2014 Highlights…and We’re off on Blogcation!

2014 Highlights…and We’re off on Blogcation!

wmb_logo_180

Season’s Greetings Readers!

As the end of December approaches, so does the end 2014. We would like to thank YOU, for joining us and coming along for the ride over this past year.  You…sharing our posts, posting comments, and interacting with us on social media…THAT is what keeps us going!

This past year has been another amazing one for World Moms Blog (WMB).  As we touch on some highlights from 2014, you will see that these world moms get around!

After all that, we are getting ready to take a blogcation break to spend time with family, friends, and re-energize for 2015.  We hope that you will get the chance to do the same.  And if you find yourself looking for something to read, come on by and catch up on posts you may have missed in 2014!

Wishing you all a joyful end of the year.  Come back on Monday, January 5th to help us kick off 2015.

Cheers!

World Moms Blog

World Moms Blog

World Moms Blog is an award winning website which writes from over 30 countries on the topics of motherhood, culture, human rights and social good. Over 70 international contributors share their stories from around the globe, bonded by the common thread of motherhood and wanting a better world for their children. World Moms Blog was listed by Forbes Woman as one of the "Best 100 Websites for Women 2012 & 2013" and also called a "must read" by the NY Times Motherlode in 2013. Our Senior Editor in India, Purnima Ramakrishnan, was awarded the BlogHer International Activist Award in 2013.

More Posts

$5 Saves Lives with Cleanbirth.org, Multicultural Kids Blogs & Girls Globe!

$5 Saves Lives with Cleanbirth.org, Multicultural Kids Blogs & Girls Globe!

Over a year ago, World Mom, Nicole Melancon of Thirdeyemom, introduced me to Kristyn Zalota, an American mom who was dedicating her time to help save the lives of mothers in Laos.  I’m embarassed to admit, I wasn’t exactly sure where Laos was.  (It’s next to Vietnam.) I also didn’t know that the country has one of the highest rates of maternal mortality on the globe.

#CleanBirth Twitter Party!

Kristyn has introduced our staff and community to both, the mothers who she has met in Laos and the nurse midwives who she has trained through the organization she founded, Cleanbirth.org. Last year, World Moms Blog helped her raise over $700 to provide clean birth kits to the moms who needed them most.  It was such a fun, fantastic global moment for our contributors. We changed our Facebook profile pictures to the Cleanbirth logo, and we Facebooked and tweeted our hearts out! But that’s not all…

Since that time, World Moms Blog was the conduit that brought Kristyn Zalota and Dee Harlow, our contributor in Laos, together.  Dee started volunteering for Cleanbirth.org and helped the organization secure a $2000 loan, and she also wrote about maternal health in Laos during our #Moms4MDGs campaign on the Every Mother Counts website. In fact, here is a photo of Dee and Kristyn in Laos advocating for maternal health with the US Ambassador to Vientiane!

US Embassy Vientiane & Cleanbirth.org

This year we are back and excited as ever, to lend Cleanbirth.org our hearts and our social media voices to help kick off their 1st month of fundraising in 2014!  But, we also have fantastic news — we are not alone!

Two equally awesome organizations — Multicultural Kid Blogs and Girls Globe — will be joining us!  Together, our three sites will be synergizing our social media power together and rallying our communities and readers to help Cleanbirth.org in their campaign to raise $7500 this February, which is earmarked for the much-needed training of 10 nurses, 25 volunteers and 500 birth kits.

Inspired by World Mom, Kristyn Zalota’s, enthusiasm to do more than her fair share to help our fellow moms on the planet,  World Moms Blog is happy to join Multicultural Kid Blogs, Girls Globe and all of our combined contributors participating in making some noise for safe births for the mothers in Laos.

How can you join in?  Share this post.  Donate.  Join the Twitter Party on Thursday, February 6, 2014 at 1pm EST! Hashtag is #Cleanbirth.  

Just $5 USD goes a long way — it buys a birth kit which includes sanitized necessities and the cost of travel for the nurse midwife to attend a birth. Kristyn has launched something amazing that saves lives and empowers women.

  • For just $5 you can provide a life saving Clean Birth Kit
  • For $100 you can train a Village Volunteer who serves her village
  • For $250 you can sponsor a nurse who serves as many as 10 villages

See more at: http://startsomegood.com/cleanbirth#sthash.gp7YuaeW.dpuf

If everyone who reads this post just donated $5, we could make a very large difference in the life of our fellow World Moms in Laos.  For almost the equivalent of a cup of fancy coffee, we can have a feel good, mother earth kind of day together.

Cleanbirth Donation Button

 

I hope you will join us and help us spread the word!

This is an original post to World Moms Blog by Founder, Jennifer Burden in New Jersey, USA. 

Photo credits to Cleanbirth.org and Dee Harlow.

Jennifer Burden

Jennifer Burden is the Founder and CEO of World Moms Network, an award winning website on global motherhood, culture, human rights and social good. World Moms Network writes from over 30 countries, has over 70 contributors and was listed by Forbes as one of the “Best 100 Websites for Women”, named a “must read” by The New York Times, and was recommended by The Times of India. She was also invited to Uganda to view UNICEF’s family health programs with Shot@Life and was previously named a “Global Influencer Fellow” and “Social Media Fellow” by the UN Foundation. Jennifer was invited to the White House twice, including as a nominated "Changemaker" for the State of the World Women Summit. She also participated in the One Campaign’s first AYA Summit on the topic of women and girl empowerment and organized and spoke on an international panel at the World Bank in Washington, DC on the importance of a universal education for all girls. Her writing has been featured by Baby Center, Huffington Post, ONE.org, the UN Foundation’s Shot@Life, and The Gates Foundation’s “Impatient Optimists.” She is currently a candidate in Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs in the Executive Masters of Public Affairs program, where she hopes to further her study of global policies affecting women and girls. Jennifer can be found on Twitter @JenniferBurden.

More Posts - Website

Follow Me:
Twitter

SOCIAL GOOD: CleanBirth.org Teams Up With Yale University to Empower Local Nurses In Laos

SOCIAL GOOD: CleanBirth.org Teams Up With Yale University to Empower Local Nurses In Laos

CleanbirthAs many of you know, my organization CleanBirth.org works to make birth safer in Laos, which has among the highest rates of maternal and infant mortality in the world.

Due to the generous support of so many of you in 2013, with our local Lao partner Our Village Association, CleanBirth.org provided 2,000 AYZH Clean Birth Kits, served 150 villages, trained 15 nurses and 20 Village Volunteers.

The training of the last group, Village Volunteers, is particularly exciting.  The nurses we train about Clean Birth Kits and safe birthing practices, have begun passing their knowledge to women from each remote village.

The nurses explain how to use and distribute the Clean Birth Kits, as well as how to track their use with a picture data sheet.  They cover topics like safe pregnancy, the importance of having a partner during delivery (many women birth alone) and the importance of exclusive breastfeeding.

IMG_0196

Photo provided by CleanBirth.org

A government representative who attended the Village Volunteer training in December 2013 was impressed and said, “We need more of these trainings throughout the Province.”  That kind of validation from the government is essential to scaling up the project.

 

 

In another positive development that will enable us to expand training for nurses and Village Volunteers, CleanBirth.org has formed an alliance with the Yale University School of Nursing.

In July 2014, Yale Midwifery students will teach 30 local nurses the World Health Organization’s Essentials of Newborn Care. The Essentials are: clean birth, newborn resuscitation, skin to skin newborn care, basic newborn care and breastfeeding.   This information will then be incorporated into the Village Volunteers training.

By providing access to the midwives from Yale, our Lao partners, the local nurses and Village Volunteers will have more tools to improve care for mothers and infants.  This promotes our mission to make birth safer by empowering those on the ground with the training and resources they need.

We want to maximize the Yale Midwifery visit in July 2014 by raising $8,250 to fund the training of  30 nurses.  To that end, CleanBirth.org is launching a crowdfunding campaign from February 4 – March 4.

IMG_0237-2

Photo provided by CleanBirth.org

We are so lucky that World Moms Blog has signed on to support us again this year.  During last year’s crowdfunding campaign WMB raised $685 and tons of awareness.

Please join us February 6 from 12-1 EST and 9-10 EST for a World Moms Blog & CleanBirth.org Twitter Party to talk about making birth safe worldwide. It is easy to join in by going to tweetchat and entering #CleanBirth.

Thank you!

Kristyn

This is an original World Moms Blog post by Kristyn Zalota. Kristyn is the founder of CleanBirth.org, a non-profit working to improve maternal and infant health in Laos.  She holds MA from Yale, is a DONA doula and Lamaze educator.  She lives in New Haven, CT with her husband and two children.  Click here to watch Kristyn talking about her project.  Email her are kzalota@cleanbirth.org. To find out more check out:

Facebook:http://www.facebook.com/CleanBirth

Twitter:https://twitter.com/CleanBirth

Tumblr:http://cleanbirth.tumblr.com/

Pinterest:https://pinterest.com/cleanbirth/

What do you think is in a Clean Birth kit? Click here to find out!

Kristyn Zalota

Kristyn brings her years of experience as an entrepreneur and serial volunteer to CleanBirth.org. She holds a MA, has run small businesses in Russia and the US, and has volunteered in Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Uganda on projects related to women’s empowerment. After having children, Kristyn became an advocate for mothers in the US, as a doula and Lamaze educator, and abroad, as the Founder of CleanBirth.org. She is honored to provide nurses in Laos with the supplies, funding and training they need to lower maternal and infant mortality rates in their villages.

More Posts

#Moms4MDGs MDG #5 With Every Mother Counts

#Moms4MDGs MDG #5 With Every Mother Counts

#Moms4MDGs Button copy

In 2000, 189 nations made a promise to free people from extreme poverty and multiple deprivations. This pledge turned into the eight Millennium Development Goals, and was written as the Millennium Goal Declaration .- United Nations Development Programme

MDG-infographic-5

MDG #5 is to Improve Maternal Health  and we are excited to continue our #Moms4MDG campaign  this month by joining forces with Every Mother Counts.

Every Mother Counts is an organization founded by Christy Turlington Burns after her own  frightening experience during childbirth.  Christy became aware that her scenario could have been fatal, as it is for many women globally, without access to the quality healthcare she had been provided. Every year hundreds of thousands of women die during or due to childbirth, mostly from preventable causes. Every Mother Counts works to reach the goal that no mother should have to give her life while giving birth to another. Tomorrow, in conjunction with our Twitter Parties, World Moms Blog contributor Dee Harlow in Laos features a post on the Every Mother Counts Blog about Maternal Health.

We hope you will also join us tomorrow , December 18th,  for our #Moms4MDGs Twitter party to discuss Maternal Health with @everymomcounts at 1:00 EST, and at 9:00 pm EST.  See you there!

P.S. Never been to a twitter party before?  Go to www.tweetchat.com and put in the hashtag: “#Moms4MDGs during the party times. From there you can retweet and tweet and the hashtag will automatically be added to your tweets. And, from there you can also view all of the party tweets!

This is an original post to World Moms Blog by World Voice Editor, Elizabeth Atalay of Documama in Rhode Island, USA.  

 

Elizabeth Atalay

Elizabeth Atalay is a Digital Media Producer, Managing Editor at World Moms Network, and a Social Media Manager. She was a 2015 United Nations Foundation Social Good Fellow, and traveled to Ethiopia as an International Reporting Project New Media Fellow to report on newborn health in 2014. On her personal blog, Documama.org, she uses digital media as a new medium for her background as a documentarian. After having worked on Feature Films and Television series for FOX, NBC, MGM, Columbia Pictures, Warner Brothers, 20th Century Fox, and Castle Rock Pictures, she studied documentary filmmaking and anthropology earning a Masters degree in Media Studies from The New School in New York. Since becoming a Digital Media Producer she has worked on social media campaigns for non-profits such as Save The Children, WaterAid, ONE.org, UNICEF, United Nations Foundation, Edesia, World Pulse, American Heart Association, and The Gates Foundation. Her writing has also been featured on ONE.org, Johnson & Johnson’s BabyCenter.com, EnoughProject.org, GaviAlliance.org, and Worldmomsnetwork.com. Elizabeth has traveled to 70 countries around the world, most recently to Haiti with Artisan Business Network to visit artisans in partnership with Macy’s Heart of Haiti line, which provides sustainable income to Haitian artisans. Elizabeth lives in New England with her husband and four children.

More Posts

WORLD VOICE: Empowerment: Attainable Goal or Another Buzzword?

WORLD VOICE: Empowerment: Attainable Goal or Another Buzzword?

Mom and Baby Laos 500

As many of you know, one year ago I started CleanBirth.org, a non-profit aimed at reducing infant and maternal mortality in Laos.  We provide nurses with training, birthing supplies and funding to educate village volunteers about safe birthing practices.

 

One tenet of my organization is that local people call the shots on-the-ground, while Westerners provide the resources and funds.  Local nurses are empowered to develop and execute programs which empower expecting mothers to have safer births.

 

There’s that darling of non-profit speak: empower.  Oxford defines it: to “… make (someone) stronger and more confident, especially in controlling their life and claiming their rights.”  A worthy goal, certainly, but sometimes I worry:

 

“Can foreigners really empower locals to find long-term solutions to their own problems?”

IMG_0016

Photo By Kristyn Zalota

I thought about this on my long journey to Laos in June to train twelve nurses.  On this second CleanBirth Training trip, I wanted to see that the nurses were taking ownership of our CleanBirth Kits Program.  I also wanted to hear their new ideas about ways that we can make birth safer.

From the beginning, it was clear they the nurses wanted to learn and participate.  They were “…thrilled to have been invited…none of them had ever been asked to a training like this before.”   They asked pertinent questions about the CleanBirth Kits Program and grasped the importance of accurately reporting data.

As we moved on to additional ideas for making birth safer, they became even more engaged.  Dr. Nong, my Lao partner, had to write furiously to keep up with the nurses’ suggestions.  I sat back and smiled, thinking:

“This is exactly the way it should be. I, the Westerner, am in the background, while they, the locals, are finding their own answers.”

In the end Dr. Nong and the nurses drafted an outline for our new initiative: CleanBirth Volunteer Training.  The nurses will gather one woman from each of the villages that she serves to learn about Clean Birth Kits, safe birth practices, and prenatal and infant care.  The first CleanBirth Volunteer Training will be held in October.

groupkids-500

So have we empowered these nurses?  Are we giving women more control over their lives and births in the 100 remote communities that we serve?  I’d say that we are off to a good start.  The nurses have the funds and the tools that they need.  They have designed the solution themselves. Now, we must wait and see what happens next.

This is an original World Moms Blog post by Kristyn Zalota.

What do you think? Is it truly possible as an outsider to empower locals of another culture in a sustainable way?

Kristyn Zalota

Kristyn brings her years of experience as an entrepreneur and serial volunteer to CleanBirth.org. She holds a MA, has run small businesses in Russia and the US, and has volunteered in Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Uganda on projects related to women’s empowerment. After having children, Kristyn became an advocate for mothers in the US, as a doula and Lamaze educator, and abroad, as the Founder of CleanBirth.org. She is honored to provide nurses in Laos with the supplies, funding and training they need to lower maternal and infant mortality rates in their villages.

More Posts

SOCIAL GOOD: 3 Steps to Changing the World by a Playground Aficiando

SOCIAL GOOD: 3 Steps to Changing the World by a Playground Aficiando

IMG_4143

Photo By Kristyn Zalota

Nine months ago, I received the first donation to CleanBirth.org, my project to make birth safer in Laos.  It was fittingly given on the playground after school by a fellow mom.

I say fittingly, because I have spent much of the past 7 years of motherhood pushing swings and spotting my monkeys on bars.  It is also fitting because the bulk of the three hundred donors who followed that first donation are fellow frequenters of playgrounds.  The support from moms, dads, and grand parents totals almost $20,000 in just 9 months!

IMG_0063

Kristyn with OVA Staff and Nurses in Laos

So how does a playground aficionado add safe birth advocacy to her daily life?

Here’s my 3-step plan for changing the world in the way only you can:

1. Find your passion.  My kids are 4 and 7 today, but when they were younger full-time, stay-at-home motherhood was tough for me.  I wanted to be with them and I also wanted to travel and work.  By way of a compromise, I volunteered on projects in Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Thailand, Cambodia and Uganda.  Sometimes the kids came with me – we lived in Thailand and Cambodia for a year – and other shorter trips they stayed at home with their dad and grandparents.  My experiences as a volunteering mother transformed my long-standing interest in women’s empowerment into a passion for global maternal health.

  Once I realized that I wanted to advocate for women and make birth safer, I became a mama on a mission.

2. Find a do-able project.  So, how can I be at pick-up by 1pm everyday *and* make birth safer in Laos?  I started with a manageable project.  CleanBirth.org provides Clean Birth Kits (an absorbent sheet, medicated soap, a sterile blade, cord clamp, picture instructions) and birth education to women in one province of Laos.  Studies show that kits prevent infection in both mothers and babies.

To ensure that the project is locally driven and sustainable, I have partnered with two organizations.  The first partner is Our Village Association (OVA), a Lao non-profit with 10 years of experience working with local villagers.  Together with OVA, CleanBirth.org trains local nurses in the use and distribution of Clean Birth Kits.  OVA continuously monitors the nurses, tracks the use of the kits and reports back to me via email.

The second organization that I teamed up with, AYZH, manufactures high-quality Clean Birth Kits in India and mails them directly to OVA in Laos.  Since the kits are shipped directly, I do not need to be on the ground to ensure quality-control or resupply.

I travel to Laos twice per year to see everything for myself.  In the US, I spend all of my kid-free hours raising funds and awareness – and loving every minute of it!

3. Find help.  None of this would be possible without the support of my family: my husband, mother-in-law and parents.  Having the people closest to you believe in your cause is so important, especially if you are working 30 hours per week and not getting paid.

I have also asked for help from maternal health experts and volunteers.  By going to the experts, to those already doing the work, I have been able to capitalize on best practices.  Volunteers can be invaluable.  When someone competently takes on a task, no matter how small, it enables me to move onto another to-do item.

I can honestly say that I am living my dream life.  I still hit the playground every afternoon — after 4 hours of working to promote safe birth.  When I travel to Laos, I pack in more in 2 weeks than I could have imagined in my pre-kids wanderings.  No time to waste,  I’ve got kids at home missing their mama.

If you are reading this and thinking: “I have a passion for _____ but I don’t know where to start,” I urge you to just start.  Find a small first project.  Make time each day to work on it.  Get advice from others who are doing similar work.  Ask for help. 

If your goal is to help others, you will find support from many places, often you just need to ask.  I have been overwhelmed by the unexpected generosity and support of friends and perfect strangers.

So use your passion, get out there and change the world in the way only you can!

What’s Your Passion?

This is an original post written for World Moms Blog by Kristyn Zalota.

____________________________________________________________

 

Kristyn brings her years of experience as an entrepreneur and serial volunteer to CleanBirth.org. She holds a MA, has run small businesses in Russia and the US, and has volunteered in Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Uganda on projects related to women’s empowerment. After having children, Kristyn became an advocate for mothers in the US, as a doula and Lamaze educator, and abroad, as the Founder of CleanBirth.org. She is honored to provide nurses in Laos with the supplies, funding and training they need to lower maternal and infant mortality rates in their villages.

Kristyn Zalota

Kristyn brings her years of experience as an entrepreneur and serial volunteer to CleanBirth.org. She holds a MA, has run small businesses in Russia and the US, and has volunteered in Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Uganda on projects related to women’s empowerment. After having children, Kristyn became an advocate for mothers in the US, as a doula and Lamaze educator, and abroad, as the Founder of CleanBirth.org. She is honored to provide nurses in Laos with the supplies, funding and training they need to lower maternal and infant mortality rates in their villages.

More Posts