TFH Program Director Sarah Nunn and local Nicaraguan Program Coordinators on international panel

Nicaragua Program Director and Program Coordinators Albany Chavarria and Carolina Lopez Ochoa are part of Global Health Delivery’s online international panel discussing Community Health Workers and global health.  Register and join the conversation here!

Expert Panel: Nurses and CHWs Working Together

Nurses and community health workers (CHWs) provide the vast majority of health care services around the world. However, training/education, scope of practice, compensation (to name only a few points) vary widely amongst and between both nurses and CHWs. There is also very little formally known about their working relationships, best practices or effects on patient outcomes. In November 2011, GHDonline members in the nursing community expressed a significant amount of interest in the topic. We hope that with your participation, this week-long expert panel broadens, informs and continues this important conversation. Please join in, ask questions, make comments, share resources and post some of your own responses to the questions.

Panelists:
Jessica Aguilera-Steinert, LICSW, Director of Training and Technical Assistance at the PACT Project
Heidi Behforouz, MD, Founder, Executive Director and Medical Director of the PACT Project
Albany Chavarria, Health Promoter and Program Assistant for Teach for Health
Sarah Nunn, RN, MSN, Teach for Health co-founder, Director of Nicaragua Programs
Carolina Lopez Ochoa, Health Promoter and Program Coordinator for Teach for Health

April 2012 Monthly Health Promoter Meeting

The monthly meeting of health promoters has now concluded. It started with a powerpoint presentation about TFH: our history, methodologies, partnerships, MOUs with the promters, our immediate plans, plans for our 5 years here in Nicaragua, plans for the future, all the workshops we’ve done with promoters, some STATs on the promoters and what we know they’ve been doing, and our thoughts/plans/hopes for this years august workshops.

After this, the promoters broke into their community groups and presented on everything they’ve been doing and their plans for the future as promoters. They broke their activities into the CDAP levels with group input. Then we did a vision for the future of the program exercise and also got input on what they want this august in terms of workshop content.

 

See the report April 2012 Monthly Report HERE (Spanish)

Dance for Health 2012 – TFH’s Upcoming Fundraiser

Teach for Health will again be holding out annual fundraiser, “Dance for Health” at the Bissap Baobab at 19th St and Mission in San Francisco. It will be Saturday, April 7 with the $10 door charge going directly into all of our programs. And of course, we’ll be having plenty of fun too- with live salsa music and much more. Come on out, we’d love to see you there.

Conflict Resolution and Leadership Seminar

On Febrary 15th a group of around forty promoters gathered together to shield themselves from the rainy day to discuss the important topic of conflict resolution. The turn out was pretty good for it still being coffee harvesting season. After they arrived we opened up by having people write on pieces of paper a statement about “a time when you stood up for yourself”, “a time when you did not stand up for your self”, or “something you feel so passionate about you would stand up for it”. People went around and shared their experiences. Some women shared their experiences of standing up against sexual harassment or on the other hand, times when they did not. Many people expressed feeling passionate about standing up for their family and friends. Each person had a unique experience to share that many people could relate to.

After playing telephone and other pump up games, we began our skits. The group of people running the meeting- Albany, Dinora, Sarah, and Zannah spent the majority of the time on a scene where alternate endings were played out based on the type of communication style that was used. The scene was a conflict between two promoters where one regularly attended the meetings and one rarely showed up. A conflict arose from the frustration that arose from this unequal participation in the group. There were four examples: one with a passive action, one with an assertive, another with passive-assertive, and another with mediation done by a program assistant. Each way that the scene was dealt with led to a different ending. At the end, each style was debriefed and people decided which skit was which type of conflict resolution.

The final activity was a competition where groups matched descriptions of the different types of conflict resolution to their corresponding papers. There is nothing like a little competition to get people engaged and excited- people were running here and there trying to match them and the fastest. At the end we talked about each style and where people thought the descriptions should go- if they should stay or move locations. This was a useful activity to get people to start thinking about the types of resolution and the activities associated with them. An example would be: description- yelling- matching style: aggressive.

In the end it was a success. Although it can be a challenging topic to discuss because it is so deeply personal and variant on the personality, culture, and context, the training started some interesting and important discussions relating to the subject. The promoters expressed the importance of getting along and serving and leaders within their communities. Conflict will arise everywhere but what matters is the ability to dispel and transform the situation to create a positive outcome for those involved is a skill that benefits the individual, group, and community.

La Feria de la No Violencia

November 25th is the national day of non-violence here in Nicaragua. The UCA – San Ramon, a local farming cooperative consortium, took advantage of this day to host a non-violence fair and invited us to host a table.

Guest speakers at the fair discussed violence as a social problem and encouraged open discussion of violence related issues. The UCA theater group also got the audience involved in a game designed to provide information about the different types of violence.

A local musical group and two local dance groups performed and the UCA invited community members to sell their produce, coffee, and other products. Mixed in with these for-sale items was a wealth of information and resources related to violence.

The Teach for Health program assistants put together a poster with information about the community health promoter program to spread awareness. They also contacted the local Ministry of Health who agreed to donate a box of condoms for us to pass out during the fair, along with informational handouts we compiled from previous promoter workshops and from the resources of UCA – San Ramon.

A local news group covered the event and even interviewed the program assistants! We were able to watch the interviews and the report of the event that night on three local channels.

An amazing estimated 300 people attended the event. It was a wonderful opportunity to provide support and open up discussion of the many types of violence that can affect the lives of people here and around the world.

ferria de la no violencia