Submitted
Equitable Health Systems

SANA Indigenous Health Autonomy Initiative

Team Leader
Arnulfo Oxlaj
Solution Overview & Team Lead Details
Our Organization
AMOR International
What is the name of your solution?
SANA Indigenous Health Autonomy Initiative
Provide a one-line summary of your solution.
Capacitating young indigenous midwives to serve as Community Health Volunteers to treat and strengthen disease resilience in their communities.
Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?

Curable diseases are wiping out indigenous people faster than any physical weapons. Depriving people of access to health services is one of the greatest human rights abuses that indigenous people face today. The coronavirus lockdown has brought the world’s informal economy to a grinding halt, threatening to plunge over one-sixth of the world’s population into abject poverty. The white flags of Guatemala, for example, indicate the pandemic's deadly side-effect: hunger. That this could significantly worsen malnutrition and lead to starvation in children and vulnerable populations is clear and a profound concern. Moreover, this same malnutrition is a risk factor that leaves these children and women far more exposed to the virus and disease in general. What is also clear is that any medicine or vaccines are unlikely to reach indigenous communities, so it is vital that they be shielded from the virus and have access to basic health care and food supplies during the current crisis and beyond. This crisis provides a once-in-a lifetime opportunity to re-introduce traditional health systems and knowledge that will help indigenous communities have sustainable access to free health support irrespective of governmental provision.

What is your solution?

In every health pandemic, those worst affected are indigenous peoples. Given that indigenous communities struggle to obtain medicine, it is vital that they be shielded and have access to basic health care. This crisis provides an invaluable opportunity to re-establish or strengthen traditional health systems and knowledge in indigenous communities to ensure affordable health care provision irrespective of governmental provision. This project will build the capacity of indigenous women to serve as Community Health Volunteers during Covid-19 and beyond, building communities that are prepared and resilient in the face of disaster, disease and food insecurity. With AMOR, through SANA Guatemala we are unlocking the potential of indigenous communities to support their own health sustainably. Our vision is to expand to serve the millions of indigenous communities globally without healthcare provision, assist them in achieving health autonomy and so save the lives of the 9.7 million children who die of preventable diseases annually.

Specifically, SANA builds the capacity of indigenous women as Community Health Volunteers (ICHVs) to care for their communities during the Covid-19 crisis and beyond, helping build communities that are prepared and resilient in the face of disaster, disease and food insecurity.

The SANA model has four major components: 

1)    Training young indigenous women in basic community health, traditional medicine and Covid-19 protocol to build the capacity of indigenous communities to mitigate their risk and prepare and protect themselves from disaster and disease.

2)    ICHVs hold regular clinics and conduct home visits in communities, educating on Covid-19 preparedness in addition to the prevention of common diseases afflicting indigenous communities.

3)    ICHVs also train others in these same skills, rebuilding traditional knowledge and wisdom in Mayan communities devastated by genocide and creating a strong base of indigenous women’s health leadership.

4)    ICHVs coordinate crisis food parcel distribution to the most vulnerable families.

The trainings content has two parts. The first part comprises an introduction to traditional medicine and how to use it to strengthen the immune system and protect the respiratory system and kidneys, building resistance to Covid-19 and other preventable diseases. The second part is specifically concerned with coronavirus prevention and treatment.

SANA builds the capacity of indigenous women as Community Health Volunteers (ICHVs) to care for their communities during the Covid-19 crisis and beyond, helping build communities that are prepared and resilient in the face of disaster, disease and food insecurity.

The AMOR model has four major components: 

1)    Training young indigenous women in basic community health, traditional medicine and Covid-19 protocol to build the capacity of indigenous communities to mitigate their risk and prepare and protect themselves from disaster and disease.

2)    ICHVs hold regular clinics and conduct home visits in communities, educating on Covid-19 preparedness in addition to the prevention of common diseases afflicting indigenous communities.

3)    ICHVs also train others in these same skills, rebuilding traditional knowledge and wisdom in Mayan communities devastated by genocide and creating a strong base of indigenous women’s health leadership.

4)    ICHVs coordinate crisis food parcel distribution to the most vulnerable families.

The trainings content has two parts. The first part comprises an introduction to traditional medicine and how to use it to strengthen the immune system and protect the respiratory system and kidneys, building resistance to Covid-19 and other preventable diseases. The second part is specifically concerned with coronavirus prevention and treatment.

AMOR builds the capacity of indigenous women as Community Health Volunteers (ICHVs) to care for their communities during the Covid-19 crisis and beyond, helping build communities that are prepared and resilient in the face of disaster, disease and food insecurity.

The AMOR model has four major components: 

1)    Training young indigenous women in basic community health, traditional medicine and Covid-19 protocol to build the capacity of indigenous communities to mitigate their risk and prepare and protect themselves from disaster and disease.

2)    ICHVs hold regular clinics and conduct home visits in communities, educating on Covid-19 preparedness in addition to the prevention of common diseases afflicting indigenous communities.

3)    ICHVs also train others in these same skills, rebuilding traditional knowledge and wisdom in Mayan communities devastated by genocide and creating a strong base of indigenous women’s health leadership.

4)    ICHVs coordinate crisis food parcel distribution to the most vulnerable families.

The trainings content has two parts. The first part comprises an introduction to traditional medicine and how to use it to strengthen the immune system and protect the respiratory system and kidneys, building resistance to Covid-19 and other preventable diseases. The second part is specifically concerned with coronavirus prevention and treatment.

This solution focuses on preventative and mitigation measures that strengthen access to affordable primary healthcare systems in indigenous communities and tackle the health inequality they face by creating autonomy via the implementation of an Indigenous Community Health Volunteer system. This model has potential global application, harnessing indigenous human resources, knowledge and natural technology to help solve an issue that results in millions of unnecessary deaths each year and causes untold suffering.

Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?

The target population whose lives this project has been designed to directly and meaningfully improve are the indigenous peoples of the world. We have begun this work in partnership with Mayan communities throughout Central America. In Guatemala alone there are 15 million indigenous inhabitants. The President of AMOR is indigenous Mayan and AMOR is deeply embedded in the communities we serve. This solution has been developed in conjunction with indigenous communities throughout all of its stages to ensure buy-in. Such communities lack doctors and public health services. This solution will address the needs of communities with high infant mortality rates to take responsibility for their own health in the same way that they did for millennia, rebuilding traditional health systems and knowledge destroyed by colonisation, and strengthening indigenous women's health leadership.

We firmly believe that now is the time to raise up once more the pillars of indigenous community, the women who are the shade for their children from the sun, their umbrella from the rain.

This project's innovation lies in its focus on the use of human resources to solve costly health challenges and so eliminate traditional barriers to health for indigenous communities whose lives are being devastated by preventable and curable disease. By harnessing indigenous human resources, ancestral knowledge and natural technology to help remove these barriers, indigenous people become their own saviours and are freed from the need for charity.

How are you and your team well-positioned to deliver this solution?

AMOR is a dynamic organisation that is dedicated to helping transform indigenous communities devastated by poverty, war and marginalisation through programmes that support education, health and human rights by reviving indigenous knowledge. AMOR is deeply embedded in the communities it serves. AMOR believes that one of the best ways to bring about positive, profound and permanent change in the world is by empowering indigenous women. 

AMOR is transforming lives using an integrated approach to development that yields both economic and cultural benefits, helping people access justice, defend their lands, feed their families, care for their communities in crisis and build climate resilience, while at the same time rescuing the vital ancestral knowledge that has been key to their survival. Importantly, our programmes have helped over 96,700 people lift themselves out of extreme poverty, as well as empowering families to stay in their communities instead of risking the perilous US migration route. Key to our success is the fact that our projects are all Mayan-led and designed, developed in conjunction with beneficiaries, communities and local and national authorities at every stage to ensure buy-in.

AMOR was founded by Arnulfo Oxlaj, a Mayan human rights activist, philosopher, author and artist from Guatemala and the only survivor of a massacre in which 115 children and countless adults perished. Arnulfo resolved to transform that tragedy into triumph, to help his people rise from the ashes of genocide and contribute their gifts to the world.

AMOR was established as a community association in Guatemala in 2001 and registered as a charity in the UK in 2012 and a UK management committee was formed. AMOR benefits from international expertise and highly trained local teams led by founder Arnulfo Oxlaj. AMOR ́s British Executive Director, Sandra Hannen M.Ed. is an education and policy specialist and a highly experienced non-profit executive with over a decade of field experience. As well as these two volunteer staff members, AMOR has 25 international volunteers and 45 facilitators in Guatemala. AMOR is an advisory organisation to the British Embassy of Guatemala and Honduras. The British Ambassador classified AMOR as the "organisation with the greatest potential impact for Mayan women in Guatemala".


Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Build fundamental, resilient, and people-centered health infrastructure that makes essential services, equipment, and medicines more accessible and affordable for communities that are currently underserved;
Where our solution team is headquartered or located:
Nebaj, Guatemala
Our solution's stage of development:
  • Scale
How many people does your solution currently serve?
450 trained, 45,000 served
Why are you applying to Solve?

AMOR is a low resource, high impact organisation with a burning ambition to transform the lives of the indigenous people, long excluded from traditional funding sources. However, demand has skyrocketed with the challenges of the pandemic and global financial crisis, with many more communities requesting our services than we can assist. At the same time, a dent in income as a result of the pandemic threatens to undo many of the gains made. We urgently need a boost and the benefit of expert assistance in increasing our capacity and diversifying funding sources and reviewing our business model to meet the exceptional demand for AMOR’s services. We also see that new funding opportunities have arisen from this crisis for which our Executive Director currently has no time to apply due to the need to manage communications and help manage our programmes. Additionally, opportunities have arisen for expert pro bono assistance of which we would like to take advantage to emerge better through this crisis. Finally, AMOR currently has three board members, but we would like to recruit two more, with expertise in marketing and business planning, to help us with the different issues we will face as we grow.

In which of the following areas do you most need partners or support?
  • Business model (e.g. product-market fit, strategy & development)
Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
Arnulfo Oxlaj
More About Your Solution
Your Team
Your Business Model & Funding
Solution Team:
Arnulfo Oxlaj
Arnulfo Oxlaj
President and Founder, AMOR International