Friday, May 29, 2009

Hours before

Hours before we leave for Guate and I am starting to freak out. 
Actually, I have been freaking out for a while. 

I can't wait to get in the field, recruit the women, and track their weight gain. I think the most difficult part will be the 24 hour dietary recall. I haven't even developed a suitable document to record the foods. I wonder how I should organize the sheet. I hope I can find a copy machine in Santiago to make all of the copies. 

Arghh--almost 3 hours to go and I can't wait. 

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

What am I doing

So...
...What am I doing for 3 months in Guatemala?

Last summer (2008) I received an award from a group at UPenn, University Scholars (UScholars), promoting research for undergraduates. This award "matched" me with a professor, Dr. Barg, who shared my research interests.
Dr. Barg was working with UPenn's Guatemala Health Initiative (GHI)-a joint program among the School of Arts and Sciecnes (my home school) and the schools of Engineering, Nursing, and Medicine. I appreciated what she was doing there--contributing her knowledge of medical anthropology to combat maternal and child mortality.

So, last summer I spent 2 weeks in Guatemala, getting a brief experience in the "field," as anthropologists call it. Most of last summer I helped Dr. Barg back in Philadelphia, processing field notes submitted from researchers who were in Guatemala all summer. I also build a literature database related to maternal and child health.

In reading through pages of field notes, I noticed a recurrent theme...
...local physicians, non-local physicians, nurses, comadronas (midwives), community members, and mothers themselves said pregnant women weren't gaining weight, or gaining very little weight...

This shared observation and concern transferred to me!

Fall 2008 I applied to be a part of UScholars, which guaranteed me a research community with which to share my interests and funding for summer research! I presented my research interest as maternal health in Guatemala with a medical anthropology focus.
After learning I got in, it was time to start applying for funding through the program. I constructed my own research protocol, which involved tracking a group of 60 Guatemalan women in their 2nd and 3rd trimesters of pregnancy. I would track their weight gain over three months and their initial height. I would also collect food recalls for 24 hour periods.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Santiago Atitlan

SO...
...where in the world am I going...

Western Hemisphere!

Guatemala is in Central America...

Lake Atitlan is in Southwest Guatemalan Highlands...

Santiago Atitlan lies on Southwest corner of Lake Atitlan nestled between 3 volcanoes: Atitlan, Toliman, & San Pedro.