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Archive for the ‘Public Health’ Category

yep…famous

Erin’s school profile
Bonus points if you can actually find it from their website.

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The returned Peace Corps volunteer who started the company that now manages my program to help lower infant mortality in La Esperanza, Honduras recently started a coffee company. 100% of the profits will go towards projects that are part of W.A.S.H., including my program. Volunteers in La Esperanza have been working to build a self-sustaining garden for the women staying at the albergue, but they are in need of some additional funding. So if you want some delicious organic coffee and to know that you are supporting both an ethical business model and projects for a non-profit organization, drink up.
Order some of the best fair trade organic coffee in the world.

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pregnant women helping water seedlings in the new garden

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Seattle

After finishing up my semester of school and work at Columbia, I spent a week in Denver and Boulder enjoying the company of my family and boyfriend before heading west on the Oregon Trail with my best friend and driving companion, Rachel. Seattle welcomed us with open arms and sunny skies when we arrived the Saturday of Memorial weekend. The incredible hospitality of one of Dan’s friend’s, Steve, who offered me a place to crash for the summer, also helped give the city a friendly feeling. I was impressed by how much I liked the city — surrounded by mountains and water, Seattle is a nice-sized city, but cleaner, cheaper and more manageable than the big apple. Steve took us on a whirlwind tour — hitting all the best views, the space needle, the market, the first Starbucks, and a number of local bars and restaurants, all before dinnertime on our first full day in the city.
After a few days to settle in, I started my internship at the Government Accountability Office (GAO). I am surrounded by fun and intelligent staff and fellow interns, and when we get bored of each other we call up someone like the president of the National Association of State Medicaid Directors or the director of community health for Georgia and talk to them about the preventive services available through Medicaid — analyzing the availability of these services will be my primary project for the summer. Secondarily, I will be working on a request from a congressperson regarding the availability of dental services under Medicaid, triggered by the death of a 12 year old boy in Maryland when an abscessed tooth became infected and the infection spread to his brain. We are currently working on scoping and creating methodologies for the projects and I have been working on some background research. So far, the internship has proven challenging and rewarding.
Guessing correctly that after my past nine months in Manhattan, a 40-ish hour work week would seem like a piece of cake, I came into the summer with brilliant plans of working on some hobbies of interest — writing, yoga, rock climbing, and cooking specifically. However, I find it difficult to focus on these pursuits between the hours devoted to interns’ quest to experience all the best of Seattle’s happy hours. Living out of a suitcase for 10 to 12 weeks lends one a certain sense of freedom. In an effort to create some balance, I have spent time the last two weekends hiking around Seattle. My mom came out this weekend to get a sense of the shape of my summer. She joined us on an evening of happy hours and she and I spent a wonderful day hiking along some beaches and enjoying a terrific seafood dinner.
While the first weekend was sunny, the sun disappeared for about two weeks shortly after I started work. A local newspaper headline ran, “Colder than Siberia.” I strain to see the humorous side of this small tragedy. However, the sun returned this weekend and it is begging me to go outside and enjoy it so it is probably time to put down my computer.
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Dan and I hiking in Boulder
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Rachel, Steve, and I in downtown Seattle
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Rachel and I in front of the city
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And by popular demand…my amazing mother

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New York City celebrated Valentine’s Day by releasing its new condom design.
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The old version is on the left and the new one is on the right.
The original NYC condom used letters similar to those of the subway markers to create brand recognition, but apparently MTA (Metropolitan Transport Authority) was picky about how and where the condoms could be advertised because they didn’t want to confuse a poor tourist who might accidentally mistake a condom for a subway stop. So, the city department of public health redesigned its brand to look slightly less like the markers. The guy behind one laptop per child is responsible for the new look. The actual condom, a premium lubricated Lifestyles latex condom is unchanged. The city department of public health increased the number of condoms distributed in the city from 250,000 to 1.5 million per month when it introduced public condom requesting online. (i.e. any business owner can request condoms via the web to be brought to his establishment within ten days.) Creating the first NYC brand condom on Valentine’s Day 2007, doubled that number to 3 million condoms per month — which, in a city of 8 million people all included, isn’t half bad. Hopefully the new look and advertisements further increase the numbers.
Check out the ads. I like the latin one and the jazz one.
And just for fun, here is Spot’s Valentine’s Day picture, with her new Valentine’s Day present.
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the gift that keeps on giving

As I mentioned in an earlier post, my nutrition education program in Honduras has continued. A wonderful peace corps health volunteer is leading the project and incorporating the help of the new volunteers that arrive with the program I volunteered with. In an effort to make the project more sustainable without indefinite help and donations from foreign countries, the current volunteers are planting a garden to help keep these valuable foods available for the women staying at the albergue. We need some extra donations to help cover the initial input cost of the garden. The volunteers have had to purchase calcium deposits, fertilizer, compost, and small trees. Many of the volunteers from the program I went with have donated their own personal money, but I would love to be able to solicit some more donations for the project. The volunteers are getting the seeds, workers, and few other things for free, but the project could really use another 150 dollars or so to help cover the costs of the trees and plants. Please click on the water and sanitation health website to donate. Specify that your donation is for the infant mortality project in La Esperanza. Check out the pictures to see the progress on the garden so far.
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clearing the field
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digging an irrigation ditch
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avocado trees
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Spreading calcium
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Pregnant moms helping water the seedlings

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the project lives on

My project in Honduras lives on. The nutrition program at the Albergue is now being run by a health Peace Corps volunteer in La Esperanza. And donations can now be accepted through an official non-profit (with a tax ID number and everything). Donations will help to bring education and nutritious foods to women from rural areas waiting to deliver their babies at the hospital. If you or your company are thinking of making holiday or end-of-year donations, please keep this project in mind.
Here is a formal description of my project: http://waterandsanitationhealth.com/infantmortality.html
Here is the information on how to donate: http://waterandsanitationhealth.com/gpage2.html
You can donate through paypal online or by mailing in a check to the address on the page. Three percent of the paypal donation is automatically deducted to allow for the online transaction, whereas 100 percent of your check will get to the people who are running the project in La Esperanza. The non-profit is administered in cooperation with the peace corps, and no administration costs will be taken out of your donation. Please specify this project when making your donation so that it will be used specifically for the nutrition program at the Albergue. Mark your check or paypal donation “infant mortality project in La Esperanza.”
If you or your company are looking to make even more substantial donations, please browse through the rest of the Water and Sanitation Health (WASH) web site. They have terrific projects all over the country. And I can tell you honestly from experience that ALL of the donation will be used towards the projects. Not a single employee is paid anything from the donations, because there aren’t any employees, only volunteers.
Go here to see the WASH homepage http://waterandsanitationhealth.com/index.html

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