TAPS teams bring health & safety
lessons to remote communities
The
name of this philanthropic quest is a mouthful. The event itself
is ambitious.
But the goal of
the “Prince William Sound Traveling Health and Safety Fair &
Events" is simple: TAPS employees and health care volunteers
visit some of the region's most remote communities to deliver
health and safety messages and lessons to the people who live
there.
This marked the
eighth year that Alyeska has sponsored this unique community
event. For one week, volunteers travel by boat throughout the
Sound, visiting with children, elders, and community leaders,
staging educational assemblies and informative meetings, and
offering services such as mammograms, blood pressure and
diabetic screenings, and lessons in everything from emergency
preparedness to dental hygiene.
“Having the
opportunity to provide health and safety programs to the
communities and villages in Prince William Sound is so
rewarding," said Ruth Black, Alyeska's Valdez Communications
Manager, who coordinates the event.
"It is a
wonderful opportunity to go to the communities and interact with
everyone, from babies to the elders," Black said. "I learn
something new every time.”
In
the beginning, the traveling health fair was a joint project
between Alyeska and state agencies, to target Prince William
Sound communities that had specific unmet health care needs. In
2006, Lynden-owned Alaska Marine Lines (AML) from Cordova and
Bering Marine Corporation (BMC) joined as full sponsors,
providing the marine crafts and crew to move the volunteers
through the Sound. Alyeska's SERVS provides the fuel.
The effort this
year reached a broad audience: With stops in Tatitlek, Chenega
Bay and Whittier, the teams provided 67 activities in six days
and made 1,436 individual contacts. The week wrapped up with no
safety incidents or injuries.
The fair's
theme this year: "Celebrate Life with the 3 P's: Prevent;
Protect; and Plan". Activities included a women's tea, where
women discussed domestic violence, wrote songs and beaded memory
bracelets; a breakfast for fathers to discuss healthy
relationships; school assemblies for children; and in each of
the three communities, a health and safety fair with various
booths geared toward physical and mental health and general
safety and emergency preparedness instruction.
Other services
provided to the communities included mammography clinics,
height/weight checks, vision tests, blood pressure and diabetes
screenings, and lessons about diet and exercise, first aid, oral
health, relationships, domestic violence, prescription
medication, sexually transmitted diseases and the WIC program.
Alyeska also sponsored community dinners in the villages of
Tatitlek and Chenega Bay.
For more on the
health and safety fair, visit Alyeska’s website at
www.alyeska-pipe.com.
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