ASAPROSAR

ASAPROSAR
Founded 1986
Founder Dr. Vicky Guzmán
Legal status Non-profit organization
Focus Development
Area served
El Salvador
Slogan Changing Lives in El Salvador.
Website ASAPROSAR

ASAPROSAR (Asociación Salvadoreña Pro-Salud Rural - The Salvadoran Association for Rural Health) is a non-governmental organization that provides health, education, environment and economic development programs in El Salvador.[1][2]

History

ASAPROSAR was founded in 1986 by Dr. Vicky Guzmán. The organization developed out of Dr. Guzmán's work providing health services and training to rural communities in her native El Salvador in the 1970s. Founded during the Salvadoran Civil War, ASAPROSAR continued Dr. Guzman's work providing health services to the rural poor. In the 1990s, ASAPROSAR developed a post conflict resolution program that sought to help reintegrate ex-combatants from the civil war into society.[3]

Headquartered in Santa Ana, El Salvador, ASAPROSAR has over 200 local employees in the education, health and social work fields. ASAPROSAR also has staff and volunteers based in the United States.[4] Today, ASAPROSAR serves more than 150,000 people in El Salvador.

Programs

References

  1. ASAPROSAR website Retrieved 6/14/2011.
  2. Guidestar ASAPROSAR Nonprofit Report Retrieved 6/14/2011.
  3. (2005) From Bullets to Blackboards: Education for Peace in Latin America and Asia. E. V.-B. a. H. B. Alarcon. Washington, DC, Inter-American Development Bank. From Bullets to Blackboards: Education for Peace in Latin America and Asia] In English. Retrieved 6/23/2011.
  4. Friends of ASAPROSAR US based volunteer organization supporting ASAPROSAR. Retrieved 6/23/2011.
  5. Coltran, Paul, MD and James Umlas, MD. Eye Care in El Salvador Archived March 27, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Cataract & Refractive Surgery Today. August 2006.
  6. History Visual Health Program Archived August 11, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  7. Rural Preschool Program Retrieved 6/16/2011.
  8. Urban Youth Program
  9. La Magadalena Protected Forest. Archived March 26, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. In Spanish. Retrieved 6/24/2011.

External Links and Additional References

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