Hesperian Weblog

Happy Bike to Work Day!

IMG_0714 Another morning, another commute to work – but this time, there were treats along the way! Today is Bike to Work Day, started by the League of American Bicyclists in 1956 and hosted in Berkeley by the East Bay Bicycle Coalition.

Almost half of Hesperian staff bike to work, and most of the rest of staff take the train, the bus, carpools, and their own two feet – it’s better for the planet, and better for us. And it can help us to slow down and connect with the world around us in a different way. We hope you joined us today (and everyday) in using your bicycle to get around whenever possible!

May 12, 2011 in Canada & US, Staff news | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Inside Hesperian

Hesperian logo mosaic

By Matthew Crimp

Last December, I started in earnest to think about an ever-present fear in the college student’s life—finding an internship for the summer. I pored over job search websites, talked to my school’s counselors, and, when all else failed, sent a pleading mass email out to my contact list of family and friends. I vaguely referred to terms such as “social medicine” and “health equality” in my preferences for a job. I’m going to be a third-year student at Williams College in Massachusetts, and I wanted something that would intertwine my sociology major with my pre-med classes and my interest in social justice work.

As usual, it was family that came through in the end, with my uncle suggesting Hesperian and giving me a link to the web page. Initially, I was a little nonplussed. They publish books? However, as I delved a little deeper into Hesperian’s mission and how the materials work (including reading their blog), I became interested. The model of community-supported independent health care that the books espouse was one that I had encountered elsewhere (most notably in reading about organizations like Partners in Health) and it was something that I wanted to learn more about. I contacted Hesperian about a summer internship, and, after some financial wrangling with my school to get a work grant, arrived in Berkeley in early June.

The first thing that I was struck by was the complete friendliness, openness, and generally good “onda” of the people who work in the office. Everyone here genuinely likes each other and the work that they do, and work long hours to make sure that the books they publish are as helpful, accurate, and beautiful as they can be. Reading a copy of Donde no hay doctor on one of my lunch breaks, I suddenly realized just what went in to producing a book like this, a product of endless scrutiny, revision, and promotion. The people who work here know that their books affect others in profound ways, and that is what drives them.

I spent the majority of my time supporting Hesperian’s new initiatives to share health information electronically. I also worked on research for the 2010 edition of Where There Is No Dentist, researched possible field review partners for the upcoming Spanish edition of A Community Guide to Environmental Health, and contributed to an interactive map for the website that is currently in progress.

Overall, I felt that I gained a deep understanding of Hesperian’s philosophy of community-based health and health equality and independence. This is the view that people should be knowledgeable about their own health issues and be able to treat a large share of them, as opposed to relying on a knowledge-giving doctor for everything. The horizontal rather than vertical knowledge and power structure not only appealed to me on a social justice level, but on a very practical one as well. Here are materials that you could use to better your health yourself, in a DIY fashion that is respectful of different people’s cultures and attitudes. I glimpsed that practicality through talking with some of the staff here, as well as from brown-bag presentations by some of the amazing people that use them around the world.

Inuit edition of A Book for MidwivesAs I prepare to travel back to my home state of Alaska (another place where Hesperian materials have been used!) and eventually back to college, I feel very lucky to have taken part in the work here, met these awesome people, and to have gained a new perspective on how health care can be provided respectfully and effectively. You don’t have to be someone in a white coat to help others in terms of health, equality, and social justice.

If you are interested in volunteering with us in our Berkeley, CA office, please email us at hesperian@hesperian.org with your resume and a brief description of your work/volunteer history and any specific skills and interests.

August 24, 2010 in Canada & US, Staff news | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

At Hesperian, every day is Bike to Work Day

IMG_0542 As so often in the San Francisco Bay Area, the early morning was foggy and cool, and now the rain is coming down into the office courtyard outside Hesperian’s windows. Through the raindrops, you can glimpse at least eight staff bicycles locked to the stair railings.

Hesperian is a bike-friendly office. Coworkers give tips on good routes, offer sympathy for surprise flats, trade information on bicycle gear, and loan spare socks after particularly damp commutes. And no wonder – since cycling promotes good health, spares the environment, and is a speedy and sustainable form of transportation, it’s consistent with Hesperian’s goal of helping to build a healthier world. It’s also economical in busy downtown Berkeley, where parking at a meter can run you $1.50 per hour – if you can find a spot.

This Thursday is Bike to Work Day in the Bay Area. If you don’t already, we encourage you to dust off your bike, put on your helmet, and ride!

May 11, 2010 in Canada & US, Environmental Health and Justice, Staff news | Permalink | Comments (1)

"Get Active for Earth Day" Contest 2009

Every year since the first Earth Day in 1970, communities have organized activities to restore our surroundings and improve our health. Earth Day is a fantastic opportunity to encourage discussion about environmental issues which affect health, both locally and all over the world. To help generate discussion this April, why not try a few ideas from A Community Guide to Environmental Health? If you don’t have a copy of the book, you can download the chapters for free at www.hesperian.org.

Which of the following tips did you try? Tell us and send pictures by May 1, 2009 to win a gift of books (worth up to $75.00) sent to health workers in your name, plus your own copy of A Community Guide to Environmental Health or any one of Hesperian's other titles! Send your Earth Day pictures and stories to ingrid@hesperian.org. We'll post the best ones on our site.

Tips on sustainable living from Hesperian’s

A Community Guide to Environmental Health

  1. Plagued by fruit flies? Got a plastic bottle? Make a pesticide-free fly trap. (see chapter 5, p. 57)
  2. Want to conserve water? Create a homemade drip irrigation system. (see chapter 15, p. 294)
  3. Want more healthy fruits and vegetables in your diet? Try double-digging in your yard, school, or community garden. (See chapter 15, p. 311)
  4. Need help controlling household pests the environmentally friendly way? (See chapter 17, p. 367)
  5. Doing your spring cleaning? Make your own safer cleaning products. (See chapter 17, p. 73)
  6. Want to make a grey water system? Get together with family or friends to construct a lovely wetland garden. (See chapter 6, p. 101)
  7. Need some new life for an eroded patch of dirt? Make some seed balls and toss them on the ground – fun for grownups and kids! (See chapter 11, p. 205)
  8. Want to put some worms to work? They will turn your food waste into rich soil for the garden. (see chapter 18, p. 400)
  9. Mold growing in your house? Get rid of mold spores before they can trigger allergic reactions. (see chapter 17, p. 358)
  10. Want to make your Earth Day dinner more fun? Cook your meal using a home-made solar cooker. (see chapter 17, p. 364)

Send your feedback to ingrid@hesperian.org by May 1, 2009 so we can share it with others - the best story/pictures wins the prize! We look forward to hearing back from you!













 

April 07, 2009 in Books, Environmental Health and Justice, Staff news | Permalink | Comments (0)

Hesperian's Tearrie Johnson Interviewed on New Wave Grrrl

Hesperian is so proud that Tearrie Johnson, our Publicity Associate, was interviewed on New Wave Grrrl.  New Wave Grrrl is a health information and resource sharing venue for women with a special focus on women's advocacy, sexuality, and information for women with disabilities. 
 
Check it out!

March 13, 2009 in Advocacy, Staff news, Women's Health | Permalink | Comments (0)

Welcome to our newest Hesperiana!

Sacha We are excited to announce the newest member of the Hesperian family: Sacha Rain Conant who was delivered in a water birth at her home in Berkeley, CA. Sacha's parents, Kristen Graser and Jeff Conant, along with the support of midwives welcomed her on December 31, 2007.

Kristen is a midwife herself and a contributor to the revised edition of A Book for Midwives, and Jeff is completing work on A Community Guide to Environmental Health, which will be published this spring.

Pictured to the left: Jeff and Sacha Conant

January 04, 2008 in Staff news | Permalink | Comments (0)

Hesperian Board Member Making a Difference in Kenya

Natasha_martin_pic_3Born in Barbados, educated in London in immunology, she became Director of the Pediatric Clinical Research Center Core Laboratory at the University of California in San Francisco. But it wasn’t until Hesperian board member Natasha Martin took her first trip to Kenya that she found the perfect job.

During that visit, Natasha met people living in the most dismal circumstances. But even those who couldn’t read or write had learned to look after many of each other’s HIV/AIDS-related health problems. Already an expert in understanding how HIV/AIDS affects children, Natasha soon realized that the Kenyans she was meeting should be responsible for creating and managing their own health care services. And she was especially touched by the children, some of whom were themselves infected with HIV, many of whom had been orphaned by the disease.

So in 2001 Natasha started the Grassroots Alliance for Community Education (G.R.A.C.E.), a program which enables Kenyans to establish the services they need. “Now, G.R.A.C.E. has its own Kenyan board of directors and a staff and office in Nairobi,” says Natasha. “We at G.R.A.C.E. USA try to help them do what they want to do.”

And what they have been able to do is quite remarkable, including sending more than 200 children orphaned by AIDS to school. Several children have already graduated from high school and are now going to university.

Other G.R.A.C.E. projects include workshops to teach community-based groups how to become more efficient and self-sustaining, a demonstration farm in the village of Nanyuki to teach people with AIDS how to crow crops and raise animals, home-based care information for people with family members who have AIDS, and teaching children marketable computer skills. “We also teach our youth how to be peer educators,” says Natasha, “so they can help prevent HIV infection and encourage people to be tested, and to get rid of the stigma associated with HIV and AIDS.”

Since Natasha retired from her work at UCSF, she has never been busier or worked harder. She visits G.R.A.C.E. in Kenya as often as she can. She brings resources, and learns how each project is doing and what changes the staff wish to make. And Natasha’s hard work has not gone unnoticed. In June of this year Natasha received the prestigious Jefferson Award, a national recognition honoring people who make a difference in their community.

Hesperian is proud to have Natasha Martin on our Board. Her wisdom and understanding of life in the communities for whom Hesperian books are written, is unparalleled. Natasha does indeed live up to the name given her by the Maasai community in Kenya: Naisula—she who has excelled.

To view Hesperian materials on HIV click here.

August 24, 2007 in Africa, Staff news | Permalink | Comments (0)

Hesperian staff drink tap water to boycott Nestle

The bottled water coolers in Hesperian’s office seemed to be just a part of the typical office landscape -- after all, you see them in every office you visit, everywhere. Cooler_cartoon

With dismay, we learned last month that the company which supplied our bottled water had been purchased by Nestle. The same Nestle of infant formula infamy. Activists have been waging a 30-year boycott of Nestle to protest their unethical marketing practices aiming to convince poor mothers around the world to buy formula instead of breast feeding their babies. As health activists, we couldn’t continue to buy water from Nestle.

And after discussing it, we realized that we shouldn’t be buying bottled water at all. While it may be convenient to get boiling hot or ice-cold water from the cooler, our public water system provides us with good quality, good tasting drinking water. After a four-year study, the Natural Resources Defense Council concluded that bottled water is no cleaner or safer than tap water. But big bottled water corporations like Nestle, Coke, and Pepsi (leaders of the $10 Billion US bottled water industry) have convinced many of us that somehow drinking water out of a tap isn’t “as good” as drinking it out of a bottle. Just as women have been bombarded with advertising to make them think that feeding their babies breast milk isn’t as good as giving them infant formula in a bottle. Who cares about truth when there’s a profit to be made?

Half of all Americans drink bottled water, and one in six Americans drink only bottled water. We invite you to join us in reducing that number and reclaiming tap water as a healthy choice, both at home and in the workplace.

For more information about the continuing Nestle Boycott, see the Baby Milk Action website for great reading, (and to view all the brands under this company). You might also want to read in the Boycott Nestle blog about Nestle buying Gerber Baby Foods here and here.

For more information about bottled water, see the “Think outside the bottle campaign” of Corporate Accountability. Food and Water Watch is also a good resource on privatization of water.

April 27, 2007 in Politics of Health, Staff news | Permalink | Comments (2)

HAPPY HOLIDAYS

Hesperianpicture1 HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM ALL OF US AT HESPERIAN!!!

December 22, 2006 in Staff news | Permalink | Comments (1)

On Annual Reports

Hesperian_ar2005_6_p1_270Every year, many non-profit organizations produce annual reports that detail their financial activities (income and expenses) of the past year, as well as list their major donors. Many also use the annual report to communicate a sense of what has been accomplished over the past year and to acknowledge those who have helped realize those activities.

As we worked on Hesperian’s 2005-06 annual report, we thought about annual reports we have received from other non-profit groups. We especially like the ones produced by the Community Development Resource Association in South Africa. Their 2005/2006 report (40 pages) includes an interesting discussion of the Transparency of Process in monitoring and evaluation, an issue central to navigating the power dynamics inherent in “development work.” They have been using annual reports to provide their financial information as well as useful, thought-provoking essays for at least a decade now. Past issues have discussed “Horizontal Learning,” storytelling, controversies in measuring development, etc. These can be accessed on their website (and use their search engine to find “Annual Report”).

At Hesperian, our effort (and our budget) is a bit more modest, but we believe you’ll find the results of the work we’ve done in 2005-2006 are quite impressive. Our annual report, which is now posted here, was beautifully produced by our talented designer Iñaki Fernández de Retana. It has also been printed on recycled paper by our wonderful, unionized, neighborhood printshop, Inkworks. In 12 pages, it summarizes some of the past year’s activities and express our thanks to the hundreds of individuals and organizations who have donated their time, resources and experience to help us produce books useful in the struggle to achieve Health for All

Please contact Khanh Pham with any feedback, or if you would like to receive a paper copy of our Annual Report.

November 08, 2006 in Staff news | Permalink | Comments (0)

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