PRESS RELEASE
The Armenia Fund
Contact: Hayk Petrosyan
Tel: + (3741) 56 01 06 ext. 107
Fax: + (3741) 52 15 05
E-mail: [email protected]
Web: http://www.himnadram.org/
January 30 2008
The Armenia Fund launches Khashtarak health clinic restoration project
Yerevan, January 30, 2008 - Khashtarak community's health clinic will
undergo complete renovation as part of the Armenia Fund Rural Development
Program. The subcontractor tender has already been announced and the
construction works are expected to commence in the spring. The project will
become a reality thanks to the efforts of the Armenia Fund Netherlands
Affiliate who managed to rally the support of both the local Armenian
community and the government of the Netherlands around the idea of improving
the health care in Armenia's border villages.
Khashtarak community is one of the six villages included in the Armenia Fund
Rural Development Program pilot cluster. The renovated clinic will serve the
needs of all these communities, providing the community members of the
border villages with a viable alternative to traveling the regional center
of Ijevan to get access to health care.
The lack of efficient health care is an almost universal issue in all of
rural Armenia. The health care point in Khashtarak is certainly no
exclusion. Only one room in the two story building is currently in use, with
the medical personnel limited to a dedicated doctor who defies the cold in
the unheated building and helps the community members with advice and an
occasional shot of medicine bought by the patients themselves from Ijevan.
In the present situation, there is little more she can do. The clinic has
received medical equipment as part of a support program but currently cannot
use it as the building's abysmal conditions cannot accommodate their
adequate placement and maintenance.
Thus, when the need arises, (even in the case of first aid), each community
member is all alone in the difficult task of finding a running vehicle and
making the several kilometer journey to the hospital in Ijevan. The
situation is the same and worse in the other five villages constituting the
Khashtarak cluster. There, the on the spot health care is limited to nurses
who receive patients in small rooms that offer little opportunity for
organizing an effective health care process.
The implementation of this project will see a full scale reconstruction of
the health clinic in Khashtarak. This will include the whole spectrum of
associated activities including the installation of a heating system,
renovation of the leaking roof and the floor. With the reconstruction
completed, this clinic will become the base for normally functioning health
care system for the cluster as a whole. This is something that makes the
implementation of the project all the more important.
"The idea of the cluster of villages is based on our firm belief that the
small border communities will have a better chance to overcome their present
isolation, to survive and develop in the modern world if they work
together", says the Armenia Fund Executive Director Vahe Aghabegians.
"Projects like this will help people living in these villages see themselves
as an integral part of the whole and will become the basis for building
mutually beneficial and effective cooperation with their neighbors."
###
The Armenia Fund
The Armenia Fund
Contact: Hayk Petrosyan
Tel: + (3741) 56 01 06 ext. 107
Fax: + (3741) 52 15 05
E-mail: [email protected]
Web: http://www.himnadram.org/
January 30 2008
The Armenia Fund launches Khashtarak health clinic restoration project
Yerevan, January 30, 2008 - Khashtarak community's health clinic will
undergo complete renovation as part of the Armenia Fund Rural Development
Program. The subcontractor tender has already been announced and the
construction works are expected to commence in the spring. The project will
become a reality thanks to the efforts of the Armenia Fund Netherlands
Affiliate who managed to rally the support of both the local Armenian
community and the government of the Netherlands around the idea of improving
the health care in Armenia's border villages.
Khashtarak community is one of the six villages included in the Armenia Fund
Rural Development Program pilot cluster. The renovated clinic will serve the
needs of all these communities, providing the community members of the
border villages with a viable alternative to traveling the regional center
of Ijevan to get access to health care.
The lack of efficient health care is an almost universal issue in all of
rural Armenia. The health care point in Khashtarak is certainly no
exclusion. Only one room in the two story building is currently in use, with
the medical personnel limited to a dedicated doctor who defies the cold in
the unheated building and helps the community members with advice and an
occasional shot of medicine bought by the patients themselves from Ijevan.
In the present situation, there is little more she can do. The clinic has
received medical equipment as part of a support program but currently cannot
use it as the building's abysmal conditions cannot accommodate their
adequate placement and maintenance.
Thus, when the need arises, (even in the case of first aid), each community
member is all alone in the difficult task of finding a running vehicle and
making the several kilometer journey to the hospital in Ijevan. The
situation is the same and worse in the other five villages constituting the
Khashtarak cluster. There, the on the spot health care is limited to nurses
who receive patients in small rooms that offer little opportunity for
organizing an effective health care process.
The implementation of this project will see a full scale reconstruction of
the health clinic in Khashtarak. This will include the whole spectrum of
associated activities including the installation of a heating system,
renovation of the leaking roof and the floor. With the reconstruction
completed, this clinic will become the base for normally functioning health
care system for the cluster as a whole. This is something that makes the
implementation of the project all the more important.
"The idea of the cluster of villages is based on our firm belief that the
small border communities will have a better chance to overcome their present
isolation, to survive and develop in the modern world if they work
together", says the Armenia Fund Executive Director Vahe Aghabegians.
"Projects like this will help people living in these villages see themselves
as an integral part of the whole and will become the basis for building
mutually beneficial and effective cooperation with their neighbors."
###
The Armenia Fund