News Archive 2009-2018

Lonnie Hackett ’14 Wins Projects for Peace Award Archives

Lonnie Hackett ’14 with school children in Zambia

Lonnie Hackett ’14 with school children in Zambia

Lonnie Hackett is not yet a college graduate, but already he is the founder of a healthcare nonprofit in Zambia that provides free medical treatment to children.

To further his work, Hackett has received a $10,000 Projects for Peace grant. He’ll use the funds to serve more children through his humanitarian organization, Healthy Kids/Brighter Future. Philanthropist Kathryn Davis set up the Projects for Peace foundation to support motivated undergraduates who are implementing community projects around the world.

Building Healthy Kids/Brighter Future

Lonnie Hackett, a biochemistry major and psychology minor — and a Truman scholar — plans to attend medical school in two years. In the meantime, he will continue building Healthy Kids/Brighter Future to ensure it remains viable. “I need to make it sustainable,” he said, with the broadest reach he can maintain.

Annual medical check-ups to all of N’gombe’s school children will cost $50,000 a year, Hackett estimates, a budget that would also cover teacher education and the delivery of clean water to schools.

To help raise money for Healthy Kids, Hackett has organized a charity run on Bowdoin’s campus May 11.

When he was a college freshman, Hackett, who grew up in Bangor, Maine, traveled to Zambia for a summer volunteer trip. He recounts being shocked by the levels of illness and poverty he witnessed there, particularly in the squatter settlements around Lusaka, Zambia’s largest city. A year later, he launched Healthy Kids/Brighter Future to help some of the city’s most vulnerable children. Many Zambian children suffer from serious illnesses, ones that are easily preventable or curable. One in nine will not live to see their fifth birthday.

With help from a board of doctors, academics and lawyers, Hackett set up a nonprofit model in which 100% of donations flow directly to his health projects. Along with the $10,000 peace grant, Hackett has raised an additional $9,000 from other donors this year to continue providing healthcare in N’gombe, one of Lusaka’s most impoverished settlements.

From June to September, Healthy Kids’ team of 15 paid Zambian nurses, doctors and other healthcare workers are planning to see 3,000 students at 15 of N’gombe’s poorest public schools. Last summer, with $10,000 (half of it from a Thomas Andrew McKinley ’06 Entrepreneur Grant, awarded through Bowdoin Career Planning), they treated 1,400 students at seven schools.

zambian child with bandaidThe team will buy an arsenal of medications, including antibiotics, deworming pills, cough syrup, tuberculosis vaccinations, flu shots, anti-parasite pills and tetanus vaccinations. At the schools, Hackett’s healthcare team will give medications to children and look for such diseases as tuberculosis, malaria and HIV, referring them to a government health clinic for more tests if necessary.

“We are able to treat most of what we see,” Hackett said. Some of the diseases are relatively easy and cheap to cure. Medicine for schistosomiasis, a small waterborne parasite that is widespread among children, costs just twenty cents. On average the check-ups cost about $4 per student, Hackett said. “We can do a lot with quite a little.”

The other part of Healthy Kids/Brighter Future’s work is educating teachers about preventative medicine, sanitation and basic healthcare so they can help their students stay healthy. With his current $19,000 budget, Hackett will also be able to offer 70 teachers a full week of medical training, paying them for their time.

Hackett is building a solid foundation in N’gombe with the hope to eventually expand the reach of Healthy Kids/Brighter Future. N’gombe has 35 community schools with 10,000 students, and there are many more needy students beyond the settlement in Lusaka and Zambia. “We’re working in this community [of N’gombe] as a model,” Hackett said. “It’ll allow us to track and see the impact in a concentrated area, so we can attract more funding, pitch it to bigger NGOs and scale it up.”

For students interested in learning more about the Davis Projects for Peace program, contact Bowdoin’s Career Planning office.

thumb: