Kolkata calling . . .

July 22, 2010 by Simon Berry · Leave a Comment 

Skype call to La Martiniere

Last Tuesday (20/7/10) ColaLife went global with calls programmed with India, Canada and the USA. The most exciting of all the calls was with members of the ColaLife group in Kolkata, West Bengal. This was organised by one of the group’s leaders Raghav Daswani. We ran it over Skype and the format was a short introduction and update from me followed by a Q & A session. Those participating were students of La Martiniere Calcutta, an independent school.

The ColaLife Chapter there was set up by Ragav and Rohin Daswani. The students in Tuesday’s audience ranged from those interested in Business Studies to Design. The group have already arranged a tour around their local Coca-Cola bottling factory, to see how the process works - and quickly came to the conclusion (which ColaLife fully endorses) that any support given by Coca-Cola or their bottling partner to an initiative like ColaLife needs to happen beyond the factory - with co-operation of the hauliers and transporters of the drinks crates. Now they would like to understand ColaLife better and to find out what they can do to help.

A key question raised was how local organisations and local people who need simple medicines engage with the ColaLife proposals. This is often asked - and is a vital point. It’s helpful to illustrate the answer with a graphic - see below.
ColaLife and local determination
This graphic is explained in more detail here.

The students at Hult Business School asked me a similar question when I was there a couple of months ago. Their questions were captured on video and can be viewed here.

Affordability of the medicines and how they would be priced was also raised. This is also partly answered by the links above: in broad terms, it will depend on how the proposed ColaLife distribution model fits into the supply chain. Depending on the country, legal issues, the partners and the supply chain route, medicines might be delivered to a remote retail shop (to be sold in the usual way), to a rural clinic (to be used as part of their public health stock), or, for example, be packed as a diarrhoea kit and picked up by the local birthing partner to support her work with new mothers. Some global initiatives, like the Affordable Medicines Facility for malaria (AMFm) is specifically trialling the effects of distributing highly subsidised anti-malarials - and the ColaLife delivery model might offer part of the supply chain solution in that kind of initiative.

Joining up with other ColaLIfe groups in other countries - to exchange ideas on local fund-raising for group activities, and just talk to like-minded young people in other countries - was an idea very popular among the group. This is just what we would like to happen. ColaLife already has groups in USA (Wellesly College) and in Warwick University, UK. The Warwick group has a Facebook page - an easy first step in making links between groups.

There are lots of other ways groups can help. For example, our Intern, Dennis Tretter, is currently collecting information about botttlers in Africa, and drawing up country profiles on health and other issues, to support our research. India is a huge country with a lot of regional variation in culture, socio-economic and health aspects. Having local students in India to pull together some of this research for us would be a great help - and the same goes for information on bottlers and hauliers. We’re also at the stage where answers to design questions would be useful: What design and manufacturing capability exists in different regions? Does the current AidPod model fit in all the drinks crates in India; and if not, how could it be modified to fit, for example, in crates of Fanta bottles? What kind of AidPod would be most appropriate in a given region (for example, single use, bio-degradable, return and re-use, secondary uses) and what might it be made of (plastic? water-proof card?)

‘Can we go to the media in India?’ was another question asked. ‘Can we try to make ColaLife a public phenomenon?’ the group wanted to know. Anyone who has had brush with the media knows that PR can be a double-edged sword. It is important to get expectations right. We are not claiming that ColaLife is a universal solution to all health product distribution problems. There are many other great ideas out there - such as LivingGoods.org in Uganda - and many possible variations of the ColaLife co-delivery model. Our message to the media and all our stakeholders is that ColaLIfe is an idea worth testing. It is much better for us to generate interest and contributions to the ColaLife idea from our friends and wait for the media to come to us.

Thanks again to Ragav and Rohin to organising this very enjoyable Skype occasion!

ORS - the ‘magic bullet’

September 20, 2008 by Simon Berry · 1 Comment 

I have been searching for weeks for good photographs to show the impact Oral Rehydration Salts (ORS) can have on a child with dehydration from diarrhoea. Then a member of the ColaLife Google Group came to my rescue, pointing me to a scientific paper published in 1994 with these amazing pictures showing a girl and boy before and after treatment. Please note the expressions on their mothers’ faces - they say it all.

Before ORT Treatment

Before & After ORT Treatment - Caption - Girl
After ORT Treatment

Before ORT Treatment

Before & After ORT Treatment - Caption - Boy

After ORT Treatment

So, if you can get Oral Rehydration Salts to where children need them and people know how to use them they are magic!

But we must also remember that the educational side of this campaign is also crucial. Ideally, children would not get diarrohoea in the first place so hygiene and sanitation education is also important. And when children do get sick then you need to know how to use the ORS.

So, in this campaign, the distribution of ORS is a ‘device’ for the stimulation of other educational activity. Maybe the ORS should have plastic, educational posters strapped to them that could be placed in places people gather, perhaps the fact that there is a mechanism to distribute ORS would be the catalyst required to stimulate a local extension programme.

You can’t look at these pictures and say this is not something worth fighting for. Can you?

You have built this …. they will come!

May 22, 2008 by Simon Berry · Leave a Comment 

UNICEF Coca Cola image

Today the Coca Cola facebook group has received a big boost in terms of content but I am a bit concerned that it is not growing as fast as it might. So PLEASE join if you haven’t done so already and invite your friends to do so as well.

In terms of content. Fully narrated photos have been uploaded by Nand Wadhwani of the Rehydration Project in India. Fantastic stuff.

Nand also emailed me and the email is reproduced here with permission.

My understanding is that the logo to the left was produced in 1985 to support a UNICEF report that Nand mentions.

Nand Wadhwani | Rehydration Project to Simon



Dear Simon,



Thanks for the link to the site. I’ve added information and links about the Campaign to my home page …
http://rehydrate.org


fyi … UNICEF first proposed the idea of making the ORS sachets more
available in a poster in their State of the World’s Children report in
1985. Please see [
http://rehydrate.org/resources/selling_survival.htm ]. I’ve also updated that page with links to the Campaign pages.


I had spoken with Coca Cola in Atlanta, about 20 years ago, about
putting a small sticker on their bottles which stated that a portion of
their profits would go towards rehydrating a dehydrated child. With
Coca Cola being the largest ‘rehydrater’ in the world … with the
variety of Coke products, water, juices and other soft drinks … it
made perfect sense to me … great advertising and good will as well.
The proposal got lost in the maze of Coca Cola’s management.



With Facebook, a new awareness, and ….. I trust you will have more
success. I will also contact Coca Cola here in India and keep you
advised of their response.



Please let me know if I may be of further assistance in helping you get
your FIRST 1,000 members. You have built this …. they will come!



Good luck.



regards,


nand



Nand Wadhwani
Rehydration ProjectHealth Education To Villages

:-)

Further information

All of the Coca Cola Campaign posts