Photo Friday

[image src="http://photos.state.gov/libraries/amgov/3234/Week_4/082710-dccentralkitchen-500.jpg" caption="Volunteers from George Washington University help prepare food at D.C. Central Kitchen. D.C. Central Kitchen works with other organizations and professional chefs to turn leftover food into meals for thousands of individuals in shelters, transitional homes and rehabilitation clinics. It also offers counseling and referrals to social services for at-risk individuals and provides nationally recognized culinary job training. (State Dept./Jane K. Chun)"]

Visit D.C. Central Kitchen’s website to learn more.

Mississippi Delta Taking Tips from Iran on Health Care

Working at the State Department, I don’t get too much good news about U.S.-Iran relations. Iran’s nuclear program and its abysmal human rights record have driven a wedge between the two governments. So it was a refreshing surprise to go home and find a very upbeat article in this month’s AARP Bulletin about friendly cooperation between ordinary Iranians and Americans.

Dr. Aaron Shirley

Dr. Aaron Shirley

The article – “Iranian Cure for the Delta’s Blues” – focuses on the efforts of Dr. Aaron Shirley, a 77-year-old pediatrician who has worked for decades trying to bring decent health care to the impoverished and underserved people of the Mississippi Delta. Shirley was discouraged about the ongoing misery of the people he is trying to help until he met Iranian-born Dr. Mohammad Shahbazi, chair of the Department of Behavioral and Environmental Health at Jackson State University.

Dr. Mohammad Shahbazi with his wife, Dr. Zahra Sarraf, a faculty member at Shiraz University of Medical Sciences in Iran

Dr. Mohammad Shahbazi with his wife, Dr. Zahra Sarraf, a faculty member at Shiraz University of Medical Sciences in Iran

Shahbazi was able to organize a trip to Iran – with the tacit approval of the National Institutes of Health and Iran’s ministry of health – for Shirley and other American health care professionals so that they could learn about that country’s ingenious methods for providing health care to poor, rural communities.

The 2009 trip provided the Americans with a look at Iran’s system of using trained locals working out of “health houses.” This method, which has won kudos from the World Health Organization, has eliminated health disparities between rural and urban populations over the last 30 years and reduced infant mortality in rural areas by tenfold. The American doctors are now trying to replicate an adapted version of the Iranian system by establishing Mississippi “health houses” and training single mothers currently on welfare to staff them.

The story made me wonder if there could be more grassroots efforts for U.S.-Iran friendship. Do you have any to share?

Photo Friday

[image src="http://photos.state.gov/libraries/amgov/3234/Week_1/070610_streetsense_500.jpg" caption="Vendor Roger Dove (right) has worked since December 2009 for Street Sense, a newspaper that covers homelessness and poverty issues while providing a source of income to the homeless. (State Dept./Jane K. Chun)" align="center"]

Learn more about the paper or get a subscription at StreetSense.org.

Obama committed to fighting global poverty

Many around the world are wondering what a new U.S. president will mean for their country. “Dear president what is your stance towards the third world countries,” asks an America.gov reader.

According to the Obama transition team, Obama will embrace the Millennium Development Goal of cutting extreme poverty around the world in half by 2015. The Obama administration aims to double U.S. foreign assistance to achieve that goal. “This will help the world’s weakest states build healthy and educated communities, reduce poverty, develop markets, and generate wealth,” according to the Obama transition Web site.

Obama also hopes more Americans will join in the fight against global poverty, perhaps by volunteering for such service programs like the Peace Corps, which arranges for U.S. citizens to help needy communities across the globe. His transition team has set up an online form for those interested in volunteering. Would you like to see the Peace Corps in your community? Post your comments below.