“A Third Culture Kid (TCK) is a person who has spent a significant part of his or her developmental years outside the parents’ culture. The TCK frequently builds relationships to all of the cultures, while not having full ownership in any. Although elements from each culture may be assimilated...
This book covers the essentials of care before, during, and after birth, through providing a variety of designs for low-cost equipment and training materials.
This guide provides managers, such as district medical officers, senior nurses, and midwives, with a wide variety of instruments for measuring some variables that determine the quality of primary child care. With these you can make a service diagnosis to find out where your present services fell...
01/01/2009 This report offers a rationale for urgently scaling up effective interventions to reduce the global burden of child and maternal undernutrition. It provides information on nutrition strategies and progress made by programmes, based on the most recent data available. The success stories and...
Many of the procedures in primary care are common to all levels of worker, so we have deliberately addressed it to any 'health worker' who can read this manual and who provide primary care, usually with little opportunity to refer children for help It is the outcome of an attempt to answer the...
13/11/2018 This workshop will be a time to think through and talk about educating and raising the most important resource that God has given us, our children, in a culture other than the one that their parents have come from. What are some of the challenges? What is best for each child? Although each...
05/09/2017 In The Third Culture Kid Experience David Pollock and Ruth Van Reken explore systematically and with compassion the experiences of those who have become know as "third culture kids" (TCKs)--children who grow up or spend a significant part of their childhood living abroad. Rich with real-life...
AccessAgriculture Training Video Dans cette vidéo, nous allons voir comment après l’accouchement nous pouvons : compenser la perte de sang ; nettoyer l’utérus et diminuer les douleurs ; se faire sentir bien dans sa peau ; et donner de l’appétit et de l’énergie. La maman en bonne santé nourrit...