Collaborating with WHO on a Video Case Study About Malaria Prevention in Siem Pang, Cambodia

This was the third time in a bit over a year that I’d been hired by the World Health Organization to work as a videographer on a case study for them.

This time it was malaria prevention in Stung Treng Province following Chan Sophal, who supports The Mekong Malaria Elimination (MME) programme at the provincial level.

Sophal works with remote communities close to the Lao border in Stung Treng Province.

‘I am stationed in Stung Treng Province, with a focus on Siem Pang, which is a malaria hotspot’, he says.

Sophal works closely with the head Siem Pang Health Center and the nurse in charge of the malaria elimination programme.

‘We plan our outreach campaigns together’, he says.

It was a great experience to work as a videographer for WHO and get to follow Sophal to some of the remote villages he works in.

Siem Pang itself is very remote, but it took a small ferry, a horse and cart and small boat to get to some of the highest risk communities.

As part of the Last Mile to Malaria Elimination, Sophal and his team of Village Malaria Workers (VMW) focus on the target group of men aged 15-49 years, who go regularly go into the forest and are the most likely to catch malaria and transmit it in their community.

‘We educate and encourage them to take preventive medication before they go to the forest or other high-risk malaria areas. They have never heard of preventive treatment, so taking the medicine when they're not sick worries them a lot. It is important to build trust so the community believes the medicine is good for their health,’ he says.

The medical care and education they provide is a key factor in helping to eliminate malaria in Cambodai.

This isn’t something Sophal takes lightly.

‘The work I’m proudest of is the contribution I’ve madeto eliminating malaria in Stung Treng Province’, he says.

For me working as a videographer on projects like this is a pleasure. Sophal and his team are dedicated in their work, they’ve won the trust of the communities they work in and their efforts are having a genuine impact.

Here’s a shorter version that was used as part of WHO’s 75th annievrsary social media campaign.

If you’d like to see more of my work you can read more of my blogs here and you can keep up with the videography work I do for other NGOs here.

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On Assignment - Photographing Malaria Prevention for WHO, Stung Treng, Cambodia

It’s always a pleasure to get of Phnom Penh on assignment and this job was no exception. The brief was to produce a series of 25 photos for the World Health Organization about Sophal for their WHO’s Who series to commemorate their 75th anniversary of providing health for all.

The series was to highlight some of vital work done by some of the key healtcare workers around the world.

Sophal works in malaria prevention and has dedicated himself to preventing malaria in the remote parts of Stung Treng, which are high risk areas.

Sophal was a great choice for the photography series and he is dedicated to his work and he’s very respected within the communities he works in. He led a fundraising campaign when one of his team lost their house through fire. On another occasion, he donated blood to one of his community health workers’ wives after being alerted to the need in the middle of the night.

He’s also studying for a masters in public health in his spare time.

It was a busy day photographing Sophal. We arrived at Siem Pang Health Center early in the morning where Sophal met with the local health centre workers, checked malaria records and did a stock take of the preventative medicine before travelling into the community.

Working in remote villages, we had to take a ferry an ox and cart and small boat to reach the most remote village.

When we got to the community, Sophal checked the records and spoke to his team of community health workers.

From there, his team went into the community to provide training to the village and to check on people who had recently returned from the forest to give them preventative medicine.

The team managed to get all of this done before a storm blew in and the heavens opened.

You can see other examples of my NGO photography for the World Health Organization here and here.

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