Welcome Back!

You have Gifts for Good in your basket.

Welcome Back!

Last time you were here, you were looking to help vulnerable children and families. Your support can save and change lives.

Sapahaqui is a rural area three hours from Bolivia’s capital, La Paz. Here, ChildFund Bolivia is supporting a key initiative which focuses on the training of community health volunteers, also known as guide mothers.

Guide mothers are responsible for visiting parents in the community to monitor children`s health and development. They teach caregivers how best to support children, and also take part in community-wide health monitoring events, held regularly at the local Early Childhood Development (ECD) Centre, with doctors on site.

At one session in 2014, the guide mothers met Ingela, a baby girl. She was severely malnourished and dehydrated. Her mother Cristina had 11 other children, with six-month-old Ingela being the youngest, and she was very worried.

The doctor`s diagnosis was clear: Ingela needed medical attention in the city because the community health centre didn`t have enough resources to help her. Unfortunately, Cristina did not have enough money to go to the city to get support; and had been giving Ingela only natural medicines and infusions. With this information, staff took Cristina and Ingela to the nearest hospital in El Alto City.

The diagnosis: severe anaemia, malnutrition, dehydration and pneumonia.

After a month in the hospital, Ingela had gained weight. The family received support from ChildFund throughout Ingela`s complete recovery: working with social services at the hospital to ensure Ingela received medicine, treatment and a bed at the hospital.

Two years later, Ingela is healthy and developing well, according to the results of her last visit to the ECD Centre with her mother for health monitoring.

“Those days were so hard for us,” Cristina remembers. “I didn’t have enough milk for Ingela, or money to save her. I am very grateful for the project and to ChildFund for all the advice and support.”

 

In remote Chhloung District in Cambodia, the electricity supply is very unreliable. Khsach Andaet, one of the few health centres in the area, often has no lights and no power for vital medical equipment, making it incredibly difficult to support expectant mothers and their unborn babies in the darkness of night.

Doctors and nurses struggle to see what they`re doing when caring for patients, and are forced to rely on hand-held torches, battery-operated lamps, and even the light from their mobile phones when the power unexpectedly goes off.

Pregnant with her first child, Marady arrived at the Khsach Andaet Health Centre in advanced labour. Like many rural Cambodians in poor communities, going to the hospital was not an option €“ the high costs of transportation and hospital services were far more than she could afford.

By the time she arrived at the centre it was nearly 7.00pm and pitch black, the sun had set at 5.30pm. “The midwife said there was no electricity. I was so scared of the darkness. I was frightened my baby would be difficult to deliver. And I was terrified my baby would be in danger,” says Marady.

Like any new mother-to-be, Marady had been wishing for nothing more than a safe delivery and a healthy baby. But without power, both her life and that of her baby were put at risk.

There are many complications that can arise during childbirth, some of which are life-threatening. Severe bleeding, infections, high blood pressure and obstructed labour regularly take the lives of mothers in Cambodia. Premature birth, infection, the placement of the umbilical cord around the neck of an unborn child and breach births are life-threatening situations for both mothers and their children.