Leta updates us from Bolivia about the past couple of weeks as the new volunteer coordinator. Here is what she reported:
For nearly the first time since I arrived here, I have the house almost completely to myself. The volunteers are off adventuring, one group in the city at la cancha (the biggest open-air market in South America) and the other at Inca Racay (Incan ruins about a half hour away). I considered joining the group hiking to Inca Racay, but, since I’ve been a little sick, I decided to stay home and take it easy. (It’s just a cold, Mom, don’t worry!)
This last week has been crazy. A group of 5 volunteers went home (and we miss them!) and another 17 volunteers arrived. That would have been crazy enough in itself, but a lot of them had trouble with their trips — canceled flights, lost luggage, etc. But now we have everyone and their luggage here, so life should calm down a bit.
This last week we did checkups on the kids at the school in Anocaraire, the community down the road. There are 540 kids there, but we only managed to get through around 200 of them. They’re starting their winter break this week, but hopefully we can go back once their vacation is over. We treated a lot of kids for parasites and skin infections, and treated one intestinal infection caused by salmonella. The hardest cases to see were the malnourished kids, because there’s really not much we can do for them. I’m hoping to go back there later this summer/winter and do fluoride treatments and hygiene education.
This coming week we’re doing an English camp at a girls’ orphanage, the Casa de Alegria, as well as doing a couple of clinics at other orphanages. We’re also starting to send medical students to the AIDS orphanage in the city. There’s only one pediatrician in the city of Cochabamba that can prescribe ARVs, so HIV positive kids don’t receive a lot of medical attention. We’re hoping the med students can help the staff at the orphanage monitor the kids’ health. We’re also starting to send volunteers to help at the main government hospital in the city, feeding and doing physical therapy with malnourished kids, as well as working with kids in the burn unit. I’ve been working hard to set up these partnerships, so it’s exciting to see them panning out and the volunteers getting excited about them.
Well, that’s about all the exciting news. I think I’m going to go take a nap in the hammock — life in Bolivia does have its perks!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment