Just over a year ago, a child¡¯s fever or a prenatal checkup meant a two-hour journey, an expense of up to 150 quetzales (about 20 dollars), and the loss of a day¡¯s work for Laura Guarcas. Today, Laura, who lives in Semeja II, feels relieved: ¡°The health post is so close to my house that if my child has a cough, I can just walk here, and best of all, they give me the medicine for free,¡± she says with joy. A mother of two, a four-year-old and a five-month-old baby, she feels, for the first time, that she can care for her family¡¯s health without barriers.
Like her, thousands of people living in Maya communities in the Guatemalan highlands, in Quich¨¦ , are experiencing what it means to have accessible, preventive primary health care.
The new health post in Semeja II is one of many centers built or renovated thanks to the Crecer Sano Project, an initiative of the Government of Guatemala with support from the ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳. Its goal is to tackle chronic malnutrition, a condition that, according to the 2014¨C2015 National Maternal and Child Health Survey (ENSMI), affects over 46.5 percent of children under five in the country.