#ONEMoms: Maternal- and family health careThe stories coming out of the ONEMoms' trip to Kenya are remarkable. (If you need context, read my intro to ONEWeek, the collaboration between advocacy organization ONE and ten parenting bloggers). Their first two days were spent observing work that comes out of the collaboration between the US Center For Disease Control and the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), the scientific research arm of Kenya's Ministry of Health. Home-based HIV testingFrom Karen Walrond (Chookooloonks): On this particular day, we split up into groups of two, to shadow HIV home health care workers: KEMRI's representatives who travel throughout the region, testing families for HIV, and counseling them on how to reduce the spread of the disease. Because many of the families in the region live in relatively remote rural areas, it can be difficult (and somewhat discouraging) to travel the long distances on foot to get to the clinics to determine their status — and so instead, KEMRI and the CDC come to them... [Read more >>] Photo credit: Karen Walrond Progress in the fight against infectious diseaseFrom Amy Graff (BabyCenter): When Doris arrived at the [Siaya Clinical Research Center] clinic pregnant and HIV positive, doctors entered her into a research program that allowed her to receive free medication, specifically ARVs, that decreases transmission of HIV from mother to child. "It's a joy to see a baby come out negative from a positive mother," says Lilian Odhiambo, a nurse at Siaya. "Cases like this show that there's hope." Before HIV positive mothers were given ARVs, the transmission rate was 25 to 40. Now that rate is 1.8 percent... [Read more, including advances against malaria and TB >>] Photo credit: Morgana Wingard (ONE) Community partnerships with the CDCFrom Elisa Morgan (FulFill Magazine) We'd arrived at the Lwak Nutritional Center, in Kisumu, a program focusing on maternal and child health. Recently, they've undertaken –- in partnership with ONE — an amazing study that follows pregnancies, birth outcomes and the health of children in a variety of stages of maternity, in order to learn what works best for moms and babies to live. The dancing women -– it turned out — were known as village reporters, elected by their communities to traipse through muddy paths to personally check on new moms and their babies, reporting back their progress to the Center for Disease Control... [Read more >>] Photo credit: Morgana Wingard (ONE) From Jyl Pattee (Mom It Forward) The Centers for Disease Control set up a community volunteer program in villages near Kisumu in western Kenya. People who had recovered from tuberculosis stepped forward to be TB Ambassadors — a completely voluntary and time-consuming position to help fellow community members... [Read more >>] Photo credit: Morgana Wingard (ONE) What you can doWant to take action? There's so much that can so easily be done from here. For starters:
More: The ONEMoms landing page at ONE.org, including a map of the locations they are visiting. Visit Parent Hacks to read the responses to this post or leave your own! More Recent Articles |
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