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Los Niños
Programs | Family Health and Food Security
What is Community "Food
Security"?
Los Niños promotes strategies that contribute to community
food security. Community food security is defined as "all people
in a community obtaining a culturally acceptable, nutritionally adequate
diet through non-emergency food sources at all times".
The Los Niños Model
The Los Niños model integrates nutrition, health, and organic
agriculture into a community approach that offers program participants
self-reliant methods to address their food needs. Los Niños
promotoras are trained to work in their own communities disseminating
information about these important issues.
The Promotoras
Each promotora teaches two Nutrition & Ecology classes during
two 4 month sessions every year. They offer one class for adults,
while the other class is taught to elementary school children. Generally
there are between 10 and 35 participants in each class.
The promotoras have typically had extremely limited access to education
and have dedicated much of their lives to their families. Their work
in the Family Health and Food Security programs affords them the respected
title of teacher in their communities, and enables them to fulfill
a much-needed role outside of the home.
Family Health Outreach
The outreach model for this program has proven to be extremely successful
in reaching vast numbers of families in the border region. Last year
over 25,000 family members, including adults and children, benefited
from heightened awareness of nutrition and ecology issues affecting
their lives and their communities.
The Family Health and Food Security Programs are currently in operation
in Tijuana and Mexicali, Mexico. Los Niños is actively looking
for financial support to expand the program into underserved communities
in the San Diego region.
To Learn More
Read about Los Niños in The Border Health Initiative newsletter |
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Learn More . . .
• Read
"From Salsas to Neighborhood Unity; Chula Vista Group makes
a Difference," by Rosa Barajas
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