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Tiny Aid Group Rescues Mothers
in Haitian Village
By Melinda Tuhus
June 16, 2005 - (WOMENSENEWS) Haiti, the poorest
country in the western hemisphere, has health, education, and mortality
statistics rivaling those of countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
But in the village of Jacquesyl on Haiti's northeast
coast, a happier story is unfolding. While its residents are very
poor, they're better off than many of Haiti's 8 million people,
thanks to a partnership with Marycare, Inc., a small woman-to-woman
nonprofit based in New Haven, Conn.
Most of the village's 1,200 residents live in tiny, cement block,
tin-roofed houses that lack electricity, sanitation and running
water. Women cook their family's meager daily meal of corn mush
over charcoal fires outside their homes. Whatever fruit is in season
completes their diet.
Still, signs that the village is benefiting from
Marycare's work are widespread. There is a new well for drinking
water that is accessible to all villagers, though it doesn't fill
the entire need. There is a propane-gas refrigerator to keep medicines
stored in the clinic, which employs a nurse and community health
educator.
There is also an invisible but even more remarkable
sign of progress: Women in the village are surviving child birth
like never before.
"In the past two years, no mothers have died
in childbirth," says Diada Angrand, a community health educator
funded by Marycare who has helped improve health care for women
in Jacquesyl. "And the only baby who died was born to a mother
who had attempted a self-abortion."
Founded by Three Women
Marycare was founded in 1996 by three women who knew from their
experience working with poor women in the U.S. that women must be
at the center of programs to improve health and education and increase
family income. They knew each other through their participation
in the liberation theology movement in Haiti. One of the founders
is Sherman Malone, a mother and social worker who first came to
Haiti in 1994 with a project that matched her Catholic parish in
New Haven, Conn., with that of Our Lady of Mercy in Jacquesyl.
Malone has come back at least twice a year ever
since, learning fluent Creole along the way, working through the
church with the village's health and education committees and the
women's market cooperative. "In 1996," Malone says, "I
learned there had been 35 babies born in Jacquesyl and 10 of the
babies had died and three of the mothers had died. And so it was
clear that that was an emergency and the first thing that needed
to be addressed." The most recent global statistics on maternal
mortality, released last week by the United Nations Population Fund,
underscore how remarkable it is for the village to have lost no
women to childbirth in two years.
Half a Million Die in Childbirth
Half a million women die every year in childbirth,
according to the U.N. report. In Haiti, 7 women die for every 1,000
giving birth, or about 1,700 annually. Marycare's work in Jacquesyl
also proves the well-worn adage among public-health workers that
it's relatively cheap and easy to reduce maternal mortality. In
Haiti, only 24 percent of women give birth with the help of a trained
attendant. Most deliver at home, where dirt floors and no running
water make home births dangerous. With an annual budget for Jacquesyl
of between $25,000 and $35,000, Marycare couldn't afford to build
a hospital for all the women who give birth at home, so it put together
a "safe birth kit," consisting of a receiving blanket,
a new razor blade for cutting the umbilical cord, a shoe lace to
tie it off, alcohol wipes and sterile gauze pads. These inexpensive
items, along with tetanus vaccination for all women of child-bearing
age, have been credited with helping to prevent infections and reduce
the incidence of tetanus, which many women contracted when rusty
knives or broken bottles were used to cut the cord.
International Aid Missing
Marycare, according to the village health committee,
is so needed because international aid to the country doesn't get
to a remote village like Jacquesyl without the help of other organizations
that can work in partnership with the local people.
These small successes have occurred in the context
of an international aid system that, from the perspective of the
supposed beneficiaries, is inconsistent and capricious. Aid from
institutions like USAID and the World Bank is not always delivered
as promised, or is sometimes withdrawn due to corruption or political
unrest. And dollars for debt repayment flow out of Haiti faster
than aid flows in. For most of the past decade, Haiti got no new
aid from big international and bilateral lending institutions because
it was in arrears on repayment of previous loans.
Now, after the second overthrow of democratically
elected President Jean Bertrand Aristide, with an unelected interim
government in power, the World Bank in January approved three new
projects totaling $75 million in grants and loans for each of the
next two years. USAID has also resumed aid to Haiti, pledging to
provide up to $300 million over the same period for "security,
budget support, immediate employment generation, elections support,
democracy and human rights programs, technical advice and assets
recovery," according to USAID. But, as Malone says, "such
aid is rarely focused on improving the quality of life for women
and children."
Work Ahead
Nurse Elirose Joseph says the most common health
problems in the village are diarrhea, parasites, malaria, typhoid
and vaginal infections. "No one really knows how many people
are HIV-positive," she says, "because very few people
get tested." On Malone's most recent trip in February, she
brought test kits for HIV, malaria, syphilis and tuberculosis. AIDS
treatment is available at a couple of clinics in Haiti, but they
are inaccessible from Jacquesyl. Marycare pays Joseph's salary.
"To have a highly competent Haitian nurse working in the village
makes all the difference in improving maternal health," Malone
says. Still, Marycare cannot address all the needs of this village.
Three women interviewed in their homes--mothers of 6, 8 and 10 children--seemed
squeezed dry by life. They all told Women's eNews they're very happy
that a doctor arrived in Jacquesyl for the first time last November,
fresh out of a Haitian medical school. But they said that they themselves
rarely go to see him with their own complaints. Each visit costs
the equivalent of 15 cents and they can't afford it. Marycare has
a fund that pays for children's visits. But so far, mothers here
cannot afford to see a doctor.
For more information:
Marycare, Inc.: - http://www.marycareinc.org
http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/2285/context/archive
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