Malaria Social Business Roll of Honor -kindly help us edit in this future history (additions, corrections welcome)
Jan 2008 -first time term
social business of malaria used in West -see video below
Fall 08 : Clinton Global Initiative- candidate obama pledges
to make ending malaruia deaths by 2015 his number 1 foreign assistance goal in health
Early 09 first future capitalism
venture in malarin announced - partners in social business BASF Germany facilitated by Saskia Thais Bruysten and Grameen (Bangladesh)
April 09 Eddy Abgo DVM, PhD, chairman of Fyodor Biotechnologies Inc presents urine test of malaria at the posters competition of extremely cost efficient healthcare of the
world health congress (see letter download above)
.search of news
of end malaria deaths by 2015
Year of the hungry: 1000000000 afflicted Independent, UK - Dec 27, 2008 Goal
six Universal access to treatment for Aids/HIV by 2010 and reverse spread of HIV/Aids and malaria by 2015.
Progress New HIV cases declined from three ...
New Year's resolution: Make 2009 the 'Year of Africa' NCR Conversation Cafe, MO - Dec 31, 2008 An
estimated 11 million African children die each year due to preventable diseases such as malaria, measles,
diarrhea and pneumonia. ...
Global Health Should be Key Component of US Foreign Policy Infection Control Today, AZ - Dec 15, 2008 These funds should be spread across a breadth of global health issues including: treating and preventing AIDS, malaria,
and tuberculosis; improving health ...
info@worldcitizen.tv loves to publish grassroots good news on collaboration to end malaria deaths - washington
dc bureau usa 301 881 1655
If you can take disease out of one person , you can do it for 6 billion, it’s a question of just doing it again
and again. It’s learning how to do it for one, that’s the difficult part. If you have found the cure for one person
then we should get on and do it for every person in need. If we don’t know with all our intelligence, all our pride,
all the arrogance of our knowledge how to repeat a million times, a billion times ... what have we learnt? We know the cure
but the people don’t get the medicine, don’t get themselves cured. What a shame!
Sep 26, 2008 ...Malaria kills a child every thirty seconds; what do
the candidates plan to do about it? scienceblogs.com/aetiology/2008/09/obama_end_malaria_deaths_by_20.php
- 93k - Cached - Similar pages
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML Today, Barack Obama committed that as president, he will make the U.S. a global leader in ending deaths
from. malaria by 2015. Malaria needlessly kills ... obama.3cdn.net/c66c9bcf20c49ee2ce_h6ynmvjq8.pdf - Similar pages
September 25, 2008. Obama Commits to Ending Deaths From Malaria By 2015...Malaria kills 1 million people each year, the vast majority of whom are children ... www.undispatch.com/archives/2008/09/obama_commits_t.php - 73k - Cached - Similar pages
Obama: end malaria deaths by 2015 Well, you certainly
can't fault Obama for aiming high. Via satellite, Obama announced at yesterday's
Clinton Global. www.politicalwrinkles.com/opinions-editorials/4809-obama-end-malaria-deaths-2015-a.html
- 88k - Cached - Similar pages
Obama pledged to eliminate deaths from malaria by 2015.
It is "time to rid the world of a disease that doesn't have to take lives," Obama said ( Pittsburgh
... www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm?DR_ID=54694 - 52k - Cached - Similar pages
can we help you connect with the other most audacious yes we can goals:
tell info@worldcitizen.tv a 2015 goal you're misison is to unit worldwide practuce around
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
please could you find out if there is a malaria coordinator in mirpur; now that dr yunus has a venture Grameen-BASF doing
malaria nets thanks to saskia and her colleagues in germany - it would be logical to assume that someone has the
job to think of all integrating solutions around malaria; also there were several other malaria exhibits in the extremely
efficient healthcare section of world congress and dr yunus seemed pretty interested in them
as I think you know
this is peter's number 1 knowledge search and micro-up network practice area , and malaria interventions are obama's
number 1 foreign health pledge
so mostofa it would be great if you could find out info on this; equally it would
be great if we can then ask the grameen person if he works with a colleague at BRAC because i assume there are lots of synergies
and collaborations across the grassroots health networks
dr yunus chatted to peter twice both at the st johns
new york event and the jeffrey sachs event so perhaps collaboration will start pollinating even in NY; there is also a health
bridges microfinance event at princeton on friday (keynotes microcredit's daley-harris and askoka's/brac's susan
davis) which peter and I will both try to network with, and I am still hopeful that cambridge (UK) medical
school will start connecting with bangaldesh soon after my family friends efforts flow
Dhaka, April 16 (bdnews24.com)—Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus met US secretary of
state Hillary Clinton at the state department in Washington on Thursday. "They discussed his plans to transform
health care in Bangladesh through the development of Health Management Centers," said a statement on the US embassy website.
Secretary Clinton is a long-time advocate of microcredit and expanding the availability of health care. Bill Clinton
& Yunus keynote in New York on April 17. Yunus and Sachs debate at NY's 92Y on Sunday April 19.
2
Voice of America April 16- Future Capitalism partnerships are helping Bangladesh create lowest cost health system http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-04-16-voa3.cfm partners include Pfizer, Mayo Clinic, GE, BASF, German Saudi Hospitals, TheGreenChildren Pop Group with Aravind
eyecare replications. Historically Bangladesh has had 3 times more doctors than nurses. Now fast learning networks of village
women are reversing that trend.
Grameen Veolia launches safe water sustaining 80 times lower customer price than
any other known water business. Whilst social business entrepreneurs typically aim to design 10 times lower cost sustainability
business models, with the possible exception of microcredit banking's mobile revolutions http://bankabillion.org , this ranks as one of the greatest entrepreneurial revolution leaps ever reported http://erworld.tv
Wednesday's first keynote was on sustainable
healthcare. The panel included Nobel Laureate Mohammed Yunus (Grameen Bank and Grameen Health_Bangladesh and Frank Rijsberman
(Google.org ). Mr. Yunus provided a holistic view of healthcare reform in the developing world. He talked about the need to
raise income of the poor, improve nutrition and sanitation and increasing access to healthcare providers. In terms of Health
IT, Dr. Yunus talked about leveraging cell phones. Cell phones are the source of internet access for the poor in the developing
world. Dr. Yunus is working with GE to find ways to improve healthcare utilizing cell phones. Personally, I feel that this
initiative needs to be monitored closely since it may be the source of global best practices for low-cost Health IT.
Mr.
Rijsberman discussed Google.org initiatives to distribute healthcare data. He discussed aggregate data such as the spread
of flu and individualized data such as finding a nearby dentist. Additionally, this data could be delivered through web-enabled
cell phones. The ultimate result would the efficient allocation of resources, i.e., placing the time, money and effort in
the necessary areas.
For me, this discussion emphasizes that the “pipeline” for the information can be rather
“low-tech.” What is far more important is collecting the data from users, from patients, etc.
In
parallel new Larry Brillinat is moving on after 3 years as ceo of gogle.org to help jeff skoll film the great crisis challenges
of our time.http://blog.google.org/2009/04/brilliant-takes-on-urgent-threats.html
Mobile Solutions for Nutrition Monitoring Presenter: Mr. Sean Blaschke, Grad Student, International Affairs, Columbia University View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
A Chlorhexidine Product for Umbilical Cord Care Presenter: Ms. Mutsumi Metzle, Commercialization
Officer, PATH View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
"Car Part" Incubator: An Innovative Solution Presenter: Ms. Aya Caldwell, , CIMIT
Global Health Initiative View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Cost-Effective Asphyxia Intervention in Aceh Presenter: Ms. Aya Caldwell, , CIMIT Global Health
Initiative View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
MIDA (Medical In-Field Diagnostic Assistant) Presenter: Mr. Alexander Albertine, Program Manager,
MIDA International View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Women-Owned Franchises: Diagnostics in Rural India Presenter: Ms. Ann Rogan, Manager, Rural
Health Services, Drishtee View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Hot Diagnostic Technologies: Low cost, point of care Presenter: Mr. Paul LaBarre, Technical
Officer, PATH View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Ultra Rice: Expanding markets for fortified rice Presenter: Ms. Rae Galloway, Nutrition Specialist,
PATH View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
InSTEDD's Global Early Warning and Response System Presenter: Dr. Taha Kass-Hout, Director,
InSTEDD View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Rapid Healthcare Diagnostics Network - D.Scope Presenter: Dr. Daniel Niclas, CSO, D-Rev View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Social Marketing and Franchising for a Better Life Presenter: Ms. Preeti Anand, General Manager,
Programs, Janani View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Embrace: A $25 Infant Incubator Presenter: Ms. Jane Chen, CEO, Embrace View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Affordable, Sustainable Mobile Health Delivery Presenter: Mr. Don Yansen, Director, ClickHealth View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
The CFWclinics Franchise Network Presenter: Mr. Greg Starbird, COO, HealthStore Foundation View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Mobile Games for Healthcare Presenter: Dr. Hilmi Quraishi, Chief Learning Technologist, ZMQ
Software Systems View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Water-Based Health Care Delivery in Bangladesh Presenter: Ms. Rupa Patel, Volunteer, Friendship
Health Care View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Integration of Hygiene Kits into Health Service Delivery Presenter: Cecilia Kwak, Technical
Advisor, Child Survival, Population Services International View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Electrochemical Arsenic Remediation for Rural Asia Presenter: Susan Addy, Postdoctoral Scholar,
University of California, Berkeley View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
WaterHealth International: Clean Water Solutions Presenter: Susan Addy, Postdoctoral Scholar,
WaterHealth International View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
An integrated, fully automated system for CD4, CD4% and hematology analysis for on-site, on-time HIV/AIDS patient
monitoring and management Presenter: Kim Beer, Marketing Director Worldwide, Pointcare Technologies View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Low-Cost USB-based Ultrasound Probes Presenter: David Zar, Research Associate, Washington
University View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
Envirofit Clean Cookstoves - Sustainability & Scale Presenter: Ron Bills, CEO and Chairman,
Envirofit International View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
A social business for drinking water in Bangladesh Presenter: Erice Lesueur, Project Director,
Veolia Water View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
A Home-based Urine Test for Clinical Malaria Presenter: Mr. Eddy Agbo, CEO/CSO, Fyodor Biotechnologies,
Inc. View AbstractView Poster(coming soon)
our web tracking emergence of malaria social business versus Obama's 2015 pledge is at http://www.malaria2015.com/ we welcome news of other deadline webs for market sector reponsibility/sustainability
For those of you on the circulation list for the youth forum countdown and 69th birtday
celebration with Dr Yunus in Dhaka http://yunusforum.net on June 29, this newseltter is in lieu of countdown newsletter
It is my belief that we should package everything we believe a community to community approach of end malaria could
do in kenya and present it to Ingrid Munro - her teams are the community franchiser par excellence in kenya
and i would say in world's top 5 at replicating votal knowhow
and in her network mobiles can be fully used; and they have their own micro social business school and an alcoholics
anomymous program so getting out vital info is something their members now how to behaviourally do
(sam daley
harris also has at welast 93 congressmen advocating that anything jamii bora learns ought to be shared with all community-up
world banking - and one guy from usaid said at Ingroid's world bank presentation last wednesday that the transition team
is making replication the new buzzword it wants practised)
we need to focus to make a listing which while
integrated ranks what's simple to try first - I still feel amazed that eg kevin has a world class prevention of hiv schools
training module used in microcredit communities but as far as I can see there is nothing similar on malaria
some
of the less simple things need your side not ingrid to go and find sponsors or famous people to endorse-obama made end
malaria desths by 2015 his most specific foreign health program; if we cant make kenya a test m,arket for the integrated approach
then I personally dont believe obama's or your goals will be met before 2002s if ever
obviously I know the
least of all of you about malaria but any its my few cents worth of where i would focus communications and actions flows
my end malaria slogan is :
are humans really dumber at networking than mosquitos
of course if we developed such a presentation with ingrid as core audience , we could learn from that and then present
it to yunus' 50+ people working on social businass of health, (end june being a target date for such things)
and
any other micro leadership team we quest now that we have about fiftenn university 18-25s clubs up and down east coast
usa trying to understand what true microknowedge is collaboratively ready for open networking
Can I doublecheck with you about Ingrid Munro and Jamii Bora and Grassroots communities
fighting malaria. If I ask people in washington DC who know her how to contact her, is there someone in your network
around Rusinga Island http://www.friendsofrusingaisland.org/ who would want to find out whether a branch of Jamii Bora can come to your area and what type of people you need to
find to help develop such a branch
Maybe I am being over-optimistic but this interview with her suggests she wants to go from being mainly Nairobi to the whole country and I believe that if we can get a nationwide microcredit
jamii bora it can also become the knowledge infrastructure partner for other grassroots developments - not the least end malaria
deaths by 2015 which is a commitment of obama and which I have started a new website on in an effort to find who is helping
grassroots empowerment on this chalenge http://malaria2015.com -as always I rely on people who know africa to tell me what to put at this web.
(Note we already have 91 congress
people calling for making Kenya's jamii bora one of the world's 10 best know knowledge linkers of micro-information
http://www.results.org/website/download.asp?id=3650 ; and end malaria deaths by 2015 is a specific goal of obama-)
If university students host microcredit clubs,
finding a way to track the 10 microcredit epicentres nominated by these 91 congress people and jamii bora as lead case in
africa is absolutely a core case any microcredit club should be handing out to recruit members with
Previously 2008 Highlights of grassroots reporting
on malaria
ref PO1
INTRODUCTION This the my summary communication
thread to the mendenyo yahoogroup on the need to malaria bed net survey study. Malaria
causing vectors; Anopheles gambiae, An. funestus and An. arambiensis are widely distributed in Western region of Kenya.
The incidence of malaria cases is prevalent in children under the age of 5 years, in pregnant women and HIV/AIDS
infected people due to their lower level of malaria immunity (WHO 2006). In addition, the disease is a cause
of poverty and is a major hindrance to economic development in the region (Sachs and Malaney, 2002). Transmission rate and risks of the disease can be controlled by intergrated approaches to vector control. ITNs trials have shown effective reduction
of deaths related to malaria in sub-Sahara Africa and INTs thus have become the major tool in
Rolling back malaria in Kenya. For example, to combat malaria in Western region of Kenya along Lake Victoria, ministry of health and Non_governmental organisations (NGOs_ INTERNATIONAL MEDICAL CORPS, CARE KENYA, SHARE KENYA, AKADO WOMEN GROUP KENYA ETC.) have distributed ITNs for use over
beds to children under five years old, HIV/AIDS infected people and pregnant mothers at substatial prices
of Ksh.50 and free of charge. However, misusage of bed nets in the region by fishermen using
the bed nets for fishing and drying fish is of great concern to sustainable malaria control efforts (Noboro Minakawa
et al., 2008). Alternative community accountancy and transparency survey is to be done for the method to be effectively
implimented to curb the spread of the vector and the disease.
METHOLOGY AND THE OBJECTIVES. The study, for example, can be executed in Western Kenya covering for example Mbita regions and Mfangano, Rusinga Islands. Questionnaires will be prepared to capture Community Accountancy, Impact
and Transparency in success of using impregnated bednets to control malaria.The region has approximately 45,000
adults with over 10, 000 bednets supplied (Distributed Bed nets from 2003_2007). Since it remains un-clear if these bednets
have been indiscriminatively distributed to the communities for reduction in vector population
and malaria cases, a study survey conducted would give: 1: A follow up to the campaign
going on with bednets for malaria control. 2: Collaborative documentation of community evaluations
on the use of current tools for malaria control.
3: Collaborative documentation to measure the impact of usage of bed in the communities. 4: Open up collaborative implimentations to other intergrated methods to control malaria by new
programs e.g the Governments and Non_ governmental organizations.
There has been a high possibility that, use of bednets alone has not been contained malaria since reported malaria
cases in health centres is extimated at 89% (clinical health report of 2007).On broader aspect,
this study would measure and assess theimpact of malaria control using bed nets. The composition of the questionnaire
will involve ownership of bednets, reason for usage, household members sleeping under bednets, frequency of
bednet usage, how often are the nets treated, and extablish time of the night when members take cover in the bednets
as well those who do not sleep under the bednet. It would also cover formal number of malaria cases experienced by the
community, how do the community know that one is suffering from malaria, when one is sick what do they do_visit
clinical
health centres, local health practitioners or aware of malaria symptoms and just buy drugs from the near
drug chemistry shops without medical consultations. Any night activity of any house hold member/s. what is their
understanding on malaria as a disease.
Community Accountancy The data collected to be analysed and the outcome interpreted in the ability of the community to help manage
vectors and the disease control. As a baseline survey, the outcome would be a great boost to researchers in the
bednet industry and would reflect whether they are giving the best tool to control malaria or some adjustment is needed to
make them efficient and cost effective. Establish collaborative and framework links with in the research institutions, Governments,and communities for malaria control. In principal, Community Accountacy
survey embraces value chain analysis that can be utilized in three different ways. First,
is the cost, price and value as research expectations flow from one malaria control method to another. Secondly, is the cost, price and value as research is done in different geographic locations and thirdly is when
the cost, price and value of the research vary over time. The cumulative data collected would generate better policies
to the community for mosquito control interventions. In the long run, the assessment is projecting reduction of
malaria parasite prevalence and the resulting mortality and morbidity in human
populations. For malaria to fought well, the donor funding communities must change the
funding approach by finding a way to have direct funding to the community groups like us who are directly affected by
malaria disease. Otherwise wish you the best, may God bless you. =========================================== PB1 really critical matter to be addresses is the knowledge of key people in the local community ... and getting
the community to become engaged themselves in helping to get malaria to go away. At the village level, knowledge
about malaria is very limited ... children should learn useful malaria stuff at school ... and community leaders need
to be given help in getting a malaria program working for their community.
Your info about the flowers that
the mosquitoes like versus those they don't like ... not much good me knowing this ... but good if the village
can use the info. A lot of plants repel insects ... again useful not as an academic exercise, but good to try out and
see whether this would work for malarial mosquitoes.
Can larvacides like Bti be made locally? Who is going
to try this ... it might work ... it ought to work? It could be a good business making Bti locally!
Can
a local village team be trained to do IRS? Can a friendly (rich) supporter help them to buy the chemicals they need ...
or can they join a program (maybe from the Health Ministry) that is designed to support public health initiatives.
With knowledge all sorts of local things could be initiated.
A second theme of the malaria work that is
emerging is the idea that there is a need to upgrade the health infrastructure so that health interventions are
accessible to all