Thank You Ugat for an Unforgettable Summer

Now that my time in the Philippines has ended, it is difficult to concisely put my experience into words. Maybe in six months, I’ll be able to write holistically about it, but I’ll give it a go. I am so thankful for this experience and all the people I met while working at Ugat. Their approach to improving health in their community is so attuned to what people need and full of compassion, which are two of the most important qualities of successful public health work. I saw firsthand the success of the sexual health education classes, where students went from believing that jumping up and down after sex would prevent pregnancy to knowing where to access free condoms in their community. I was deeply inspired by everyone on the Youth Team and bouncing ideas off each other was one of my happiest memories there.

Pride Parade in El Nido, Palawan

I was also struck by the beauty of Palawan. On the island, you can find one of the seven natural wonders of the world, an underground river that runs through a cave. You could see for miles in the clear, light blue water and witness some of the most amazing sunsets in the world. But while experiences like swimming with whale sharks will be awe-inspiring forever, it’s the intangible moments of beauty that I will really miss. I miss passing the same people every morning and saying hello to them, hailing the correct multicab to go to the mall, thrifting at the spot across the street from Ugat, singing in the office while making my PowerPoints, etc., because it was in those moments that Puerto became familiar.

Picture of the Youth Team at Ate Ami’s Birthday Dinner

On the first night of my stay in the Philippines, I woke up around 3 a.m. to the sound of heavy rain on the roofs around my apartment and loud singing coming from down the street. The singing helped calm my nerves and eventually lulled me back to sleep. I thought the singing was part of the Baragatan Festival that had just kicked off or some sort of party from one of my neighbors. But as I was adjusting to the 12-hour time difference, I would frequently wake up in the middle of the night and would regularly hear that loud singing. Around my second to last week, I finally found the man who had been singing karaoke the whole summer. It was a man who owned a shop down the street from my apartment, whom I had said good morning to on most mornings. During my final week, I heard a new voice singing, and as I peeked into the shop to see who the new voice belonged to, my neighbor popped out and invited me in to sing a round with them. This was around the time of my trip when the reality that I was leaving had started to sink in, and I couldn’t believe my luck that the man who had helped ease me into my new life was also the man helping me remember all the beautiful things about Puerto while easing me back to the U.S.

The view of a sunset outside of my apartment

~ Dana

A Summer Spent with Ugat Ng Kalusugan

Hello from the Philippines! My name is Dana Thompson, and I am currently completing my practicum with Roots of Health in Palawan, Philippines. I am working with the Youth Team here creating harm reduction modules for people living with HIV and updating their sexual health education modules. My trip began with about 45 hours of traveling from the time I left my apartment in Chapel Hill to when I arrived at my apartment in Puerto Princesa. I had never traveled this far and had never been out of the United States for so long, so there was much to adjust to. I settled into my apartment which sits above my host named Mitch and her family. After settling into my new home, I tried to keep my eyes open for as long as I could to adjust to the 12-hour time difference but eventually sleep won and I wound up falling asleep around 6 pm. Later, on my second day I took a ride on my first trike, which is a motorcycle with a cab attached to the side of it to meet my fellow interns for dinner. This would be the beginning of many firsts that I have already gotten to experience while here.

 

A picture I took at the top of a sunrise hike with the Roots of Health team on Philippines Independence Day

On my first day of work, I was excited to learn that the Youth Team at Roots of Health is the loudest team which meant that I would fit right in. One of my favorite activities that I did during my first week here was attend an outreach event with the Clinical Team where we traveled to Aplaya to disseminate contraceptive resources to women in the community. While we were there, we were talking to community advocates and the clinical director who had been working with members of the community for years. She told stories of the amazing successes of traveling to the community. Many of the women had been coming to the events for years and would only stop attending if they wanted to get pregnant or had started menopause. These outreach events are crucial to the community because these resources that would have been difficult for members of the community to access without Roots of Health traveling to them. She also detailed stories of women who were forced to stop accessing birth control when their husbands left for long fishing trips because their husbands were afraid that they would cheat. Stories like this are demonstrative of societal norms that do not view a person’s reproductive choices as their own.  

A picture taken at the entrance of the Underground River, one of the seven natural wonders of the world.

In addition to my work on the modules, I have also had the privilege of attending two sexual health education classes in Aborlan, the municipality just south of Puerto Princesa. I got to see firsthand how engaging and passionate the people I work with are during these trainings which result in stark improvements in understanding among participants from the pre and posttests. It made me so excited to continue working here and to begin developing my deliverables. There are some significant issues that surround sexual and reproductive health in the Philippines. One of these issues is that the Philippines has the fastest growing HIV epidemics in the Asia-Pacific region and most of the new cases are among people aged 15-35 and men who have sex with men. There are many factors contributing to this issue, some of them include stigma, lack of access to comprehensive HIV education, and limited access to reproductive health resources, including condoms. In addition to this issue, the Philippines has serious concerns surrounding teen pregnancy. The United Nations Population Fund states that about 9% of girls aged 15-19 have already had at least one child; this is also influenced by factors including limited access to reproductive health education and resources and stigma. I am so excited to continue learning from and working with this team while exploring this beautiful island. 

A picture taken during the last weekend of the Baragatan Festival, which celebrates the rich culture and history of Palawan

Dana