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Saving a Baby's Life, For Less Than the Price of a Cup of Coffee

ByMANDANA MOFIDI
July 08, 2011, 8:54 PM

July 9, 2011— -- Some people never discover their mission in life. Others do, but usually not at the tender age of six. For Alan Penn, that is the precise age he discovered his purpose.

The year was 1954. The place: Honduras. Penn was brought there by his missionary parents who were giving tetanus vaccines to women and children. His job was to hold the babies while their mothers were being immunized.

Fast forward some 50-odd years later, and Penn, now the president-elect of Kiwanis International, is in Cambodia holding a child who can live a healthy life due to his organization's efforts to vaccinate mothers against maternal and neonatal tetanus, a painful disease that kills one baby every nine minutes, or 60,000 babies each year, in some of the poorest places on earth.

"I had tears in my eyes because I flashed back to when I was a little kid with my mom in the mountains holding the babies," Penn told ABC News. "And now, I am helping to eliminate this terrible disease."

The Eliminate Project

At its 96th annual convention in Geneva this week, Kiwanis International pledged to raise $110 million by 2015 in a final push to help eliminate maternal and neonatal tetanus, a preventable disease that is typically contracted through unhygienic childbirth practices.

Take the Million Moms Challenge to help mothers and babies around the world!

The global campaign, called The Eliminate Project , is a partnership with the United Nations Children's Fund. The goal of the project is to eliminate this disease by vaccinating women of childbearing age, which will not only protect the mothers but also their future newborns.

"This will impact 61 million women and their children in just under 40 countries around the world," Penn said, noting that the cost of the vaccine is roughly $1.80, less than a cup of coffee.

A Trail of Broken Hearts

Three years ago Caryl Stern, the president and CEO of the U.S. Fund for UNICEF, witnessed first-hand the devastating effects of tetanus when she traveled to Sierra Leone. "It was the first and only time I sat with a mom and watched her baby die in her arms," Stern told ABC News. She said the newborn had contracted tetanus after her mother, who gave birth at home, used a sharp piece of metal to cut the umbilical cord.

"I watched the color drain out of the baby's face. It was heartbreaking. What's really sad about that is that had we immunized the mom, she would have been able to pass on that immunization to her child during her pregnancy," Stern said.

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