By Esperanza International | October 31, 2018

Women’s Health – A Life Saving Endeavor

According to Ben Wolford, a Newsweek journalist, “cervical cancer is a disease of poverty.” Woldford’s article reveals that cervical cancer affects over half a million women worldwide each year and that 85% of these cases occur in developing countries such as the Dominican Republic. Additionally, the International Agency for Research on Cancer indicates that cervical cancer has the second highest mortality rate of all cancers affecting women in Dominican Republic....

According to Ben Wolford, a Newsweek journalist, “cervical cancer is a disease of poverty.” Woldford’s article reveals that cervical cancer affects over half a million women worldwide each year and that 85% of these cases occur in developing countries such as the Dominican Republic. Additionally, the International Agency for Research on Cancer indicates that cervical cancer has the second highest mortality rate of all cancers affecting women in Dominican Republic. In contrast, cervical cancer only causes 3% of the female cancer deaths in North America.

The World Health Organization explains that because developing countries lack affordable screening, prevention, and treatment, a disproportionate amount of women in these countries are diagnosed with and die from cervical cancer every year. However, PATH offers a hopeful statistic: If all women age 35-64 received a cervical cancer screening once every two years, the cumulative rate of cervical cancer would reduce by 93%. By offering free cervical cancer screenings, Esperanza is helping do their part to reduce the cumulative rate of cervical cancer in developing countries.

Esperanza empowers women by providing them with access to doctors and health services, such as cervical cancer screenings, so that they can maintain their health and prevent fatal diseases from affecting their lives and their family’s lives. Esperanza sends doctors out into the Bateys (farmlands) to administer free cervical cancer screenings. The women who live in the farmlands do not have access to a doctor near them. In addition, cervical cancer screenings can be costly, especially without insurance. Esperanza’s free cervical cancer screenings eliminate the barriers of distance and cost so that these women can maintain their female health and prevent fatalities from cervical cancer. 

The women who received cervical cancer screenings in Batey Anita, ranged from age 19 to age 82. They all expressed their thankfulness for Esperanza’s health services, because the free exams provide the women with reassurance of their physical health that would be otherwise undetectable. In addition, if a woman’s results come back positive for cervical cancer, Esperanza continues to support the associate by providing free treatment for the woman. 

Esperanza’s health education and medical services help break the cycle of cervical cancer being a “disease of poverty.” All women should have access and means to maintain their health and see their children grow up. With Esperanza’s help, these women are able to ensure that their health is not an impediment to their thriving businesses and flourishing lives. 

Microfinance is a banking service which exists to serve the material poor in emerging economies. Through this lending process, loans are distributed to entrepreneurs for investment in their business.

learn more

share this article

recent articles

Julio: Committed to Community

Some might say that the La Malaga community, located high up in the mountains outside of Hato Mayor, DR, would be no place for a young entrepreneur to open a business and set up a life. But for Julio, there was never much of a choice. Growing up in an extremely remote area can be quite difficult, especially for those who are already vulnerable due to social status or poverty. Instead of…

“Esperanza is our hope”

In 2004, a sugarcane plantation worker named Jacobo joined a new solidarity group forming in his community with the hope of starting a colmado (a neighborhood convenience store) to provide for his wife, his two sons, and his daughter, Yasquina. When Yasquina told her parents her dream to become a doctor and come back to serve their impoverished community, they used loans from Esperanza to cover tuition payments, and Yasquina…

Maria: Her children rise up

Maria remembers her community as a hopeless place when she was a child. Most of the 500 residents of her batey are descendants of Haitian immigrants working the sugarcane plantations without access to social services, education, or opportunities. When she heard about women taking out loans together with Esperanza, this hard-working single mother recognized an opportunity to provide for her children. With her first loan, Maria opened a small fried food shop, which became…