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Four
Harvard Undergrads To Work at
Costa Rican Clinic
While many students will avoid
their reading and darken their
tans this spring break, the
Harvard branch of Federation for
International Medical Relief of
Children (FIMRC) will head to
Costa Rica to aid Nicaraguan
refugees.
FIMRC is a global non-profit
organization that provides
health education programs and
medical care for the
underprivileged. Four
undergraduate FIMRC members will
travel to a clinic in Alajuelita,
a community located south of the
Costa Rican capital, San José.
The Alajuelita population is
plagued by contaminated water,
underemployment, lack of
education, and minimal public
utilities, among other health
problems such as malnutrition
and drug addiction, according to
the FIMRC website.
The Harvard volunteers will
spend a week working with
children in the area, providing
medical assistance and promoting
health education through skits
and other types of
presentations.
Volunteers, who will be housed
in local homes with English or
Spanish-speaking families, will
have the option to stay longer
than one week. Students cover
the cost of the trip, about
$900, according to the FIMRC
website.
Approximately 13,000 Nicaraguan
refugees, mainly single women
and children, have fled to Costa
Rica to escape poverty and
persecution, according to the
FIMRC website and Angela M.
Mayorga ’09, the coordinator of
the trip.
The national organization worked
with the Harvard branch in
organizing the trip, according
to Mayorga.
Vikram Bakhru, the president and
founder of FIMRC, said he
started the organization after
witnessing severe poverty in
India. Bakhru said he believes
it is important for college
students to devote their time to
helping underprivileged
populations globally.
“We are overwhelmingly
thrilled,” he said of the
Harvard trip. “It is important
to implement what you’ve learned
in class to gain perspective.”
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