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Traditional Guatemalan midwives—comadronas—recently received property from San Juan Ostuncalco for the creation of their own clinic. HEP+ supported the Observatory on Reproductive Health (OSAR)—Guatemala’s reproductive health watchdog—in the development of a proposal to the San Juan Ostuncalco Municipal Council for clinic space to provide medical services and store equipment. After the June handover of the property, clinic construction can begin. The clinic will be attended by 93 comadronas and remain open 24 hours a day. It is expected to serve 40 percent of the young children and pregnant women in San Juan Ostuncalco.
Traditional Guatemalan midwives—comadronas—recently received property from San Juan Ostuncalco for the creation of their own clinic. HEP+ supported the Observatory on Reproductive Health (OSAR)—Guatemala’s reproductive health watchdog—in the development of a proposal to the San Juan Ostuncalco Municipal Council for clinic space to provide medical services and store equipment. After the June handover of the property, clinic construction can begin. The clinic will be attended by 93 comadronas and remain open 24 hours a day. It is expected to serve 40 percent of the young children and pregnant women in San Juan Ostuncalco.
Traditional Guatemalan midwives—comadronas—recently received property from San Juan Ostuncalco for the creation of their own clinic. HEP+ supported the Observatory on Reproductive Health (OSAR)—Guatemala’s reproductive health watchdog—in the development of a proposal to the San Juan Ostuncalco Municipal Council for clinic space to provide medical services and store equipment. After the June handover of the property, clinic construction can begin. The clinic will be attended by 93 comadronas and remain open 24 hours a day. It is expected to serve 40 percent of the young children and pregnant women in San Juan Ostuncalco.