"Improving the health status of underserved populations through sustainable and comprehensive research, service and educational initiatives related to infectious diseases."

6th Tropical Disease Biology Workshop in Ecuador
Summer 2000

 


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Updated April 20, 2012
Created by:
T. Creamer & M. Grijalva 

 

For information about upcoming programs visit
the Workshops page or e-mail grijalva@ohiou.edu

 

Mondaņa, Yachana Lodge & FUNEDESIN

 

The Mondaņa clinic is located next to the Yachana Lodge, where two doctors and a dentist serve 5,000 people in 30 communities up and down stream in the Napo river area. "One of our biggest problems is transportation," Mondaņa’s clinic Dr. Ramiro Baquero said. Often patients walk four or eight hours to reach the clinic, and if they require major surgery, they must travel two hours by canoe then drive to the Stadler Richter Hospital in Archidona or the Provincial Hospital in Tena.

Students visited the Mondaņa clinic,

Delivering Medicines to Mondana
Joel Anders and Michelle Carter deliver medicine to the Mondaņa Clinic.

Students toured the Yachana Gourmet marmalade factory, just one hundred meters from the lodge. The factory supports local communities and preservation of Ecuador’s endangered rain forest by paying market price for locally grown fruits to support the surrounding community. Often patients at the Mondaņa clinic pay for their treatment in fruits, which the clinic then sells to the factory. "Sustainability of these efforts is the key to our mission," said Dr. Clemente Ponce, CEO of FUNEDESIN, an NGO that owns the Mondaņa clinic/Yachana lodge complex.


Cornelia Genanci

Working with the Mondaņa Clinic for the last seven months has definitely showed me the forced value of human life.  For lack of money, precious lives are lost, and for lack of adequate education children don’t have access to improved quality of life.  It is a very strong reality check, which shocks you while also giving you energy to fight to change the situation – by working together.

Ms. Genanci, born in Switzerland, is a volunteer that works at the Mondaņa Clinic as a FUNEDESINadministrator.

The FUNEDESIN Foundation’s Mondaņa Project helps 30 indigenous communities build schools, improve medical clinics, install running water and develop methods of sustainable agriculture.  In the short term, FUNEDESIN seeks community economic development by improving production technology of coffee, cocoa, and short-term crops: corn, rice, yucca, and bananas (which constitute the population’s basic diet.) Environmental protection is key to the program’s success by reaching an equilibrium between farming and the appropriate use of the zone’s natural resources.   All proceeds from the ecotourist Yachana Lodge support the FUNEDESIN Foundation and the Mondaņa clinic.

 Vicente Urrutia, Economist for FUNEDESIN