Books for Health Education: India & South Asia
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Summary
This project sends free copies of Where There Is No Doctor and other Hesperian popular education materials to health workers and community leaders working to improve health in poor communities.
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Received $100 from 1 donation from people like:
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More Information About this Project
Project Needs and Beneficiaries
In India and other parts of South Asia, people suffer and die from preventable and curable health conditions and in many cases, access to information on simple, low-cost solutions is totally unavailable. Hesperians publications provide local health workers, educators, and community leaders with the knowledge they need to have an impact on the root causes of poor health. Each month we receive requests for 12-14 publications from India and for another 3-4 from nearby countries.
Activities
Hesperian develops and distributes health guides for people who live far from medical services or are too poor to pay for them. We evaluate free book requests to ensure they will benefit the broad community. Volunteers pack the books to save costs.
Funding Information
Total Funding Received to Date: $100
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $2,875
Total Funding Goal: $2,975
Additional Documentation
This project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Word file (projdoc.doc).
Resources
Why this Project is Important
Potential Long Term Impact
Using simply-written and heavily illustrated books and booklets, ordinary people (even those with little formal education) can learn to diagnose and treat common health problems and work together to address the underlying causes of poor health.
Project Message
We have widely used your materials [in about 1,000 villages]. Thank you very much for producing these wonderful books and for making them so easily accessible to groups like ours world wide.
- Balaji Sampath and Kalpana Karunakaran, Jeevansaathi, AID & Secy, Tamilnadu Science Forum
When this Project was Updated
Last Updated
This project was last updated on September 12, 2007.
Date Added to GlobalGiving
This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on July 19, 2006.
Latest Update from the Field
Recent Accomplishments
By Zena Herman - Development Associate, September 12, 2007 05:18 PM
In the last fiscal year Hesperian has sent 94 free books (plus dozens of shorter booklets) to health workers and community leaders in India and neighboring countries who have requested them. From non-profit development workers to remote village health promoters, school teachers, and clergy, countless people worldwide rely on Hesperian books as essential tools for healing, health education, and organizing for change. Hesperians Gratis Fund acknowledges and responds to the reality that often, those who most need our materials are the least able to pay for them. The following feedback from Gratis Fund recipients proves the success of the program in strengthening the capacity of grassroots healthcare workers to improve the health of marginalized people around the world:
Dr. A. Mariaraj, the Centre for Action in Training, Education and Research in Tamilnadu, India As we are deeply engaged ourselves in Community Health Programmes and Community Based Rehabilitation Programmes for the disabled children in the villages we find these two treasures of books (Helping Health Workers Learn and Disabled Village Children) extremely useful. We treat them as Bible for our Field Level Health Workers and Physiotherapists. We are happy to inform you that we are constantly in touch with these books...Of course, we grasp the methods found in the books and then localise the methods depending upon our reality. Our medical Doctors who visit once in a fortnight explain a few difficult chapters in simple words in vernacular so that the field level workers carry the message to the people at the grassroot level. We...have translated one or two chapters in our mother-tongue (Tamil) with a view to enabling our villagers to understand them.
Promoting health and environmental preservation among tribal women, Gujarat, India The organization Amari Mandali works predominately with tribal women and children in deforested and polluted South Gujarat to build environmental awareness and respect for the natural world. Their activities fall into 3 areas: school environmental education programs (with 60 schools); village environmental education and communications; and women's health program. They write: "We mainly use Where There Is No Doctor when creating new health programs
We have also used HELPING HEALTH WORKERS LEARN when preparing our programs... We have always seen environmental and health issues as utterly intertwined and thus through our practical projects we hope to bring about measurable improvements in both areas. We are sure that your books will continue to be always at our right hand. Thank you for publishing these books which are helping us in our work
"
Training community health workers, Pakistan Dr. Parsram Pardesi of Sindh writes: I, with confirmation, can say that Where There Is No Doctor and A Book for Midwives are most valuable and useful. They are more practical than even all medical education related books. It is essential to build capacity of willing volunteers at village level... I am using [these books] during training of female health workers, Traditional Birth Attendants, health staffs skill improvements, school teacher training workshops about health education and male health volunteers at village level.
HIV, Health and Your Community is the most in demand, followed by Where There is No Doctor, Where Women Have No Doctor, A Book for Midwives, and Where There is No Dentist. In addition, materials on sanitation and water, Sanitation and Cleanliness for a Healthy Environment and Water for Life, stand-alone booklets developed as part of our environmental health book project, also received strong distribution through the Gratis Fund.
The activities of the Gratis Fund have continued to be fueled by the dedication of volunteersfrom its coordinator, Lee Gallery, to our volunteer book packerswith a minimal amount of staff support and oversight. Lee has been volunteering as the program coordinator every week for 7 years. Using her extensive experience as a community volunteer and former Peace Corps volunteer, she carefully evaluates each request to make sure that the people asking for the manuals will use them to benefit a larger community of people in need, tracks the books we send, and reads every letter of thanks before passing it on to other Hesperian staff to appreciate. The commitment of Lee and the other Hesperian volunteers assisting the Gratis Fund are a true inspiration and ensure that funds received for this program have significant impact. We are extremely grateful for the support from our donors which has enabled Hesperian to support these health workers and grassroots leaders better serve their communities.
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