2018 Hero of Health
Con Alma Health Foundation has named Tom Faber, a pediatrician and clinical director at Zuni Indian Health Service Hospital, as a health hero for collaborating with community members to increase opportunities for physical activity and healthy food options. Together community members are transforming what it means to grow up in Zuni, a pueblo of about 8,000 people in the northwest corner of New Mexico.
For the past decade we have recognized people who make incredible contributions to improve the health of their community, and contributed to the nonprofit of their choice. This year Con Alma will donate $1,000 to the Zuni Youth Enrichment Project on behalf of Faber.
“We received a record number of nominations this year telling us how people are improving health across New Mexico,” said Dolores E. Roybal, Con Alma’s executive director. “We chose Dr. Faber for bringing people together to provide children organized physical activity that hadn’t existed before, spearheading the development of more than 70 miles of walking trails and increasing families’ access to healthy food in a rural, isolated pueblo.”
Joseph Claunch, co-director of Zuni Youth Enrichment Project, and Jason Kurland, Diabetes director of Zuni Indian Health Service Hospital, both nominated Faber for the hero award. Ten years ago Dr. Faber founded the nonprofit organization, Zuni Youth Enrichment Project, which now serves more than 600 adolescents each year through summer camps, sports leagues, mentorship, youth leadership, cultural education, gardening, and food sovereignty.
“He understood that the foundation for a healthy Zuni community could be realized by connecting youth with caring, competent adults, challenging youth within a nurturing environment and facilitating a connection to Zuni traditions,” wrote Kurland in his nomination.
Dr. Faber, who moved to Zuni Pueblo in 2006, began partnering with community organizations to provide wrap-around services to his pediatric patients. After building relationships, he invited tribal programs, the public school district, government agencies and local businesses to develop a coalition, officially recognized by the Tribal Council, that works together to enhance local healthy food options and increase physical activity opportunities.
“I am truly honored to be recognized by the Con Alma Health Foundation, an organization which has done so much to elevate the health of all people in our state,” said Dr. Faber. “This award is particularly meaningful to me because of Con Alma’s commitment to respecting each community’s cultural strengths and advocating for equal access to health services.”
This year people across New Mexico nominated 56 individuals as possible heroes, including volunteers, doctors, nurses, nonprofit directors, health workers, community organizers and advocates for minority and underserved populations. Past heroes include Ophelia Reeder, facilitator of the McKinley County Health Council; Mary Stoecker, retired health promotion specialist for the New Mexico Department of Health in Silver City; Doug Meiklejohn, director of New Mexico Environmental Law Center in Santa Fe and Lauren Reichelt, director of Rio Arriba County’s Health and Human Services Department.
2018 Hero of Health Nominees
Esther Abeyta, San Jose Neighborhood
Charlie Alfero, Southwest Center for Health Innovation
Ashley Armijo, NM Center for Therapeutic Riding
Glenn Banks, CHRISTUS St. Vincent Sports Medicine
Jesse Barnes, MD, First Choice Community Health
Jack Barrett, Mountain Home Health Care
Curtis Breitner, Epilepsy Research Association
Yolanda B. Cruz, San Miguel County DWI Program
Sandy Dawson, Luna County Parents As Teachers
Colleen C. Dearmin, Solace Crisis Treatment Center
Yolanda “Yoli” Diaz, CARE (Cancer Aid Resource & Education)
Brenda Dunn, New Mexico Lions Operation KidSight
Caren Gala, Santa Fe Indian Center
David A. Gonzales, MD, Presbyterian Medical Services
Bud Hamilton, Cancer Foundation for NM
Lynn Haynes, El Puente de Encuentros
Daniel Hena, Tesuque Pueblo Juvenile Healing to Wellness Court
Olga Hernandez, Strong Families New Mexico
Janet Johnson, Santa Clara Pueblo
Bill Jordan, New Mexico Voices for Children
Stacy Keener, Mental Health Resource
Bob Kristy, The Sky Center
Nandini Pillai Kuehn, PhD, Health Services Consulting
Jenny Landen, Santa Fe Community College
Mary Laumbach, Harding County Health Council
Suzanne Lawson, SL Consulting
Nevin Marquez, HopeWorks
Terri McCaslin, Inside Out Recovery
Marsha McMurray-Avila, Bernalillo County Community Health Council
Claudia Medina, Enlace Comunitario
Stephanie Michnovicz, Cancer Services of New Mexico
Leslie Morrison, MD, UNM Hospital
Sunshine Muse, Black Health New Mexico
Dolly Narang, Pueblo de San Ildefonso
Barbara Nelson, Imagination Library of Grant County
Michael C. Parks, Senior Citizens’ Law Office
Judith Pierce, Taos Public Health Office
Verónica Plaza, MD, University of New Mexico
Jan Rivera-Velasquez, Guadalupe County Health Council
Lewis Rosenthal, Mountain Home Health Care
Lupe Salazar, Barrios Unidos
Allen Sanchez, CHI St. Joseph’s Children
Siena Sanderson, Las Cumbres Community Services
Olivia Seppi, Dona Ana County Head Start
Loretta Sesbeau, ARCA
Michele Suina, PhD, Albuquerque Area Indian Health Board
Karla Thornton, MD, UNM Medical School & Project Echo
Adela Trujillo, Community Action Agency of Southern NM
Amanda Trujillo-Gonzalez, McCurdy Ministries Community Center
Mary Vallejos, Dental Care in Your Home
Victoria VanDame, The OT Circus
Juventino Vasquez, Dona Ana County Head Start
Patricia Walsh , New Mexico State Parks
James Ziomek, MD, Los Alamos Medical Care Clinic
Marcos Zubia, Esperanza Shelter