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Home > Find a Project > Cambodia > Health > Supporting 546 OVCs in Cambodia

Supporting 546 OVCs in Cambodia

Summary

This project provides training to 220 caregivers and CAGs in the skills of counselling children, including topics of loss and grief in 3 districts in Cambodia. progress reportread updates from the field


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More Information About this Project

Project Needs and Beneficiaries

CHEC has been requested by their communities to scale up the home-based care program focusing on OVCs to enable them to remain integrated into their own community with a positive outlook for their future. Strategies will be responding to the needs of children and orphans affected by AIDS through the set up of the OVC Support teams/OVC Committee at each Dist. (3 Dists such as Sa Ag, Kampong Tralach and Preah Sdach in 3 Provinces). We ensure access for OVC to essential services.

Activities

Through the creation of the supportive environment and protection of OVCs, we will be able to help OVCs to access essential services and reduce stigma and discrimination against them.

Funding Information

Total Funding Received to Date: $160
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $24,693
Total Funding Goal: $24,853

Additional Documentation

This project has provided additional documentation in a PDF file (projdoc.pdf).

Resources

Why this Project is Important

Potential Long Term Impact

The project will educate 328 carers and links arrangements with health and education services, community saving schemes and volunteer activities.

Project Message

“My family health become better, my wife gained weight for 3 kg, my first child's health is much improving and I could sent him to school".
- Mr. Seam Peng, Beneficiary

Who is Running This Project

Contact

Kasem Kolnary,
Director
#86
Sreet 608
Toul Kork, Phnom Penh 636
Cambodia
85512945 077
Email:

Project Sponsor

GlobalGiving Prediction Markets

Organization

Cambodian HIV/AIDS Education and Care (CHEC)
608
Toul Kork, Phnom Penh 636
Cambodia
85523 884 473
http://www.checcambodia.org

Learn more about Cambodian HIV/AIDS Education and Care (CHEC) and the project team.



Where this Project is Located

Country

This project is located in Cambodia and can also be found under Health.

For more information about Cambodia, read the Human Development Report on Cambodia or the Wikipedia entry for Cambodia.

When this Project was Updated

Last Updated

This project was last updated on February 06, 2008.

Date Added to GlobalGiving

This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on October 31, 2007.

Latest Update from the Field

Project update

By Dr. Kasem kOLNARY - Director, February 06, 2008 09:47 AM

Cambodia is one of the few countries that have been able to reach the 3 by 5 target of having at least 50% of people who need ARV treatment receiving ART treatment. According to the National Centre for HIV/AIDS, Dermatology and STDs (NCHADS), number of patients receiving ART as of September 2007 was 25,353, including 22,981 adults and 2,372 children (female patients accounted for 50.6%). However, PLHIV/AIDS need not only ARVs but also sustainable food and nutrition. Many families affected by HIV earn low incomes but have greater expenses on daily living that always push the HIV positive people confront with food insecurity. They face increasing difficulties to preserving their health. These constraint demand government, donor agencies, NGOs, civil society and local community take more actions on care and support to PLHIV/AIDS and OVC.
The communities where the CHEC projects are in place are coming up with unique strategies for supporting the PLHIV and empowering them to actively involved in formulating all interventions targeted at them. CHEC has been working in partnership with the government and civil society to involve community opinion leaders, health providers, and representatives of community groups to create an enabling environment for change, reducing the risks of transmission, and halting the spread of HIV/AIDS in Cambodia.

CHEC has been implementing the project in accordance to the National Policy and Priority Strategies for HIV/AIDS and Control in the Kingdom of Cambodia.

The Strategies of the National Strategic Plan are as follows:
1.   Increased coverage of effective prevention interventions and additional interventions developed
2.   Increased coverage of effective interventions for comprehensive care and support and additional intervention developed
3.   Increased coverage of effective interventions for impact mitigation and additional interventions developed
4.   Effective leadership by government and non-government sectors for implementation of the response to HIV/AIDS, at central and local levels
5.   A supportive legal an public policy environment for the HIV/AIDS response
6.   Increased availability of information for policy makers and programme planners through monitoring, evaluation and research
7.   Increased sustainable and equitably allocated resources for the national response .

CHEC has been successful in working with community leaders, facilitating the development of an enabling environment, working to increase the capacity of the target groups to address problems. The project listens to the needs of the target groups and is in a position to respond to them. Community Action Groups have been appointed which encourage the target groups to develop their own responses and solutions and provide relevant and appropriate information and resources.

According to the recent HBC/OVC project evaluation has shown that the main achievement of HBC is that it was able to respond to the varied needs of PLHIV and OVC depending on their individual situations. Services provided by HBC staff include home support visits, provision of care, and counselling, and health information, welfare support, assistance in establishing income generation activities, aid in setting up self help groups, and travel support to access various health services (OI/ART, VCT, STI, PMTCT and TB services) as well as Mondule Mith Choy Mith (MMM= Friends help Friends Centers). The HBC project continues to work well inline with MoH Standard Operating Procedures. There remains a strong demand for community HIV/AIDS education and care in the communities. In addition, the HBC project activities have helped to reduce stigma and discrimination toward PLHIV/AIDS patients and OVCs. There is a strong recommendation that the HBC/OVC project should continue and the provision of professional skills to PLHIV so that the community can sustain positive changes enable by HBC/OVC project initiatives. Furthermore, there is needed to expand project capacity to assist with transport and health costs as PLHIV/AIDS patients continue to face difficulties in relation to financial fees for medical check ups i.e.CD4 test costs.

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