Transforming
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TRANSFORMING 2012 ANNUAL LIVES REPORT TRANSFORMING LETTER FROM OUR CEO 2012 ANNUAL Dear Friends of PCI, REPORT LIVES Despite the uncertainties of the economic environment in 2012, PCI closed CONTENTS the year on strong footing with our impact, programs and financial support OUR VISION all continuing to grow. This annual report highlights some of our continuing initiatives and most important priorities as we finished 2012 and look ahead Motivated by our concern for the world’s most vulnerable in our 2013-2016 Strategic Plan. children, families, and communi- ties, PCI envisions a world where abundant resources are shared, We’ve set a very ambitious goal: to reach and help transform the lives of ten communities are able to provide million people over the next three years. We know from all our experience that for the health and well-being of their members, and children even in the most disadvantaged circumstances people have the will and the 1LETTER FROM OUR CEO 12INTEGRATION IN ACTION can achieve lives of hope, good ability to change their own lives. When we provide the tools, training and health, and self-sufficiency. resources they need, they will lift themselves out of poverty and create a future of real hope, improved health and economic self-sufficiency for their families. OUR MISSION The stories in the following pages offer inspiring examples of personal, PCI’s mission is to prevent community and national transformational change that is occurring through- disease, improve community health, and promote sustainable out all our programs around the world. Our economic and social empowerment development worldwide. 2PCI BY THE NUMBERS 14OUR GLOBAL IMPACT groups in Botswana are giving women the confidence and tools to tackle some of the most critical health and social issues in their communities. For nearly ten years, our llamas program in Bolivia has helped a declining community build sustainable businesses, including a flourishing women’s savings program. Our SOLUCION TB program in Mexico has been instrumental in trans- 4 17 forming the national health care system, saving lives TRANSFORMATION /BOTSWANA FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS through the prevention and control of the spread of TB. In 2012 PCI launched one of our most ambitious programs in India through a grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Named Parivartan (Hindi for transformation), the ABOUT OUR COVER program’s goal is to improve public health and nutrition, and reduce maternal and child mortality for the most marginalized people in the state of Bihar. 6 On a blistering hot Friday in March, TRANSFORMATION/MEXICO 18 Parivartan, as with all PCI’s nearly 60 active programs, will positively contribute DONOR LIST PCI provided emergency food to over 3,000 households suffering to the fulfillment of the Millennium Development Goals set by the UN in 2000. from repeated crop failures due to drought. After patiently waiting representatives of each household Our life-changing work would not be possible without the commitment and were provided with three months support of all our donors, our partners and our staff. Your generous contribution worth of food. Thousands of women like the one on the cover of this re- in time, talent and passion is making an extraordinary difference for PCI and the port in turn placed pieces of brightly people we serve. 8 24 colored fabric on the ground to TRANSFORMATION/BOLIVIA STRATEGIC PLAN receive the 5 kg of pinto beans and 15 kg of corn-soy blend, which were Thank you again for everything you do. poured into the center of the cloth and then tied into a big bundle. Each woman then placed the large bundle on her head for the long walk from the distribution site to her home, while children flocked to scoop up any remaining corn-soy blend for a 10 25 GEORGE GUIMARAES STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIPS BOARD OF DIRECTORS much welcome mid-afternoon snack. 2012 // AN EXCITING YEAR FOR PCI Number of malnourished, HIV+ children and adults provided with therapeutic food thorough NACS (nutrition, assessment, counseling and support) 63% Percentage of PCI 148,879 Field Directors who Number of meals served 5Number of PCI are local nationals daily to students countries that 4,020 1,326,926Number of people reached by PCI through awareness and educational campaigns have incorporated economic and social empowerment groups into existing programs INDIA 0 Number of national 16,139,000 58 and state reference Number of Estimated number of people labs being accredited receiving improved HIV testing active projects services as a result of PCI’s before PCI support laboratory strengthening work in India Number of people benefiting from PCI’s program services 2,700 Number of times people have Number of trees intervened to prevent violence planted in Guatemala against women in South Africa 6,351,373 as a result of PCI’s efforts 49,520 Projected number of Number of organizations microenterprises supported benefiting from PCI’s with economic and social capacity building efforts empowerment groups 2,160 2,548 28 Number of national and state reference labs now Number of family in accreditation cycle Number of PCI health groups after receiving capacity staff worldwide Number of participating building support textbooks Number in metric tons of food shipped under the Parivartan from PCI provided by to Guatemala, Nicaragua and Tanzania 44 Program funded by 624 Number of violence-free PCI to school the Bill and Melinda zones established in children in Gates Foundation South Africa Tanzania 34,657 2,487 154% 4,111 Increase in TB/HIV-coinfections detected in Mexico since PCI began its co-morbidities efforts 154,130,361 18,413 Number of meals provided to school Number of vulnerable people in 35,004 children by PCI in Bolivia, Guatemala, 4 target countries with improved Number of soldiers and community members Nicaragua and Tanzania from skills to respond to disaster in Botswana, Zambia and Malawi reached 57,510 2001-2012 as a result of PCI capacity Number of households reached through Care with individual and/or small group level building efforts Groups in Bangladesh, Liberia and Malawi HIV/AIDS prevention interventions “ I am grateful for the group and appreciate the support other members can provide. I even invited the GROW Coordinator to my home so she can lead a discussion about HIV/AIDS and gender issues with me and my husband.” — Oageng Regelepeng 2012 // AN EXCITING YEAR FOR PCI improving LIVES IN BOTSWANA However, after only two months, Oageng gained confidence and is now passionate about contributing to group discussions on social and community issues. While previously she would cover her face and shy away from discussions about HIV/AIDS saying, “I have no idea what you are talking about,” she now speaks freely about HIV/AIDS and TRANSFORMATION OF A LIFE other issues that affect her life, including the abuse she receives from her husband. She is now confident enough to bring up the issue of HIV with her husband and recently, Oageng finally agreed to get tested for HIV and says that she will encourage her husband do the same. Participation in group meetings and discussions have inspired Oageng ageng Regelepeng, 49, lives in Mosokotso, a remote to realize she has the ability and strength to make positive choices inspiration settlement about 60 kilometers outside of Gaborone, that impact her life and the lives of her children. One clear example the capital of Botswana. She has eight children, six still of her improved confidence is her decision to confront her own “ I get my inspiration for work by reading or O living at home. There is no electricity and no potable water in illiteracy. Initially, she would sign a cross to represent her name on visiting with women such as Oageng. The group records. After observing the other women in the group and interaction with them reminds me how our Mosokotso and providing basic necessities for the household is a daily work is critical to changing the lives of women struggle. In September 2012, PCI introduced the GROW methodology forming new friendships, Oageng built up the courage to ask another and their families. Oageng’s outlook on life for economic and social empowerment to HOPE Worldwide Botswana, member to write her name on a piece of paper so that she could will now be different. She will be able to one of its ten implementing partners on a five-year USAID-funded practice her handwriting. The next time PCI staff visited the group, motivate her children to value education Oageng’s name could be found all over the group’s ledger book, and it because she now has an appreciation of what project designed to improve the livelihoods of marginalized it can do. The fact that she can now write her populations, especially girls and women. During the initial exercise was apparent that something had changed inside her. This tangible name may seem small, but it is huge in terms where community members help to determine the poorest in their change in Oageng, reflecting a growing sense of possibility coupled of the kind of future it represents for her community, Oageng was identified as one of the women to join a with new skills and livelihood support, is now helping to transform and her family!” GROW group. Oageng was shy and would come to the weekly meetings the lives of her children and the community in which they live — Dorothy Tlagae, sad and saying very little. She declined to moderate a meeting, even through a powerful ripple effect. PCI/Botswana Country Director when elected to do so by other group members as part of the GROW methodology’s rotational leadership requirement. PAGE 5 2012 // AN EXCITING YEAR FOR PCI improving LIVES IN MEXICO “Now I approach this public health issue from a more humanistic TRANSFORMATION OF A perspective, one that allows me to identify social and community HEALTH CARE SYSTEM partners who are needed to better serve persons affected by TB.” — Dr.