Showing posts with label children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label children. Show all posts

Friday, February 2, 2018

Every Effort Helps

This two-minute video focuses on the importance of education for Bolivian children.


But how does health affect education?

For every child in the video, and thousands of their classmates, each day of school brings them closer to a life free of poverty. Every day is important, even when supportive teachers (mentioned in the video) give extensions so struggling kids can finish their homework.

If a child gets sick... they miss school.

If a sibling gets sick, and a child needs to care for them because a parent has to work... they miss school.

Health is an integral part of education.

Our partners in the Clean Hands, Healthy Schools program are working help children stay healthy so they can stay in school, through basic handwashing and dental hygiene education. Keep kids healthy, keep kids in school.

Every donation supports these efforts in Bolivia. Make a tax-deductible donation here.

-- Mackenzie Malia
President & Co-Founder, AAVia Foundation for the Health of Bolivian Children

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Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Happy World Water Day!

Water is a vital part of our lives. It's there when we brush our teeth, wash dishes, grab a quick drink, and hose the lawn. But for many children in rural regions of Bolivia, it's hard to find access to clean water, and even harder to stay healthy when the only available water is contaminated.

Yesterday we celebrated World Water Day, a day to remember the importance of water in our lives, and learn how we can help others access water. For the AAVia Foundation, this day reminds us to be grateful for the water that we have here in the United States.

So, what can we do to help Bolivian children have access to clean water?

A child practices hand-washing in Ancocagua, Bolivia. Photo by Nia Haf Photography

The AAVia Foundation is proud to support Clean Hands, Healthy Schools, a hand and dental hygiene program run by the School of Nursing at Pucarani, Bolivia. Led by 50 of the nursing students and their instructors, the program teaches elementary school children about the importance of using clean water, washing their hands, and brushing their teeth.

Clean Hands, Healthy Schools gives these children valuable knowledge that helps them prevent basic illnesses throughout the rest of their lives. The lessons include:

  • How to sterilize water for use
  • When to wash hands
  • Hand-washing methods
  • How to brush teeth
  • How to use hand sanitizer
  • When to use nail clippers

As well as hand-washing practice with the nursing students, and follow up visits to ensure that the lessons are being implemented by the children and their families.


A nursing student helps a child wash hands in Cohana, Bolivia. Photo by Nia Haf Photography

In 2015 Clean Hands, Healthy Schools worked with 10 elementary schools, teaching over 500 children while also providing the same education to their teachers, parents, and village leaders. In 2016, this will continue to grow to reach more schools and more children.

Each one of the children receives a pack of supplies to help them continue their healthy habits: a bar of soap, a toothbrush, toothpaste, a hand towel, and a pair of nail clippers. Funding from the AAVia Foundation made these packs and various education supplies possible.

Kids in Cohana, Bolivia practice hand-washing. Photo by Nia Haf Photography

We look forward to continuing their work with this incredible program to continue providing this vital education to children. Together, we can give these kids the healthy habits that will change the rest of their lives.

Funding for the Clean Hands, Healthy Schools program is made possible by your tax-deductible donations. Thank you for your support of these children.

--Mackenzie Malia
AAVia Foundation Co-Founder & President

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Monday, August 25, 2014

Bolivia Needs a Bigger Boat


Give a man a fish, feed him for a day.
Teach a man to fish, feed him for a lifetime.
--Chinese proverb

I've become amazed how often people refer to that famous proverb after we explain the goals and efforts of the AAVia Foundation for the Health of Bolivian Children.

Typically, we acknowledge the point and move on. But, honestly, it's never felt exactly right.

It was this year's Shark Week that helped me understand what was missing from the idea. Shark Week is an annual summer "event" when Discovery, an American cable TV station, has a week of shark-based programming.

Included in that week of programming is the classic film Jaws. The famous scene when the three protagonists are on the boat looking for the great white shark which had menaced the summer beaches completed in my mind what the AAVia Foundation is doing.

You're gonna need a bigger boat.
--Police chief Brody in "Jaws"


On that boat were three men with a lot of motivation, knowledge and experience -- a very powerful skill set for a team to possess. Nevertheless, police chief Brody, marine biologist Hooper, and grizzled old fisherman Quint were lacking one thing: a boat sufficient for the challenge of beating that shark.

And so it is for our efforts in Bolivia!

We know people with motivation, knowledge and experience working hard for children's health in Bolivia. In so many important ways, they do not need us to teach them anything -- they already know "how to fish." They also understand how great their challenges are to improve the health of Bolivian children.

What they need is a bigger boat in the form of funding and equipment that is lacking in their resource-poor environment.

And that is why we are doing what we do.

--Timothy Malia, MD
Co-founder & Vice President, AAVia Foundation for the Health of Bolivian Children
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Monday, March 17, 2014

Say Ireland ... Think Bolivia

Happy St. Patrick's Day!

May green beer and corned beef brighten your day.

May our Irish heritage and jilty tunes filled with bodhran and flutes warm your heart.

May happy tales and words of affection for all you love fill the air on this day we celebrate that snake-banishing, Welsh-born saint we call Patrick!

On this special Irish day, however, I have one request:

When you say, "Ireland," just think, "Bolivia."

This, of course, is a play on a scene in Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid where Butch, the man with ideas, explains why he and the Kid should go to Bolivia. He describes the rich mines and all the wealth they could collect with their bank robbing skills. Comparing Bolivia to the old Gold Rush in California, Butch ultimately says:

So when I say, "Bolivia," you just think, "California."

I trade California and Ireland for one simple reason. Bolivia and Ireland share histories with similar struggles, influences, and high points.

  • Both are physically isolated geographically. Bolivia by mountains and its landlocked modern borders. Ireland by the sea.
  • Both influenced the world during Europe's Dark Ages. Bolivia with the Tiwanaku culture. Ireland with its monasteries, monks and scribes who kept copies of the great books of antiquity and later re-spread Christianity through Europe.
  • Both have often been invaded by foreign powers. Bolivia with the Huari, the Inca, and later the Spanish. Ireland with the Romans, the Vikings, and later the English.
  • Both suffered through centuries of poverty while a small number of people, often foreigners, gained wealth from control of the land and resources.
  • Both were affected by periods of massive death bordering on genocide. Bolivian natives dying of smallpox, cholera and other Old World diseases, and later working in the silver mines, after the Spanish arrived. The Irish through the Great Famine of the mid-nineteenth century.
  • Both have seen a significant emigration of its young and talented looking for opportunities abroad over the years.
  • Both cling to their traditional languages while trying to forge ahead in the modern world. Bolivia with Aymara and Quechua. Ireland with Gaelic. 

Yet their histories do differ in many ways today. Ireland has done well this past century -- its economy is secure, children are educated, health care excellent. Bolivia on the other hand still struggles --  its economy is weak, it struggles with narco-traffickers, its children often work rather than attend school, and the medical system is impoverished (only $235 per person per year on health care).

So today, while celebrating St. Patrick's Day, you may raise a glass in cheer for Ireland, or shed a tear when hearing Danny Boy, or share special moments with family and friends, but please also pause and remember Bolivia, the kindred spirit of Ireland!

We are working to make a better future for Bolivian children. Support our efforts with a donation to the AAVia Foundation for the Health of Bolivian Children. Then pass the word so others can understand the history and the need.

We are getting started and your help so far has given us the footing we need. Word is coming soon for projects on the ground in Bolivia -- and you'll be to thank for them.

Slainte!
--Tim

Timothy Malia, MD
Co-Founder & Vice President
AAVia Foundation for the Health of Bolivian Children
Join us on Facebook, Twitter (@AAViaFoundation), YouTube, and Pinterest!



Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Caring for the Kids of Prisoners

Program providing medical care for small children living in 
prison with their mothers in La Paz, Bolivia needs new funding.

Obrajes is a nice section of La Paz, Bolivia. It's not too far from downtown, has a nice mix of businesses and restaurants, and enjoys milder weather than much of the city due to its lower altitude. So it may be a surprise to have a women's prison in the neighborhood, yet that is where you will find COF (Centro de Orientacion Feminina Obrajes).

The street view of the prison is nondescript other than the sign on the wall identifying it and the metal door answered by uniformed police. A former school, the property behind the wall has a central building from that earlier era surrounded by newer structures and shacks crowding the space.

Also behind that wall are over a hundred children living with their mothers. And, I learned, a health program for those kids in need of support and new funding -- you can help! (keep reading to learn how)

A couple weeks ago, I joined Dr. Sergio Armaza Virreira and Dra. Jimena Condori Surco from the mobile medical unit of Hospital Arco Iris on a stop at the prison. It was one of many visits and tours I made during the ten-day long official visit to La Paz for the AAVia Foundation for the Health of Bolivian Children.


Making weekly visits to the prison, the mobile medical unit provides care for the children who live there, most under the age of five, who do not get medical services from the prison system. It is programs like the Hospital Arco Iris mobile medical unit that serve the needs of the kids.

Famously overcrowded and with decaying infrastructure, Bolivian prisons are also known for the high number of children living within their walls. The women's prison in Obrajes is no different. Designed to hold about 100 prisoners, the facility actually holds about three times that currently -- plus another 120 kids!

Entering the prison for the visit, I handed over my passport, was patted down, and entered a courtyard crowded with women and children. Some prisoners were doing some morning calisthenics, others were chatting in small groups, and many sat in chairs along the periphery. About a quarter of the facility is another courtyard where laundry hangs from wires, drying in the sun -- a service the women do for the public to make money to pay for what they eat and own while in the prison.

We made our way into the main building where the medical team met with prison officials to discuss how the financial support the program had been receiving is not being renewed. The team, however, reported they would continue visiting the prison each Wednesday to care for the kids even while funding opportunities were searched for.

This prison program is one part of what the mobile medical unit team from Hospital Arco Iris do, but its funding is separate. The mobile medical units provide free medical care for La Paz' street kids and poor when parked by plazas and markets. When special care is needed, the patients are served at Hospital Arco Iris, a private charity center that is now perhaps the best hospital in all of La Paz.

The children in the prisons get the same free care both on-site and at the hospital when needed. Visiting the prison weekly, the mobile medical unit provides continuity of care and  timely services before problems become severe. There were many smiles and happy conversations between the doctors, the women and many of the children during our visit -- evidence of the trust and respect these doctors have developed in the prison.

At this time, the prison program is not formally part of our plans at the AAVia Foundation for the Health of Bolivian Children. But it is a good program in need of support, and promoting such efforts is part of our mission, even if the support is not directly through us.

I wish to vouch for the prison program and the efforts of the doctors, colleagues I am happy to now call friends. And I also wish to offer you a way to support their efforts with a tax-deductible gift.

HOPEworldwide-Bolivia has been working closely with Hospital Arco Iris for the last three years and is focused on pragmatic efforts that have a positive effect on real lives. Having been in touch with them for many months, we formally visited them during our trip to La Paz and appreciate their efforts to improve health care in Bolivia. Our two organizations are truly kindred spirits!

Please take a minute and go to the DONATION page for HOPEworldwide-Bolivia. Their country director has assured me that funds will be directed to this effort when the Comments section says "Prison Program" (see middle of the donation page and "Additional Information"). Then please let others know of this need and opportunity.

There is a very capable program on the ground in La Paz offering care to children who need it. That program has capable doctors and staff, and it has a proven track record. Your support with funding will have immediate impact.

Thank you!

--Timothy Malia, MD
VP & Co-Founder, AAVia Foundation for the Health of Bolivian Children

Join us on the AAVia Foundation Facebook Page!

Monday, January 14, 2013

Mountains & Forests, Sand & Salt: Bolivia's Natural Beauty

At the AAVia Foundation for the Health of Bolivian Children, we often point out challenges faced by impoverished Bolivian children needing medical care. And we support our colleague starting a center for infants and children with colo-rectal problems who need high-level care or face life-long risk of problems and complications. But there is a lot more to Bolivia than poverty and barriers to medical care.

On a map, Bolivia looks small because it borders Brazil, one of the world's largest countries, but Bolivia is actually as big as the states of Texas and California combined! And Bolivia has remarkable diversity: Amazonian rain forests; savannas; mountain valleys; high peaks; Titicaca, the world's highest navigable lake; and even the world's largest salt flat which lies remotely at 12,000 ft (3600 m) elevation!

This tourism clip from Bolivia is worth a watch if you want to get a taste of the land's and its people's majesty. Enjoy.


And, remember, "Bolivia ¡te espera!"

--Timothy Malia, MD
Co-founder, AAVia Foundation for the Health of Bolivian Children
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Thursday, January 3, 2013

Highlights for December 2012

This past month has been filled with new, wonderful things for the AAVia Foundation! In future posts I will be sharing more details and information, but for now, the highlights:

  • We returned from a trip to Bolivia, where we had the opportunity to speak with doctors, nurses, parents, and children about the help that is needed.
  • We began this blog, which will become our place to talk with you about the foundation, Bolivia, and how all of us can make a difference.
  • Last but not least, we have added lots of new material to our website, including Pictures and more information about Our Project.

Our Facebook and Twitter pages have day-to-day updates, and our YouTube channel will have new videos soon. Join us on any of these sites to keep following the AAVia journey!


-Mackenzie Malia
Co-Founder, AAVia Foundation for the Health of Bolivian Children

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Our Blog: Warm in December, Cold in June


Welcome to the first blog post for the AAVia Foundation. We look forward to posting about our activities, stories of our experiences, news reports, updates from our Bolivian partners, and whatever else we can imagine. Our hope is this will help readers better understand our motivation to support efforts in Bolivia for children's health.

Today, however, I wish to point to great poetry, specifically Robert Frost (1874-1963) and a poem he wrote about one hundred years ago, The Mountain (1915)

Frost was a Pulitzer Prize winner and the first poet asked to read at a presidential inauguration when John Kennedy invited him in 1960. He used his life in New England to color his poetry with natural world imagery and colloquial speech which related to common-man life both literally and metaphorically. His work is a major part of how rural American life of the early twentieth century will forever be remembered.

While most may recall Frost's poem The Road Not Taken ("Two roads diverged in a yellow wood ... I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference."), we were drawn to The Mountain and from it found the name of our blog: Warm in December, Cold in June, as it reflects where we are and where we hope to go.

In the poem, a man is visiting a town which sits in the shadow of a mountain. As he hikes toward the mountain he meets a local farmer who is walking with an ox and cart. The conversation which follows relates how the mountain's size limits the growth of the town and that there are stories of a spring at the top which is "almost like a fountain," and which feeds a brook that flows down the mountain. The brook is storied as being "always cold in summer, warm in winter." The old man, though he has lived there a long time, has never climbed the mountain or seen the spring but he encourages the visitor to consider ways to climb the summit.

Later, the visitor tries to learn more about the brook and the water's temperature when he asks:

"Warm in December, cold in June, you say?"

And the old man replies (with what I imagine is a slow, heavy rural New England accent and dry humor):

"I don't suppose the water's changed at all.
You and I know enough to know it's warm
Compared with cold, and cold compared with warm.
But all the fun's in how you say a thing"
.
The poem winds down with no finality as the farmer turns to continue walking with his ox and cart. We never know if the visitor hikes the mountain finding the brook and its spring, or simply returns to the town where he started.

So goes life. We travel, sometimes to places that are "held in the shadow" of something grand like a mountain. We meet locals who encourage us to hike and explore new places. We ask questions and learn from the locals, understanding more of their past and possibilities for the future. But those possibilities are never certain and the reality that will unfold is only determined by what we choose to do next.

That defines the AAVia Foundation for the Health of Bolivian Children at this juncture. 

Bolivia lies in the southern hemisphere where, yes, the weather is warmer in December and colder in June. The peaks of the Andes Mountains dominate the geography. And we are learning from the locals so we may understand possibilities and choose our actions to better shape the future as we all climb the summit which lies before us.

--Timothy Malia, MD
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