisor
  • Supports and facilitates community involvement in annual innovation and  knowledge fairs
  • Collects basic information, best practices, case studies, and lessons and report to her/his supervisor
  • Conduct malnutrition causal mapping and arrange outreach sessions in identified kebeles or villages.
  • Use nutrition data for local decisions or actions making with his/her supervisor  
  • Undertakes  personal  professional  development initiatives identified with his/her supervisor

% of Time:  15%

Job Responsibility #6:  Perform other duties as assigned.

% of Time:  5%

III PROBLEM SOLVING (Thinking Environment)

  • The level of problem solving this position will face is level number two. What has to be done and how to do it are clearly defined, and the incumbent will face identical or similar problems on a regular basis.

IV GENDER EQUALITY

  • Understanding and demonstrated commitment to the importance of gender, youth and social inclusion issues.
  • Demonstrated commitment to principles of Gender Equity, Diversity, Inclusion and PSEAH (safeguarding), as evidenced in previous positions / programming

IIV. QUALIFICATIONS (KNOW HOW) 

A) EDUCATION/TRAINING

Required:

  • Degree in Nursing or other related fields.  
  • 3 years of relevant work experience for degree holders in Nursing.
  • 2 years relevant work experience for second degree in Nursing.

B) EXPERIENCE

Required:

  • At least two years emergency nutrition related work experience 
  • Experience in community based nutrition intervention preferably in  community management of acute malnutrition (CMAM)
  • Knowledge and practical experience of the national/international therapeutic /supplemental feeding protocols/guidelines
  • Experience in standard nutrition data management and reporting
  • Skill in facilitating on job   training for health workers, HEWs, and CNVs
  • Field experience of community mobilization
  • Previous experience in pastoralist communities
  • Knowledge of local language

Desired:      

  •  NGO experience

C) TECHNICAL SKILLS

Required:

  • Communication skill, good human relations, willingness to reside in rural areas;
  • Firm belief in teamwork, gender equality, sensitivity to HIV/AIDS, conceptual understanding of participatory approach and sustainable development.
  • Knowledge of the local language

D) COMPETENCIES:

  • Respect, accountability, courage, excellence, stress tolerance, information monitoring, developing teams, interpersonal skills, coaching, problem solving, planning and organizing. 

V. CONTACTS/KEY RELATIONSHIPS 

  • The CMAM Nurse is expected to establish open relationship with the community, government counterparts and other community based organizations in order to facilitate and encourage active participation in overall development activities and internally, with Supervisors, Project Managers, and other concerned FO’s staff.

VI. LIVING CONDITIONS:

  • The CMAM Nurse based in the project woreda and  lives among the community. She/he can travels on foot long distances (50%) and stand about 30% during training sessions. 

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Lien