Rotary.org: News - Pink Jeep delivers prenatal care to rural Haiti

 Pink Jeep delivers prenatal care to rural Haiti

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A bright pink Jeep Wrangler, staffed with four midwives, races along uneven, dusty roads to reach more than 50 pregnant women in Darlegrand, a rural town two hours north of Hinche, Haiti.

The Jeep belongs to Midwives for Haiti, a nonprofit organization working to ensure that women in remote parts of the country have access to prenatal care and skilled birth attendants. Without the Jeep, many of the women, who have traveled to the daylong February clinic in Darlegrand, would not receive proper medical attention.

The Rotary Club of Western Henrico County, Virginia, USA, along with Bon Secours Health Systems and local individual donors, contributed a total of  US$70,000 to purchase the Jeep, customized for rugged terrain. More than $20,000 of that amount came from the Haiti Earthquake Relief Fund, a donor advised fund set up by The Rotary Foundation.

Rotarians around the world are working to reduce maternal mortality rates and improve access to essential medical services for mothers and their children. Maternal and child health is one of Rotary's areas of focus.

More than 340,000 women worldwide die each year from complications related to pregnancy and childbirth, most of them preventable. On 5 May, midwives and their supporters celebrate the International Day of the Midwife -- launched by the International Confederation of Midwives in 1992 -- to raise awareness of their role in reducing maternal and child mortality.

Nadene Brunk, founder and executive director of Midwives for Haiti, says long distances, inadequate transportation, and lack of information on basic prenatal care contribute to Haiti's maternal mortality rate, the highest in the Western Hemisphere. A Haitian woman's lifetime risk of dying in childbirth is 1 in 44.

The off-road vehicle allows the midwives to reach some of Haiti's most remote villages, says Brunk. "I believe Midwives for Haiti can expand so that every woman can have access to a skilled birth attendant."

How you can help

The pink jeep project is just one example of how Rotarians around the world are working to reduce infant and maternal mortality rates and improve access to essential medical services for all mothers and their children. You can help support these efforts by making a special gift to The Rotary Foundation.

Direct your Annual Fund gift to SHARE, to help support the local and international activities of clubs in your district, or direct your entire gift to the maternal and child health area of focus fund, to be spent on quality disease prevention projects identified and implemented by Rotarians around the world.

Either way, your contribution will be used to fund high impact, sustainable solutions to our world’s most pressing needs.


14 Comments:
At 9:21AM on 19 October 2012, John Blackman wrote: With all the need in Haiti I'm curious if that $70,000 pink jeep could have been better spent on 14 off road motorcycles that could have more than tripled the access to these important services. Motorcycles can reach the most remote areas of Haiti, more than any four wheeler can.
At 4:50PM on 31 May 2012, CDR JANA wrote: I am motivated to serve along with the Rotarians as a non=medical person. I am sure you can find some job for me too as an engineer and an administrator with 40 years of experiance.
At 12:13PM on 30 April 2012, Harald Marschner, RFPD Chairman wrote: A great initiative, mother's is most important! RFPD - Rotarian Action Group for Population & Development - is the official Rotarian ressource for maternal and Child health. We are able to provide help and advice! Please ask! rfpd.hq@rifpd.org
At 12:11PM on 30 April 2012, Rtn Mythili Muralidharan wrote: PINK JEEP Project is amazing! Great efforts by Rotarians to help reduce Maternal Mortality Rate in Haiti. Wishing this Project all the very Best! Rtn Mythili Muralidharan Chairman - Maternal and Child Health RI Dist 3230 India
At 4:25PM on 1 June 2011, Ken Heatwole wrote: I echo the sincere thanks to the Rotary Club for making this Jeep possible. Having just returned from the same trip as Alice Hirata, I also participated in the profound and immediate positive affect it is having on clinic accessability. One example was going to the village of Naran. Our first visit there required a 40 minute drive plus a 40 minute hike. This time, we drove to the "mayor's" hut and clinic site in just 25 minutes.
At 10:40AM on 20 May 2011, sibel yuksel wrote: This just proves how big of a change a few dollars can make in other people's life if those few dollars are wisely spend in the hands of people who truely believe in the importance building goodwill all around the world. This is why I joined Rotary and I am proud of it!
At 10:19AM on 11 May 2011, Susan Madden wrote: This makes me proud to be a Rotarian. We travelled through Hinche on our way to Pignon, Haiti last summer and can tell you how much this means to the people that live there. My husband and I have started a non-profit (Be the Power of One) to help with education in Haiti and other developing countries. We believe education leads to improved living conditions, including lower birth rates, better nutrition and lower infant & maternal mortality.
At 11:46AM on 9 May 2011, Christina McClung, President of Western Henrico Rotary wrote: We are so thankful that our club could have provide funds for this effort in Haiti. We are moved my the work that is being done and hope to continue to bring more resources to the community. Thank you to all that were involved.
At 11:46AM on 9 May 2011, alice hirata wrote: I just returned early this morning from Hinche and promise you that the pink jeep is amazing. It safely delivers M4H midwives to any community - no matter how remote! Also, we held a clinic seeing over 200 people and were able to the tarp and poles carried on the jeep to set up a perfectly functional clinic. Its known throughout the area surrounding Hinche; people wave as it passes knowing that good people performing good works are carried safely on board!
At 9:09AM on 6 May 2011, Darwin Nkonde Chatyoka wrote: Building communities bridging continents
At 9:09AM on 6 May 2011, Bill Pollard, PDG D7600 (VA, USA) wrote: Thank you to the clubs and Rotarians who contributed to the Haiti Earthquake Relief Fund providing Rotary clubs with the resources to support the relief efforts in Haiti. We are proud of the Western Henrico club in D7600 for their work on this project. Bill Pollard, District 7600 Foundation Chair.
At 4:33PM on 5 May 2011, Philose S. PIERRE wrote: Thank you for helping my country. This is a great job you do and I appreciated it. May God bless District 6290. Philose S. PIERRE President-elect Rotary Club Carrefour/Mon Repos, Haiti
At 4:33PM on 5 May 2011, adriana wrote: this is sooo depresing i only wish there was more i could do everyday!!!
At 2:41PM on 5 May 2011, Kay Fellows wrote: Thank you for this coverage, I am one of the Midwives who goes to Hinche to teach at the midwifery school. My late Father was a Rotarian as is my brother, David Matthews.

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