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Founded | 2004 |
---|---|
Founder | Sera Bonds |
Type | Non-governmental organization |
Focus | Maternal and neonatal health |
Location | United States |
Areas Served | Sri Lanka, Tibet, New Orleans, Sudan, Tanzania, Afghanistan, Israel, Haiti, Syria, Texas, Oklahoma, Jordan, Philippines, Nicaragua, Nepal, Sierra Leone, Turkey |
Method | Providing quality healthcare to communities by partnering with local organizations |
Website | cohintl.org |
Circle of Health International (COHI) is a US-based non-governmental organization founded in 2004, with the mission to work with vulnerable women, children, and refugees during times of disaster through comprehensive women's health worldwide. [1] They cooperate with organizations to help vulnerable women with a community based approach during times of crisis. COHI has worked with midwives and public health professionals in countries like the United States, Sri Lanka, Louisiana, Tibet, Tanzania, Israel, the Philippines, Palestine, Jordan, Syria, Nicaragua, Sudan, Haiti, Afghanistan, and many more. [2] [3]
In 2016, COHI partnered with the American Refugee Committee to provide maternal and child healthcare in Haiti, [1] midwives in indigenous women's forum in Nicaragua, midwifery students and sexual health advocates in Nepal, a clinic for refugees in Rio Grand Valley on the Mexico/US boarder. COHI assists with human trafficking globally. [4] [3]
COHI is affiliated with organizations including Catholic Charities, [4] Boston University, [3] Harvard, [5] [1] The American Refugee Committee, [1] and the American Israel Political Action Committee AIPAC. [6] [7] COHI is also engaged in the social enterprise community program, known as the COHI Cloth Network, to address women's poverty. [8] [4]
COHI is a member of the Alliance for Middle East Peace, [9] [10] which requested $38 million in grant funding from the US House of Representatives under Title VIII (Program of Research and Training for Eastern Europe [11] and the Independent State of the Former Soviet Union) in 2013. Such funding was made available after the fall of the Soviet Union as it recovered from communist societies. [6] COHI also received the Positive Action Challenge Grant from the United Nations in 2016. Their services included providing health kits to refugees in Greece and Syrian midwife training in the Gaziantep and Turkey. [12]
In 2004, COHI partnered with a local host organization, Tibetan Healing Fund, in Tongren, also known as Repkong, Eastern Tibet to aid with the training of midwives in order to create a more sustainable maternal health care system. [13]
In 2004, COHI and their partners worked with Israeli and Palestinian women to address midwifery [10] and Gender Based Violence (GBV). [14] Conducted an assessment based on three main categories.
The assessment included in depth interviews and recommendations for each sector of Israel and the West Bank's diverse populations: religious and secular Jews, immigrant populations (Ethiopian, Russian, Congolese), the Bedouin, and the Palestinian populations of Israel and the West Bank, both Muslim and Christian
The results from the assessment were used to advocate for the needs of Israeli and Palestinian women such as better postpartum care.
This article has multiple issues. Please help
improve it or discuss these issues on the
talk page. (
Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
Founded | 2004 |
---|---|
Founder | Sera Bonds |
Type | Non-governmental organization |
Focus | Maternal and neonatal health |
Location | United States |
Areas Served | Sri Lanka, Tibet, New Orleans, Sudan, Tanzania, Afghanistan, Israel, Haiti, Syria, Texas, Oklahoma, Jordan, Philippines, Nicaragua, Nepal, Sierra Leone, Turkey |
Method | Providing quality healthcare to communities by partnering with local organizations |
Website | cohintl.org |
Circle of Health International (COHI) is a US-based non-governmental organization founded in 2004, with the mission to work with vulnerable women, children, and refugees during times of disaster through comprehensive women's health worldwide. [1] They cooperate with organizations to help vulnerable women with a community based approach during times of crisis. COHI has worked with midwives and public health professionals in countries like the United States, Sri Lanka, Louisiana, Tibet, Tanzania, Israel, the Philippines, Palestine, Jordan, Syria, Nicaragua, Sudan, Haiti, Afghanistan, and many more. [2] [3]
In 2016, COHI partnered with the American Refugee Committee to provide maternal and child healthcare in Haiti, [1] midwives in indigenous women's forum in Nicaragua, midwifery students and sexual health advocates in Nepal, a clinic for refugees in Rio Grand Valley on the Mexico/US boarder. COHI assists with human trafficking globally. [4] [3]
COHI is affiliated with organizations including Catholic Charities, [4] Boston University, [3] Harvard, [5] [1] The American Refugee Committee, [1] and the American Israel Political Action Committee AIPAC. [6] [7] COHI is also engaged in the social enterprise community program, known as the COHI Cloth Network, to address women's poverty. [8] [4]
COHI is a member of the Alliance for Middle East Peace, [9] [10] which requested $38 million in grant funding from the US House of Representatives under Title VIII (Program of Research and Training for Eastern Europe [11] and the Independent State of the Former Soviet Union) in 2013. Such funding was made available after the fall of the Soviet Union as it recovered from communist societies. [6] COHI also received the Positive Action Challenge Grant from the United Nations in 2016. Their services included providing health kits to refugees in Greece and Syrian midwife training in the Gaziantep and Turkey. [12]
In 2004, COHI partnered with a local host organization, Tibetan Healing Fund, in Tongren, also known as Repkong, Eastern Tibet to aid with the training of midwives in order to create a more sustainable maternal health care system. [13]
In 2004, COHI and their partners worked with Israeli and Palestinian women to address midwifery [10] and Gender Based Violence (GBV). [14] Conducted an assessment based on three main categories.
The assessment included in depth interviews and recommendations for each sector of Israel and the West Bank's diverse populations: religious and secular Jews, immigrant populations (Ethiopian, Russian, Congolese), the Bedouin, and the Palestinian populations of Israel and the West Bank, both Muslim and Christian
The results from the assessment were used to advocate for the needs of Israeli and Palestinian women such as better postpartum care.