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PASADENA: Program gives kids a shot in the arm

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  • PASADENA: Program gives kids a shot in the arm

    Program gives kids a shot in the arm

    Organization hopes to raise $200,000 at fundraising
    dinner to vaccinate children in Armenia.

    Glendale News-Press
    December 15, 2004

    By Josh Kleinbaum

    PASADENA -- Until two years ago, children in Armenia
    received one vaccination, paid for by international
    aid organization UNICEF. The vaccination only covered
    measles, leaving children exposed to a handful of
    other diseases, including mumps and congenital
    rubella.

    Outbreaks of mumps began rippling through the young
    population of Armenia, said Kathryn Donovan, a UNICEF
    spokeswoman. Adults suffered from rubella, leading to
    unhealthy newborns.

    "Untreated mumps, while not fatal, can have serious
    health consequences," Donovan said.

    A Glendale-based organization is giving the next
    generation of Armenians a shot in the arm, quite
    literally. The Millennium Armenian Children's Vaccine
    Fund is raising $1.5 million to vaccinate every child
    in Armenia for diphtheria, hepatitis B, mumps,
    measles, rubella, pertussis, polio, tetanus and
    tuberculosis. At 6:30 tonight, the fund will hold a
    gala fundraising dinner to try to raise the final
    $200,000.

    "This is the one sector of aid or health that reaches
    every single person who was born in Armenia," said
    Eliza Karagezian, the fund's director. "All of the
    other projects are necessary or important, but none of
    them touches every single person the way that our
    project does. Starting off a new generation of
    children in Armenia on a healthy foot is extremely
    important. The first step of a healthy democracy is
    having a healthy population."

    Michael Mahdesian, former deputy director, Bureau for
    Humanitarian Response United States Agency for
    International Development, and Lise Grandé, United
    Nations Development Program Resident Representative to
    Armenia, will speak at the $200 per person gala at the
    Craven's Estate, 430 Madeline Drive in Pasadena. Actor
    Mike Connors will be a special guest.

    Organizers hope the fundraiser will complete the $1.5
    million two-year fundraising effort, which is expected
    to vaccinate 37,000 Armenian children per year for the
    next 15 years.

    "What I love about this program is fact that a little
    bit of effort yields a great good," said Tamar
    Kevonian, publisher of Mosaix, an Armenian lifestyles
    magazine, who will serve as master of ceremonies.
    "It's a finite project, not something that people have
    to contribute to every year. There's a lot of other
    organizations that provide assistance, but this is on
    such a molecular level. If we don't keep these kids
    healthy, they can't grow up to take advantage of
    education benefits, career benefits, anything."

    Karagezian said tickets will be available at the door.
    For more information, call 291-6490.


    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/glendale/news/la-gnp-vaccine15dec15,1,5462749.story

    --Boundary_(ID_j3cCImG2P7So4yKap4YqmQ)--
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