Guatemala
Currently, Concern America has 3 field volunteers working with 400 trained community members, serving a population of 180,000 in Petén, Guatemala.
A snapshot of our work-to-date
Location: El Petén
Languages spoken: Spanish, Q’eqchi’, Mam, Poqom’chi, and K’iche
1994
Year established in Guatemala
180,000
People impacted by program
350
Rural communities served
150,000
High-quality, low-cost health consults by Concern America trained community-based health care workers annually
400
Community leaders trained
Program History
The program was initiated in 1994 and continues the work begun by Concern America in the refugee camps in Mexico where Guatemalans sought refuge as they fled from serious repression in their country in the early 1980s during Guatemala’s civil war.
Impact
There are currently 400 health promoter practitioners, midwives, and environmental health promoters, including those receiving specialized training in women’s health and dental health and providing health care, health education, and sanitation measures to a population of approximately 180,000 people.
Health Care For All
Each year, the community-based health care workers trained by Concern America provide (on average) 150,000 high-quality, low-cost health consults, including those in the program’s practitioner-run teaching clinic. The community health workers trained and accompanied through the program, as well as the population served by their work, are mostly campesinos (of the land) and include representatives of several Mayan ethnic groups including Q’eqchi’.
Projects in Guatemala
- Community-led health care
- Securing safe and clean water
- Education and virtual health training
- Supporting artisan cooperatives
About the work
Guatemala Program Highlight
Artisan Cooperatives
Concern America accompanies the Spoonmakers of Petén, an income-generation cooperative that produces fair trade, hand-carved, wooden kitchen utensils, enabling families to earn a steady, supplemental income.
“We have been able to meet all of our basic needs in these past few months because of this work with the spoons. Each month, we are happy because we still have this reliable source of income from the cooperative, as we complete and turn in parts of the most recent order.”
– Silvestre, member of Spoonmakers of Petén