Dr Phillip Lee MP joins Virtual Advisory Board

Dr Phillip Lee MP

Phillip was a full-time GP before entering the UK Parliament as a new MP in the May 2010 election as Member of Parliament for Bracknell. He is a Member of the Energy & Climate Change Select Committee. He is also a Member of the House of Commons Administration Committee. He has been elected Chairman the All Party Parliamentary Group for Environment. He is also on the Executive of the Conservative Friends of Bangladesh as well as a member of various other all-party parliamentary groups (APPGs).

Born in 1970, Phillip studied Human Biology and Biological Anthropology at King’s College, London and Keble College, Oxford, before going on to study Medicine at St Mary’s Hospital at Imperial College in London. He has since worked at various hospitals in London, Slough and also Stoke Mandeville Hospital in Aylesbury before becoming a GP. He lives in Berkshire and he continues to work as a part-time GP.

We are delighted that Phillip is able to join our Virtual Advisory Board and make public his support for a trial of the ColaLife idea.

About ColaLife, Phillip says:

Simon’s idea of using the distribution network of Coca-Cola to deliver much needed rehydration packs to babies is a great example of how the power of a multinational company can be harnessed to provide much needed care for vulnerable human beings. As a practising doctor, I am very pleased to associate myself with a development programme for sub-Saharan Africa that is both effective and sustainable. ColaLife is an inspiring idea that deserves much support.

Here is Phillip’s biography.

:-)

Dr Ian Goldman joins the ColaLife Virtual Advisory Board

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Dr Ian Goldman

I am very pleased to be able to announce that Dr Ian Goldman has agreed to join the ColaLife Virtual Advisory. He is the second member and joins Prof Don Nutbeam in support of ColaLife.

About ColaLife Ian says:

Having worked in many countries in Africa it is extraordinary how Coca-Cola reaches into the remotest areas. How wonderful if this distribution system could work for life-saving items. What ColaLife is trying to do is admirable, using the power of the multinationals not just for profit but for good. And the dedication of people like Simon to make this happen is inspiring. Viva ColaLife viva!

Here’s Ian’s brief biography:

Ian specialises in strategic and development planning and the facilitation of short and long term change processes. His main areas of work have been rural development, decentralisation and community-driven development, local economic development and promotion of sustainable livelihoods approaches. He has worked in 18 countries, particularly in South Africa, the UK, Zambia and Mexico, working with all levels of government, civil society and the private sector.

Ian qualified as a soils/agronomist. He worked in Zambia from 1982-7 strengthening the capacity of Serenje District Council to plan and implement a decentralised rural development programme. From 1988-1995 Ian was at the National Rural Enterprise Centre, a UK NGO, working in rural economic development. Ian returned to South Africa in 1995 as a Management Adviser with the Free State Dept of Agriculture in South Africa, assisting the Minister with reforming the rural sector. He wrote this up for his doctorate, awarded in 2001. From 1998-2009 Ian founded and became CEO of Khanya-African Institute for Community-Driven Development (khanya-aicdd). Khanya works with action-learning partnerships in Southern and Eastern Africa to transform development systems to promote sustainable livelihoods and community-driven development. In October 2009, Ian became Team Leader of an EU-funded Monitoring and Learning Facility on Pro-Poor Policy with South Africa’s Presidency, with a particular focus on rural development. He is also a trustee of the Mvula Trust, South Africa’s leading water and sanitation NGO.

Ian is married to Judy, has two adult daughters, and loves gardening, South African jazz, and is about to qualify as a facilitator of Biodanza, a system of music and movement.

Thanks for your support Ian.

The ColaLife Virtual Advisory Board

There has been a lot of work going on behind the scenes to put together a ‘virtual advisory board’ of well known names to add further credibility to ColaLife and help us move from an incredibly successful campaign to an organisation that can help put together the unlikely alliances that are going to be required for us to achieve our vision. Getting the first person to commit was always going to be the big challenge. So our sincere thanks go to Don Nutbeam who has put himself forward as our first ‘virtual advisory board’ member.


Don Nutbeam
Professor of Public Health
University of Southampton

Professor Nutbeam said:

“ColaLife offers a creative solution to the distribution problems that prevent the delivery of proven solutions to enduring health problems among some of the world’s poorest and most vulnerable populations. For Coca-Cola it represents an outstanding example of corporate social responsibility.”

Professor Nutbeam has been a long term supporter of ColaLife. You will see from this video that he shares the ColaLife philosophy and our attitude to big business. When this was filmed (June 2009), Don was Honourary Professor at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Sydney. He talks about ColaLife in the context of ‘making the most of what is already there’ to improve public health, or ‘going with the grain’. He says:

“I’ve been working . . . with a campaign to try to persuade Coca-Cola who have frankly the best distribution network in Africa to use their distribution network to deliver essential medicines. They can deliver Coca-Cola to pretty much any corner of Africa and we in public health seem to be miserable at achieving the same goal so why not try to work with the grain.”

Brilliant.

Professor Nutbeam’s summary boigraphy reads like this:

DON NUTBEAM PhD FFPH

Don Nutbeam is currently Vice-Chancellor of the University of Southampton and a Professor of Public Health. His career has spanned positions in universities, government, health services and an independent research institute. From 2003-9 he was in senior academic roles in the University of Sydney, and prior to this he was Head of Public Health in the UK Department of Health. His research interests include public health intervention research in schools and communities as well as studies of health literacy, and adolescent health behaviour. He has published widely on these topics. He has substantial international experience in both developing and developed countries, working as an advisor and consultant for the World Health Organisation over a 20 year period, and as consultant and team leader in projects for the World Bank.

Onwards and upwards.