by Alejandra Cabrera and Carlos Pineda, PASMO
It was near the end of the school year and the halls of the Santa Ana Middle School and High School were uncharacteristically quiet. In the cool and dim library, only one student was reading in silence with his headphones over his ears. It was there where Dino Alfonzo greeted us, wearing a warm smile, a grey t-shirt and jeans.
The 47-year-old science and biology teacher is described as “the best teacher in school” by his students and was recently named a “Zika champion” by PSI’s network member, the Pan American Social Marketing Organization (PASMO), as part of the USAID-funded Social and Behavior Change Communication (SBCC) Zika Prevention Project in Central America and the Caribbean.
“No one talks to the students about their sexual and reproductive health”, Dino says, “and they generally don’t feel comfortable talking to their parents about these things”.
Dino is one of 90 teachers trained by PASMO in El Salvador who have reached nearly 5,000 adolescents and youth in communities at-risk for Zika transmission with information and resources about how to prevent both the vector-borne and sexual transmission of the virus, including the prevention of unplanned pregnancies and use of family planning methods. From April to September 2018, Dino alone has trained 119 seventh-graders at the school using the methodological guide developed under the Project, helping him earn the “Zika champion” title.
“At first, it’s hard to get them to take some of the topics seriously, especially when we talk about using condoms and other family planning methods”, describes Dino with a chuckle. “But I prepare for that, and after talking to them calmly and seriously, I make sure they get the message”.
After the Zika outbreak in the region, USAID’s SBCC Zika Prevention Project has implemented a comprehensive approach to the epidemic which works in close coordination with Ministries of Health and Ministries of Education, actively engaging and reaching those most vulnerable to Zika infection and their communities. It includes communications efforts and campaigns to reach pregnant women and their male partners, as well as adolescents, youth and young people of reproductive age through media channels, social media, their teachers, and healthcare providers.
“I’ve learned a lot in this process, and I think my relationship with the students has improved”, says Dino, who was so motivated by the project that he became a volunteer community leader who now advises families and neighbors on how to eliminate standing water and other ways to prevent Zika.
“As teachers, I know we can have a big impact, not only in our schools, but also our communities.”
Banner image: © Pan American Social Marketing Organization (PASMO)