Saturday, April 26, 2014

é a malária, não é? (It's malaria, isn't it)

April 25, 2014 (yesterday) was World Malaria Day.  So I figured I should write a blog post about malaria, this won't be overly exciting, but I'm trying to write a blog more often and this is an important issue here.  So a lot of you reading this probably have never had to think much about malaria in your daily lives.  You probably don’t know someone personally who has died from malaria or even someone who has had malaria.  I’ll admit it, before coming to Mozambique, I knew malaria was a big problem in a lot of the world, and killed a lot of people but I never really had to worry about it living in the United States, since it was considered eliminated in the US in 1951.  

But since joining the Peace Corps and moving to Mozambique it has been something I have had to deal with.  I had to start taking malaria prophylaxis (malaria meds to help prevent getting it), had to start sleeping under mosquito nets, and started using mosquito repellent more frequently and not just because the mosquitos are annoying, but because they can get me sick.  I have also had to deal with the consistent occurrences of the question, “Is it malaria?” or “Oh you had malaria” when I tell someone I am or was sick recently.  Here malaria is so common, most people think any combination of the symptoms or anytime someone is sick, it means they have malaria.  Toward the beginning of my class at the IFP, we played a game “I’ve never” where I or someone read a statement and if you had never done that you stepped into the circle.  It was a get to know you activity as well as practicing some English.  I read the phrase, “I’ve never had Malaria” and I think only one of my students stepped into the middle of the circle along with me.  I saw the look on some of their faces at the fact that I’d never had malaria, they were very surprised.  Then last week I did a whole lesson on malaria.  We listened to a TedTalk by Sonia Shah about malaria and discussed some of her points.  Part way through one of my students raised his hand and said, “Trainer, I remember you said you never had malaria, do you not have mosquitos in the United States?”  I explained that we had mosquitos but malaria was not a problem for us anymore, it used to be a problem but it was eliminated, like many other countries. Some of them knew this already, but others were again very surprised that before coming to Mozambique I didn't sleep under a mosquito net, or that I didn't have to worry about malaria.  

Malaria is curable and preventable and yet a huge problem in a lot of the world.  Why?  People know about malaria and how to prevent it, but many people feel that it is just a part of life and they don't need to do much to prevent it, because everyone gets it and over time they start to develop some immunity to it, so it isn't as bad.  But the majority of people dying from malaria are children under 5 who have not developed this immunity.  And by not taking precautions against it, the rest of the population is adding to the prevelence of these deaths.  How so, you might ask?  Well Malaria is spread from person to person through mosquito bites.  So if a 35 year old man who has had malaria multiple times in his life and has developed some immunity to it, gets malaria again but it doesn't really affect him much and then a mosquito bites him and then bites his 3 month old granddaughter, this is how she can get malaria and since she is so young and doesn't have any sort of immunity to it, it could kill her.  I'm not saying that everyone thinks that they shouldn't take precautions because malaria is just a part of life, and most people I've met here in Mozambique don't feel this way, but it is a common thought throughout the world that is affected by it.  

Mosquito nets are a huge prevention tool, yet many people do not use them.  Even when the local hospitals hand them out or sell them for very cheap often people use them for other things.  For example, in a nearby town, where some of my students are from (and told me about this problem), people often use mosquito nets as fishing nets.  A large population of this town makes their living selling fish they catch, and not only that, they get their own food this way.  So when given this nice big net or when they buy one, that is supposed to help them prevent malaria, they decided to start using it to fish and get more product and food for their families.  It is common to see mosquito nets here and in other countries used for a variety of different things, other than malaria prevention.  So how do you convince a population that it is more important to protect themselves from malaria, than to improve their fishing abilities, thus making more money and having more food.  I'm not entirely sure.  But I hope someone figures that out someday and malaria can be completely eradicated.  It's so strange to me that we have this illness that we know where it comes from, how to cure it and how to prevent it and yet in 2012, an estimated 627,000 people died of malaria (CDC.com).  Again, I don't know how to fix this, but hopefully someday malaria will not be an issue anywhere.


                So now for a little education and facts for you. 
  • About 91% of malaria-related deaths in 2010 occurred in Africa.  The majority of these deaths were children under 5.
  • Malaria is spread from person to person by mosquito bites.  (A mosquito bites an infected person  and gets infected with the parasite, then bites another person and transmits the parasite)
  • Malaria is spread by some species of female Anopheles mosquito, and these usually bite between the hours of 9pm and 5am
  •  Approximately 1,500-2,000 cases of malaria are reported every year in the US, almost all in recent travelers.  Reported malaria cases reached a 40-year high of 1,925 in 2011. (cdc.gov/malaria/about/facts.html)
  • Of the species of Anopheles mosquitoes found in the US, the three species that were responsible for malaria transmission prior to elimination are still prevalent; thus there is a constant risk that malaria could be reintroduced in the US (cdc.gov/malaria/about/facts.html)
  • Malaria is preventable and sleeping under an insecticide-treated mosquito net every night is one of the best ways to protect yourself and others from malaria. (I recently heard an interesting statistic… If 80% of a community slept under a mosquito net every night, malaria could be eliminated from that community.)
  • Malaria is curable.   Medicine is often taken 2 times a day for 3 days but it depends on the weight and age of the person. 
  • As of 2013, 111 countries are free from malaria

Friday, April 18, 2014

Good Morning Teacher

It's official... I am an awful blogger.  I didn't realize that my last post was in February, sorry about that everyone.   In my defense, I am in Mozambique where internet is not always easily available to me and my life as become very “normal” at least to me, but that is still no excuse because I know there are a lot of people (or maybe only a few) who want to know what I’ve been up to for the past few months. So what have I been up to through the months of February and March since my last post.  Well a lot, but also not a whole lot.  So we had interviews to get into the IFP during February. Because I'm to lazy to write a lot about this you should go to my roommates blog and read all about her take on it.  I pretty much agree with everything she says, and she is much better at keeping up with her blog :)!   Let me just say that it was frustrating, interesting, eye-opening, and comical all at once.

Now for what I've been doing with alll my time.  Teaching, thats about it right now.  I am teaching one class at the IFP (my original job) and since I didn't have much to do there I went to the secondary school to see if they needed English teachers, which they did, and I am teachering two turmas (classes) of 11th grade English.  It is nice to get both the experience at the IFP and the experience of a secondary school teacher... because let me tell you they are completely different from each other and very different from what I am used to teaching in the states.

                I’ll start with the secondary school.  Each class has 84 students on the class list, but I’d say only about 70 show up on a regular basis, sometimes more, sometimes less.  I have each class 3 times a week, two douplas (two 45min. classes back to back) and one single class period.  The only material I have is a chalk board and chalk and if I have access to big paper to write on I can use that.  The students only have notebooks and pens and do not have text books or work books to use.  Several of the students end up sitting on the floor during my class because there are not enough desks for everyone.  It is very difficult to plan lessons for classes that are that big and its even harder to have good classroom management with that many students and when many of them could care less about learning English.  Especially when they know that no matter what I give them for a grade, it will probably be changed to passing.  Even if they get a high grade, it will probably be changed to a lower but still passing grade.  The grading scale is from 0 to 20 and anything over a 10 is considered passing and a good grade.  For some reason here they don’t think that many students or any in some cases, should get over a 14 and below a 8 or 9 no matter how much work they did or didn’t do throughout the trimester.  I have several students who did not pass my classes and some with some very good scores, so we will see what happens with that when I turn those grades in.   

On the other hand my IFP students are great! (not saying that the secondary students aren’t, but it’s just very different.)  I have 33 students in my class, most really seem to care about learning and trying and are always full of qustions.  I still only have chalk and a chalk board in the classroom, but with only 33 students it is easier for me to bring in supplies for them like colored pencils and what not.  We also have a smartboard here that I can use, so that is fun for some classes.  Grades are still an issue because most people have the same mentality and my grades may get changed at the end of the semester but I hope not.  The students work hard to earn those grades and I just don’t understand the mentality of cheating here and changing grades, but it is what it is.

So I have been in Mozambique for over 6 months (now getting closer to 7) and my roommate Sam and I were sitting around making a list of all the things that we haven’t done in over 6 months…. So here it is.

In the last 6 months I haven’t….
  1. Been in a building over 3 stories high (ok the hotels in Nampula and Maputo… maybe)
  2. Climbed a flight of stairs in a building (again see above… that’s still been over 4 months)
  3. Been in an elevator
  4. Eaten or seen bacon
  5. Had easy access to reliable wi-fi
  6. Seen a dog on a leash (but I’ve seen several goats on leashes)
  7. Driven a car
  8. Gone a day without hearing or speaking another language
  9. Been to a shopping mall
  10.  Eaten at a fast food restaurant
  11. Had delivery food
  12.  Lived within a mile of a store
  13.  Not had to bring my own toilet paper into a bathroom
  14. Used a public restroom that wasn’t a dump flush or a pit
  15.  Had air conditioning in my home
  16. Spent a night where I didn’t need to sleep under a mosquito net
  17.  Gone a week without having take malaria meds
  18. Been to a movie theatre
  19.  Not had to filter my water
  20.  Mowed a lawn or seen a lawn mower
  21.  Used a washer and dryer
  22. Lived with a supermarket within 50K
  23. Taken public transport that didn’t have a goat, chicken, or several crying babies on it (usually two or more of these)
  24. Been able to buy things at a store or market after 8pm
  25. Not had to wear sunscreen
  26. Not had awful tanlines (especially on my feet… what up Teva Tan)
  27. Not had hundreds of roommates that were of the insect persuasion (yes we call all the cockroaches and other insects our roommates now)
  28. Had a closet
  29. Had a legit system (shelves, dressors, ect) to store things
  30. Seen a skateboard
  31.  Seen a soccer net (most of the goals here are just empty goal posts or nothing at all)
  32.  Worn Flip flops on a daily basis because they are not an acceptable form of footwear to wear around town. They are house shoes…
  33. watched Netflix
  34. Been in classroom with a white board, maps and things on the wall, and other materials (not just chalkboard and chalk)
  35. Paid with a credit card or debit card
  36.  Paid with American money
  37.  Had a voicemail
  38.  Spoken on the phone without having to worry about running out of credit
  39. Been in the same room as my family
  40. Been in the US
  41. Seen snow
  42. Had a normal bowl movement
  43.  Gone a day without talking about foods I miss, poop, or sex (usually at least 2 of these things are brought up in conversations by every PCV)
  44. Gone a day without seeing a baby on a motorcycle
  45. Used a doorknob to open a door.
  46. had ice in a drink
  47. Eaten chicken that wasn’t killed that day
  48. Gone a day without being called “white person” in some language or another
  49. Shown my knees in town
  50. Used a Microwave
  51. Gone a day without multiple mysterious bug bites on my body
  52. Been somewhere with a fire department
  53. Had soda out of a plastic bottle
  54. Had a beer at home
  55. Used an actual oven
  56. Used a dishwasher
  57. Taken a taxi
  58. Owned a chair that wasn’t plastic
  59. Straightened my hair
  60. Gone a day without seeing people carrying things on their heads
  61. Entered a classroom without students standing and saying good morning teacher or good afternoon teacher
  62. Been inside a target
  63. Been inside a coffee shop
  64. Eaten a hamburger
  65. Used tortillas that I didn’t make