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March 05, 2012
1. MDG Summit & Exhibition. Cape Town South Africa. 3-4 May VRS Media
January 12, 2012
2. OneVoice South Africa seeks to appoint a Managing... OneVoice South Africa
December 01, 2011
3. World Aids Day OneVoice South Africa
September 03, 2010
4. Research Yields Promising Malaria Drug Candidate Afif Say
August 02, 2010
5. Leprosy workshop UNISA 20-23 September 2010 Afif Say
August 14, 2009
6. TED Talks - Larry Brilliant: on the eridication... Colin Hooper
August 12, 2009
7. Funding Opportunities - Dell Development Fund and Heath Colin Hooper
July 28, 2009
8. Hug an HIV+ Person Today Colin Hooper

1.
MDG Summit & Exhibition. Cape Town South Africa. 3-4 May
From: VRS Media
To: Health
Posted: March 05, 2012 3:19 PM
Subject: MDG Summit & Exhibition. Cape Town South Africa. 3-4 May
Attachment(s):
Message:

MDG Summit & Exhibition. Cape Town. 3-4 May.

Since the formation of the MDGs in 2000, world leaders have continuously called on the entire world to play its part in making the MDGs a reality in 2015.

The UN describes the eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) - which range from halving extreme poverty to halting the spread of HIV/AIDS and providing universal primary education, all by the target date of 2015 - as a blueprint agreed to by all the world's countries and all the world's leading development institutions. These goals have galvanized unprecedented efforts to meet the needs of the world's poorest.

Progress towards reaching the goals has remained uneven. Some countries have achieved many of the goals, while others remain off-track to realize any. The major countries that have been achieving their goals include countries like China and India due to clear internal and external factors of population and economic development. However, areas needing the most reduction, such as the Sub-Saharan Africa regions have yet to make any drastic changes in improving their quality of life.

As an organisation that has continued to monitor the MDGs since their half way point, we have developed partnerships with some of the world's leading NGOs, donor agencies and the private sector. It is from these relationships and success of our other project MDG Review that we decided to translate our success from print to exhibition and summit.

On the 3rd - 4th of May 2012 at the Cape Town International Convention Centre (CTICC) in South Africa, we are not only pushing boundaries but we are bringing the world to one of the few countries in Africa that has shown commitment in changing its own people's lives - South Africa. MDGs are a huge opportunity for sub-Sahara Africa to bring about the sustainability it so requires and work towards a permanent poverty eradication agenda.

Building up on the last MDG meetings across the world, this event will have its theme set out to promote the power of business as one of the solutions to the MDG challenges.

Government sector, NGOs, Development Agencies, Management consultants, Civic groups, business, and most of the steering groups and policy makers will be invited to come and address the MDG challenges, and share success stories. The only difference this time being; the agenda for this summit will be set by business, the solution providers.

Come and witness some of the latest technologies in ICT, see a world of difference in the delivery of healthcare & pharmaceuticals in areas such as HIV & Aids, Malaria. Also other sectors to be represented by the companies who have continued to contribute a lot in changing lives, improving service delivery or Corporate Social Responsibility all of which contribute towards the MDGs are:

  • Transport & Logistics
  • Energy & Environment
  • Financing for Development
  • Food & Agriculture
  • Infrastructure Development
  • Water & Sanitation
  • Education
  • Women Empowerment

VISIT THE OFFICIAL EVENT SITEwww.mdgsummit.org for more information and also to register. NGOs have free access to this event.

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VRS Media
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2.
OneVoice South Africa seeks to appoint a Managing Director, based...
From: OneVoice South Africa
To: Health
Posted: January 12, 2012 1:39 AM
Subject: OneVoice South Africa seeks to appoint a Managing Director, based in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
Message:
This message has been cross posted to the following Forums: Health and NGO Lounge .
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http://www.onevoice.org.za/jobs/

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Marlijn van Berne
OneVoice South Africa
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3.
World Aids Day
From: OneVoice South Africa
To: Health
Posted: December 01, 2011 6:32 AM
Subject: World Aids Day
Message:
This message has been cross posted to the following Forums: Health and NGO Lounge .
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HIV is 100% preventable and manageable. On this World AIDS Awareness Day, OneVoice South Africa wishes you and the school community an HIV-free Life. Together, let's take a good look at where we are...  celebrate what we have achieved and commit to the global targets of reducing the sexual transmission of HIV by half, eliminating new infections in children, providing treatment for 15 million people living with HIV, ending stigma and discrimination, and closing the AIDS funding gap, by 2015.


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Marlijn van Berne
OneVoice South Africa
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4.
Research Yields Promising Malaria Drug Candidate
From: Afif Say
To: Health
Posted: September 03, 2010 5:54 PM
Subject: Research Yields Promising Malaria Drug Candidate
Message:
This message has been cross posted to the following Forums: NGO Lounge and Health .
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National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
NIH-sponsored Research Yields Promising Malaria Drug Candidate

In Mice, Compound Cleared Malaria parasites Quickly

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Public release date
Thursday, Sept. 2, 2010

Media Contact:
Anne A. Oplinger
+1 (301) 402-1663
niaidnews@niaid.nih.gov

A chemical that rid mice of malaria-causing parasites after a single oral dose may eventually become a new malaria drug if further tests in animals and people uphold the promise of early findings. The compound, NITD609, was developed by an international team of researchers including Elizabeth A. Winzeler, Ph.D., a grantee of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health.

"Although significant progress has been made in controlling malaria, the disease still kills nearly 1 million people every year, mostly infants and young children," says NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D. "It has been more than a decade since the last new class of antimalarials-artemisinins-began to be widely used throughout the world. The rise of drug-resistant malaria parasites further underscores the need for novel malaria therapies."

Dr. Fauci adds, "The compound developed and tested by Dr. Winzeler and her colleagues appears to target a parasite protein not attacked by any existing malaria drug, and has several other desirable features. This research is also a notable example of successful collaboration between government-supported scientists and private sector researchers."

The study, in the Sept. 3 issue of Science, was led by Thierry T. Diagana, Ph.D., of the Novartis Institute for Tropical Diseases (NITD), and Dr. Winzeler. Dr. Winzeler is affiliated with The Scripps Research Institute and the Genomic Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation, La Jolla, Calif.  

Work on what eventually became NITD609 began in Dr. Winzeler's lab in 2007. Scientists screened 12,000 chemicals using an ultra-high throughput robotic screening technique customized to detect compounds active against Plasmodium falciparum, the most deadly malaria parasite. The screen identified a chemical with good parasite-killing abilities and the potential to be modified into a drug. Medicinal chemists at the NITD then synthesized and evaluated about 200 versions of the original compound to arrive at NITD609, which could be formulated as a tablet and manufactured in large quantities. NITD609 is one of a new class of chemicals, the spiroindolones, which have been described in recently published research by Dr. Winzeler and colleagues as having potent effects against two kinds of malaria parasites.

"From the beginning, NITD609 stood out because it looked different, in terms of its structure and chemistry, from all other currently used antimalarials," says Dr. Winzeler. "The ideal new malaria drug would not just be a modification of existing drugs, but would have entirely novel features and mechanism of action. NITD609 does."

In the current study, the scientists detail attributes of NITD609 that suggest it could be a good malaria drug. For example

  • In test-tube experiments, NITD609 killed two species of parasites in their blood-stage form and also was effective against drug-resistant strains. In humans, malaria parasites spend part of their life cycle in the blood and part in the liver.
  • The compound worked faster than some older malaria drugs, although not as quickly as the best current malaria drug, artemisinin.
  • Other laboratory tests showed that NITD609 is not toxic to a variety of human cells.

When given orally to rodents, the compound stayed in circulation long enough to reach levels predicted to be effective against malaria parasites. According to Dr. Winzeler, if NITD609 behaves similarly in people, it might be possible to develop the compound into a drug that could be taken just once. Such a dosage regimen, she says, would be substantially better than the current standard treatment in much of the world in which uncomplicated malaria infections are treated for three to seven days with drugs that are taken between one and four times daily.

"We were excited by the potential NITD609 showed in the first series of test-tube experiments," says Dr. Winzeler. "We became even more enthusiastic when our co-investigators at the Swiss Tropical Institute in Basel tested NITD609 in a mouse model of malaria."

Typically, she says, rodents infected with the mouse malaria parasite, Plasmodium berghei, die within a week. But a single large dose of NITD609 cured all five infected mice that received it, while half of six mice receiving a single smaller dose were cured of infection. Three doses of the smaller amount of NITD609 upped the cure rate to 90 percent.

The researchers also compared NITD609 with other malaria drugs in P. berghei-infected mice. "No other currently used malaria drug was as potent," says Dr. Winzeler. NITD609's effectiveness in relatively few doses is a key point in its favor, she adds. A novel malaria drug that works in as few doses as possible leaves less opportunity for parasites to develop drug resistance.

Additional tests in animals are under way and NITD609 could enter early-stage safety testing in humans later this year, says Dr. Winzeler. But, she adds, many drug candidates fail in clinical trials and thus it will be important for the community to continue to work on developing other potential antimalarial compounds.

To learn how parasites might develop resistance to this potential drug, the researchers also exposed parasites to sublethal levels of NITD609 continuously for several months until drug-resistant strains emerged. Then they analyzed those strains and determined that resistance results from a single change in one of the parasite's genes. The gene contains the code to make a protein called PfATP4, which allows substances to cross cell membranes. No other anti-malaria drugs act on the PfATP4 protein, notes Dr. Winzeler. Having information in hand about the genetic basis for NITD609 resistance at this early stage of the compound's development is advantageous, she adds, because it will allow scientists to rapidly detect drug-resistant strains in clinical settings if the compound is eventually approved as a drug for human use. 

More information about malaria and NIAID's research programs on the disease is available on the NIAID malaria Web portal.

###

References:

M Rottmann et al. Spiroindolones, a new and potent chemotype for the treatment of malaria. Science DOI: 10.1126/science.1193225 (2010).

BKS Yeung et al. Spirotetrahydro ß-carbolines (Spiroindolones): A new class of potent and orally efficacious compounds for the treatment of malaria. J. of Medicinal Chemistry  DOI: 10.1021/jm100410f (2010).


NIAID conducts and supports research-at NIH, throughout the United States, and worldwide-to study the causes of infectious and immune-mediated diseases, and to develop better means of preventing, diagnosing and treating these illnesses. News releases, fact sheets and other NIAID-related materials are available on the NIAID Web site at www.niaid.nih.gov.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH)-The Nation's Medical Research Agency-includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and translational medical research, and it investigates the causes, treatments and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.




5.
Leprosy workshop UNISA 20-23 September 2010
From: Afif Say
To: Health
Posted: August 02, 2010 4:06 PM
Subject: Leprosy workshop UNISA 20-23 September 2010
Attachment(s):
Message:

The Leprosy Mission has pleasure in announcing a free workshop on the management of leprosy, to be held at UNISA from the 20th - 23rd September 2010.

The purpose of the workshop is to transfer leprosy management skills.

Whilst the workshop [including morning and tea and lunch] is free, delegates are responsible for their accommodation costs and the costs of their transport to and from UNISA. 

This is a special opportunity to learn from two experts in the field of leprosy:  

Dr Digafe Tsegaye, MD and senior medical specialist ( dermato-venerologist )at ALERT hospital, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia and

Mrs  Jannine Ebenso, the Global Disability Advisor for the Leprosy Mission International, a physiotherapist who has sixteen years' experience in the management and prevention of disabilities in leprosy.

There will also be opportunities to hear about South Africa's leprosy campaign.

As space is limited, please RSVP by Monday 16th August 2010 should you wish to attend.


RSVP details:
Peter Laubscher
Executive Director, Leprosy Mission Southern Africa
Phone:  011 440 6323
Fax:        011 440 6324
Email:   
peter@tlm.co.za



6.
TED Talks - Larry Brilliant: on the eridication of smallpox
From: Colin Hooper
To: Health
Posted: August 14, 2009 5:36 AM
Subject: TED Talks - Larry Brilliant: on the eridication of smallpox
Message:
Accepting the 2006 TED Prize, Dr. Larry Brilliant talks about how smallpox was eradicated from the planet, and alls for a new global system that can identify and contain pandemics before they spread.

Are there lessons that we can learn about the control and eradication pandemic diseases, including HIV/AIds, across Africa? Follow this link to watch Larry's talk:

http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/larry_brilliant_wants_to_stop_pandemics.html


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Colin Hooper
Relationship Manager: Private Sector
NGOConnect Africa
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7.
Funding Opportunities - Dell Development Fund and Heath
From: Colin Hooper
To: Health
Posted: August 12, 2009 4:52 AM
Subject: Funding Opportunities - Dell Development Fund and Heath
Message:

The Dell Development Fund was established to implement Dell's Corporate Social Investment strategies in the communities in which their employees and their families are members. Dell also recognises that these communities are also the source of future employees.

In Dell's opinion, their contribution to sustainable development in "Healthy Communities" is one of the keys that unlock the latent potential across African society.

Healthy Communities

Where the basic needs of people, children and the disabled are focused upon. Where meaning and significance is given to HIV/AIDS.

Although the Dell Development Fund Annual budget has already been allocated to specific projects for 2009, and they are accepting any new applications this year, it is time to start working on you funding proposal for 2010.

For more information on how to apply for grants please visit http://delldevelopmentfund.co.za.

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Colin Hooper
Relationship Manager: Private Sector
NGOConnect Africa
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8.
Hug an HIV+ Person Today
From: Colin Hooper
To: Health
Posted: July 28, 2009 4:34 AM
Subject: Hug an HIV+ Person Today
Message:

Recently I had the privilege of getting to know an HIV positive person and have them trust me enough to share thier status with me. Initially, I had all the prejudices that that mant people have towards people that are HIV+. But then I saw how this "infection" had paralysed him and eroded his sense of selfworth. I also saw the fear of rejection written all over his face when meetig new people.

Then I realised that the very prejudices that I first felt are the very things that drive HIV+ people to the brink of despair. That, as a society we are not only ingnorant of the way in which infection occurs, but our ingorant attitude about this infection, is stripping people of thier dignity, and robbing them of their valuable role in our communities.

In some sectors of our communities the HIV infection rate is reaching 41%. Its time that we change our attitude towards those who are infected, and learn how we can embrace and support them in remaining healthy productive memebers od society. Sites like Positive Heros (www.positiveheros.org.za) are beginning to tell the stories of those who have risen above the ignorance and prejudice.

Lets chat about ways in which we can shift the attitudes towards HIV+ folk, and embrace rather than reject them.

What do you think?


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Colin Hooper
Relaionship Manager: Private Sector
Potential Africa
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