GSK PULSE Volunteer Kerry spent time in La Paz, Bolivia last year working with Pro Mujer. The PULSE Volunteer Partnership Program is an integral part of GSK's commitment to serving communities around the world by empowering high-performing employees to volunteer their professional expertise towards sustainable change in the areas of healthcare, education, and the environment.
Like most PULSE volunteers, I chose to do a six-month international assignment. I went to La Paz, Bolivia, to work with Pro Mujer, an international, non-profit women's development and microfinance organization with some of the most amazing people. While working at Pro Mujer, my role was to evaluate how the organization purchases, distributes, stores, and sells their medications to 65 health clinics throughout the country. In addition to the financial services and business and empowerment training it provides to women in impoverished communities across Latin America, Pro Mujer also provides access to high-quality, low-cost primary health care services and preventive health education. I then helped develop a more efficient medication purchasing, stocking, sales and tracking system. Ultimately, I lived the GSK mission of 'do more, feel better, live longer' by helping women and children in Bolivia to recover sooner from illness so they could return to their daily lives-- working and providing for themselves and their families.
You learn a lot about yourself when you are in an environment very far out of your comfort zone--I returned in December of 2010 back to the LA area of California. Although I am glad to be back, I feel different. I now appreciate more fully all that we have here and try to keep that in my daily perspective. With a global vision, I hope to bring a different outlook to my work within GSK vaccines and to my personal interactions with friends, family and strangers. I'mforever grateful to GSK and Pro Mujer for supporting such a program like PULSE and the personal and professional development opportunity it provides for people like me. I am often asked, "What one thing helped you the most with your adjustment to La Paz?? I always reply that my sense of humor helped me get through the sometimes awkward conversations, misunderstandings or outright confusion. I grew to enjoy and treasure my friends and the community I had created. Now, I miss all that made La Paz so special--my cubicle, hanging my laundry to dry, sharing a minibus with strangers on my rides to work, drinking soda and/or juice with every meal and of course--the kissing greeting.
When I first heard Andrew Witty, the CEO of GSK, talk about PULSE, I knew I wanted to participate. I was aware of the support that GSK provides to the developing world and this was my chance to be a part of that work. Andrew has since mentioned that GSK has been sending product and monetary donations to non-profits and NGOs for quite some time. However, PULSE now also sends our most valuable resource--our people. So far, PULSE has sent nearly 200 GSK employees from 26 different countries working with 58 non-profit and NGOs in 39 countries.
I moved to La Paz--a city that sits at more than 14,000 feet--on June 18, 2010. It's a surreal experience coming down into La Paz from the airport in El Alto. La Paz is a bowl-shaped city with apartment buildings and taxis just like any other. However, there are of course large cultural differences. Adjusting to just about everything took some time--altitude, climate (I landed in the middle of winter), food, transportation, and general 'Bolivianisms.' One 'Bolivianism' is the ritual greeting. I worked in an open area with about 12 people. The ritual greeting is a kiss on the cheek. It' a lovely greeting, yet some days I felt funny kissing 12 people. Did I mention every single morning to say hello and every afternoon to say good bye?

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