children

Thanks to Canada from Angkor Hospital

Even though I have not lived in Canada for many years I am still very proud to call myself a Canadian. With Canada Day coming up very soon I just wanted to say thank you to all the wonderful Canadians I have met over the last several years who have so generously gone out of their way to support Angkor Hospital for Children and the kids of Cambodia.

For many of you, it was volunteering your precious vacation time, for others it was bringing medicines, hygiene kits, toys and art supplies and for some it was holding dinner parties and presentations to raise awareness of the work of AHC in Siem Reap. To all of you we owe you a very special thank you. Your generous contributions of time and money go a long ways in Cambodia. We are so very appreciative of your participation and charity. You are truly making a difference.

Download the original pdf file here.

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Friends Without A Border

The Center for Friends Without A Border at Angkor Hospital for Children (AHC) receives and educates the many visitors to the Angkor Hospital for Children campus. In addition to viewing rotating exhibits from celebrated photographers worldwide, visitors have a unique opportunity to learn more about the impact of Cambodia’s recent history and the dramatic progress being made today through the medical care, education and outreach programs provided by AHC.

Angkor Hospital for Children provides free pediatric care to more than 300 children each day; trains thousands of healthcare professionals each year; and strives to restore Cambodia’s healthcare infrastructure. Every child has the right to a happy and healthy life!

Construction of New Wing of M’Lop Tang Day Centre

The site has been safely fenced out from M’Lop Tapang day Centre in order to completely avoid access to building site for children attending the centre.

Ground was broken at the end of March and the Foundations of the building will be laid during April 2009. Status of construction on April 8, 2009:

Room to Read Project

8am Visit to Room to Read project funded by Cassils and Wettsteins

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Paul Hancock, Patricia Solar, John and I traveled 40 minutes outside of Siem Reap to visit a village school library. For anyone interested in funding child education Room to Read is well positioned in Laos and Cambodia as we know from personal experience.

In Cambodia the Room to Read team has chosen to focus on all of our core programs, except for the School Room Program. They have identified library construction, Khmer language children’s books, and girls’ scholarships as three of the most important improvements we can make to the educational system and have thus chosen to focus much of their work there. The following table highlights our Cambodia team’s success to date:

Program Total Thru 2008 2009 (Projected)
Libraries Established 1105 81
New Local Language Titles 69 10
Schools Constructed - -
Girls Education Participants 1525 300

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AHC Satellite Program at Sot Nikum

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Helping Change the World for Children in Rural Cambodia

Children are the innocent victims of the most drastic consequences of poverty. In Cambodia, thousands of children die each year of preventable and treatable disease and it is not uncommon for a child to die of complications from respiratory infections, diarrhea, and diseases which are practically eradicated in the more developed countries.

In this impoverished and battered country, the mortality statistics are earthshaking:

  • 15% of Cambodian children die before the age of 5
  • 35% of Cambodian children are not immunized for polio, measles, or diphtheria
  • 45% of Cambodian children under 5 are moderately to severely underweight
  • 12,000 Cambodian children under the age of 15 live with HIV/AIDS

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Angkor Hospital for Children

Patient Total October 2008

  October 2008 Year to Date Total since 1999
Outpatient 12,860 92,733 601,469
Inpatient 214 2,339 24,876
Intensive Care Unit 58 622 3,894
Low Acuity Unit 85 856 7,741
Emergency 603 6,418 88,051

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Mavericks on a Mission

By Adrian Mack

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Maybe they should call her Cyclone Nina. When she sits down for a chat with the Asian Pacific Post at a Kitsilano diner, Nina Cassils’ first act is to start dispensing gifts, like a hand-woven basket from the Rawang community in Burma-Myanmar’s Kachin State, along with a rapid-fire history lesson of the region. All this while simultaneously gushing over the Madonna concert she’d attended with a bunch of girlfriends the night before at BC Place.

The youthful-looking 54 year-old is warm, open, and super-kinetic. She leaps from topic-to-topic without pause, sometimes tripping over her words in the rush to communicate as much information as she can.
When she empties her bag on the table in front of her, it’s a messy snapshot of the work that Cassils and her husband Dr. John Cassils are currently engaged in – along with their friends Susan and Wieland Wettstein – on behalf of their Cassils Wettstein Asia Fund. The Fund has spent the last 10 years improving the lives of indigent children and families in Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, and Burma-Myanmar, throwing its energies behind libraries, orphanages, schools, hospitals, and other relief efforts.

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To date, over $3 million has been raised in direct aid benefiting hundreds – if not thousands – of children and their impoverished families. There’s a handsome spiro-bound booklet produced for potential donors to a pediatric hospital in Angkor, Cambodia – a “ten-year dream,” in Nina’s words. There’s a brochure about the Moo Baa Dek orphanage in Thailand. “We’ve been with them for 10 years,” she says. “There’s about 150 children here and it’s actually become so large it’s its own village. It’s neat.”

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Mobile Library

Lighting up the world with words!

mobile-libraryIt should always be impossible for us to accept that during evening hours while more fortunate children can be found safe at home with their families, the poverty stricken boys and girls of the same planet will often only be located roaming the unforgiving streets of the developing world. This is particularly true in various areas throughout Cambodia, where disadvantaged children are commonly found begging, working to generate income in whatever way they can, or being lured in by pedophiles who do nothing but exploit Cambodia’s most precious assets.

Refusing to accept this situation as an inconvenient truth, M’Lop Tapang Centre for Street Children in Sihanoukville decided to extend its Mobile Library which previously only toured in search of these children during the day, to also operate during the night. Says Project Director Maggie Eno:

“Our night time outreach is now more effective and fun because the M’Lop Tapang Mobile Library can be lit up and used regularly, in any location and at any time thanks to Light up the World Foundation’s efficient solar systems!”

Indeed, M’Lop Tapang’s Mobile Library regularly tours throughout deserving areas and serves up to 500 children a month through outreach work carried out by staff and volunteers on the beaches, ports, railway station and slums. But these services can now also reach children at night when they are certainly most vulnerable. Accordingly, the light which is generated by the solar panel on the bus allows the outreach team to attract these curious children and youth when most Cambodian streets are pitch black and only moving with the sounds of young scurrying feet. It is particularly heartbreaking to know that these children have often never been exposed to education and are usually forced to beg at night by their parents (also driven by poverty) to aid in their day to day survival. Although M’Lop Tapang has managed to reintegrate many of these kids back into public school and with their families, it is always important to remember that their first line of contact with our social workers is always on the street. For some kids, the library is the only safe place in their daily lives where they can just be kids, even if for only a little while.

For those children and youth who we are still on the streets but with whom we are working with and also for the ever increasing population of new kids who come to town, the M’Lop Tapang Mobile Library offers a channel of hope that sheds light on positive choices, as well as provides a fun and safe learning environment even when there is no other light for miles and miles. In fact, solar panels and LED lights have been proven to be so beneficial for M’Lop Tapang that there have been serious talks about trying to integrate them into the new M’Lop Tapang Centre that is currently under construction. Electricity prices in Cambodia are always soaring and as an NGO M’Lop Tapang is unjustly charged as a “company or factory”. With this in mind, a sustainable energy program would have a positive impact on the whole community, displaying to the world that street kids are not only bright in every sense of the word, but also environmentally conscious!

Visit Light up the World Foundation, of the University of Calgary.

Visit M’Lop Tapang website to find out more about their programs and projects.

Angkor Hospital for Children – January 2008 Monthly Report

Thank you to all the staff and supporters who helped to make 2007 another exciting year at Angkor Hospital for Children (AHC). Following are a few highlights of some of the things we accomplished together in 2007.

Click here for the complete January 2008 Monthly Report from AHC.