Monday, February 27, 2012

Sending Hope Beyond Borders

Alexa, Age 5, with her mother.
This precious kindergartner doesn't live in Guatemala, where COTA usually works, but she does live in a country that doesn't stock the medication she she needs for survival. Alexa has adrenal insufficiency. Her case was referred to Children of the Americas by Melanie Wong, the Executive Director of The National Adrenal Disorders Foundation in Great Neck, New Jersey. Ms. Wong was trying to find a resource for hydrocortisone for Alexa. The lack of this medication is life-threatening for patients with adrenal disorders. Children of the Americas is not able to offer this service on a routine basis, but thanks to the generosity of one of our COTA pharmacists, Alexa was given a  free six-month supply of her medication, which was shipped to her in Central America.  Extending hope and friendship to families in need is the highest act of diplomacy.

Saturday, February 4, 2012

The faces of pediatric and maternal malnutrition in Guatemala

Two week old infant admitted for malnutrition. His mother has no breast milk
For the past few years, international news headlines have talked about the growing issue of pediatric malnutrition and growth stunting. It is not a new concern for COTA team members, but this particular year, it felt more personal. We held the babies admitted for critical malnutrition, but harder still was holding the mothers, and knowing we had little to offer them.
The mother in this photo is only 23 years old. This is her 7th baby. He cried most of the time he was on the pediatric ward while we were working there. Bonding with a baby you can't feed, and who won't stop crying, must be very difficult, and we saw his mother struggle with this.
We gave his mother our hand-made infant quilts, some baby clothes, and some maternal vitamins donated by our pharmacists. We fed her from our backpacks, and gave her Gatorade from our supplies. We taught her how she needed to nourish herself in order to make breast milk for her baby. Our nurses slipped her some money for food while she was there. She refused to use it for herself, and told us she would save it for her children.
But we couldn't give her what she needs most--an economically viable way to support her children. A job for her husband. Food for her table. Education for her children, which means purchasing school supplies she can't afford.
This family was discharged from the Guatemalan hospital last Wednesday. The hospital had no infant formula to give the mother. As you can see in the photo, the mother had no breast milk to feed her baby. He was vomiting when he left. All we can offer is our prayers, and our continued determination to travel to Guatemala annually to do what we can for those who need it the most.
Formula donations (powdered, with an expiration date beyond January of 2013) gratefully accepted.



Twenty Years of COTA: Perspective and Memories from Warren Brandwine

         My first COTA mission to Peten was in January, 2000. We flew up to San Benito in a surplus C-130 with the door held on with ...