Rotary.org: News - A prescription for better health in Guatemala

 A prescription for better health in Guatemala

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Patients and family members in Hospitalito Atitlán’s waiting room watch a DVD describing steps they can take to live healthier lives. Photo courtesy of the Rotary Club of Guatemala Norte

A global grant project that provided neonatal medical equipment to a Guatemalan hospital is helping to safeguard the lives of newborns and educating community residents about preventive health. 

The US$54,322 project -- sponsored by the Rotary clubs of Guatemala Norte and Sunnyvale, California, USA -- provided Hospitalito Atitlán in Santiago Atitlán an oxygen generator, infant incubator, and diagnostic devices, along with training to hospital staff in how to use and maintain the equipment.  

As part of the effort, the Guatemala Norte club arranged for production of an educational DVD in Tz’utujil, the language spoken by the local Mayan community. Shown in the hospital’s waiting room, the DVD covers nutrition, common illnesses, maternal and child health, hygiene, and issues such as alcoholism and domestic violence. That component of the project was inspired by the success of a previous Matching Grant effort involving the two clubs, which had distributed an educational DVD on health-related topics to a different Mayan community. 

DVD's impact

Funded under the Future Vision pilot, the effort supports Rotary’s disease prevention and treatment area of focus. Its impact, sponsors say, will reduce the number of people requiring medical care for routine, preventable conditions and enable the hospital’s doctors to focus on treating patients with more serious health problems. 

“As all patients generally are accompanied by several family members, the impact and delivery of the messages are guaranteed,” says Josef Fischer, a Guatemala Norte Rotarian with the Hospitalito Atitlán project. “The idea was to re-create situations in their everyday environment [as realistically as possible], so they are able to identify themselves in individual scenes.” Fischer says the DVD is also used in other clinics and by the regional health department and churches. 

In addition, the video will be shown in the town’s municipal auditorium, and has the potential to reach 45,000 community residents through local cable TV. It also could be adapted for use in other communities in Central America and southern Mexico, say the project’s sponsors. 

The video’s messages are “excellent” and present many new ideas for Santiago Atitlán, says Lyn Dickey, a representative of a community foundation that operates the hospital. 

Read more about Future Vision by signing up to receive Future Vision News.


5 Comments:
At 11:18AM on 1 December 2011, PDG Douglas W. Vincent wrote: Congratulations! . . We've just returned from a 2 1/2 week Dental/Medical Mission to Guatemala with a great team of 23 volunteers, plus some young adult translators. It is a shame we did not know of this project sooner, which may have helped us be more effective in our health and wellness outreach. The DVD could have been a great addition to our information sessions, in addition to the medical treatment and services. They need our help and it is great to see success stories like this. Hopefully we might consider building a dada base network of all Rotary projects in a given area so we can share resources and experiences to make the world a better place. PDG Doug Vincent, D7080 Ontario Canada
At 11:28AM on 17 November 2011, Jalal Zuberi wrote: Wonderful to hear about a successful project that captures the essence of Rotary in striving for service beyond self.
At 10:15AM on 7 November 2011, Lisa Bickford wrote: I participated in this project and I can say it was life-changing for everyone involved! Rotary gives us all opportunities to serve in ways that are meaningful and challenging.
At 10:14AM on 7 November 2011, Jim Sikora wrote: Good coverage of a project I and others from Area 7, District 5170, worked on. You might also check with the Area 7 rotarians, headed up by Georgie Hildebrand, RC of Scotts Valley, who simultaneously helped change the Westmont-Bethel Hospital into a leading neonatal hospital in Guatemala City, primarily for the Mayan and indigent population who could not be served otherwise.
At 10:14AM on 7 November 2011, Fernando Aguirre Palacios wrote: Congratulattions !!Every efford to saves lives are welcome worldwide. Thats why is so important to invite Doctors inside Rotary Int.

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