Letter
from the Director,
Dr. Doug Stockman:
Thank you for visiting our web site. We hope you will
take the time to learn more about our project in San
Jose San Marcos de la Sierra in rural Honduras,
Central America. I am the Director for Global and
Refugee Health in the
Department of Family Medicine at the University of
Rochester, in
Rochester, NY. We are committed to improving the
health of under-served populations both in the US and
abroad. As part of our mission to the under-served,
we have partnered with a rural community in Honduras
and with a non-governmental organization,
Shoulder-to-Shoulder. Our shared goal is to improve
the health of the rural poor in Honduras using low
cost sustainable interventions. Our long term hope is
to help the rural Hondurans become self sufficient
with as little external resources as necessary.
Preventing illness before it happens is a more cost
effective solution than always trying to cure an
illness after it happens. Diarrhea is a great example
of this concept. In developing countries, drinking
water contaminated with bacteria and parasites is one
of the leading causes of diarrhea, and diarrhea is
estimated to kill more than 4 million children in our
world today. Infra-structure development, such as
latrines, improved water systems and basic hygiene
education can significantly reduce the risk of
diarrhea. This means less children get diarrhea and
therefore many childhood deaths will be prevented.
These interventions are more cost effective than
curative medicines for diarrhea – which often do not
help anyway. Therefore, many of our interventions are
directed towards infrastructure improvements.
Although we do provide curative care year round, we
want to break the cycle of poverty and disease
through prevention.
The old proverb of “You give a man a fish and he has
a meal. You teach a man to fish and he has food for
life” is at the core of our approach in Honduras. We
are not the experts and San Jose is not our home. The
local people must become self-sufficient. Therefore,
we keep interventions low cost and low technology and
the Hondurans often direct the interventions. This
enables us to pass off both the work and the
responsibility to the Hondurans. We become advisors.
At some point we anticipate the San Jose people will
be fully self-sufficient and will make the leap to
help train surrounding communities on what they
learned.
Many people that hear about our project ask how they
can help. Consider donating by either a direct
financial contribution, or by shopping at one of our
supporting retailers using one of the links on our
Web site. As an example, by clicking on the Amazon
link on our Home Page, four percent of your purchase
price will be donated by Amazon to our Honduran
project – at no cost to you! . Because organizational
overhead is paid by another funding source, 100% of
the proceeds go back to Honduras to fund many of the
projects you can read about on this web site.
If you are a student, consider volunteering your time
by fund-raising or becoming involved with one of the
many initiatives taking place in San Jose. To find
out more, visit the student section for contact
information regarding specific interventions. Thank
you again. Sincerely, Doug
WHO, WHAT, WHERE, WHEN,
WHY, HOW?