Environmental health training of promotoras in colonias along the Texas-Mexico border
IN Ramos, M May and KS Ramos
Center for Environmental and Rural Health, Texas A&M University, 4455 TAMU, College Station, TX 77843-4455, USA. iramos@cvm.tamu.edu
Poverty, overpopulation, and a lack of environmental controls have combined
with cultural and linguistic division to produce a looming public health
threat in unincorporated communities on the US-Mexico border. These rapidly
multiplying colonias, from a Spanish term for neighborhoods, are
settlements of varying size located along the border. Along the American
side of the Texas-Mexico border alone, there are approximately 1800
colonias--the largest number of any border state--most of which lack basic
water and sewer systems, paved roads, and safe and sanitary housing.
Promotoras, from a Spanish term for lay community educators, are community
leaders who live in the colonias and build important bridges between
residents and the federal and state bureaucracies. These women have been
trained to introduce their neighbors to state "systems" of government,
education, and medical and social services that otherwise may lie out of
reach. Promotoras are able to "translate" this training into culturally
meaningful instruction that empowers community self-development. When
neighbors teach neighbors, the message is received with greater trust and
readiness to act.
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