Sunday 20 November 2011

Ann Bourdin, The Gasworks & a Cape Town Rotary Scholar's HIV Initiative.

Our own Ann Bourdin gave us a very interesting talk last week on little know stories of George Washington in his teens and early twenties and how he inadvertently started the first world war, the Seven Years War.

Thank you Ann for such a fascinating talk.  This was a shortened version of a talk she had previously given to the SA Military History Society and it really is a good idea to have members talk about things that interest them....thanks Julian Nagy for suggesting it!  Everyone really enjoyed it, as you can see.

We always spend every Wednesday breakfast watching the sun rise over the gasworks...well in winter, anyway.





Our speaker this week is Brendan Fraser of Egoli Gas who will tell us about what we have been looking at for so long!

There are plans to develop the site of the old gasworks, see here, and I'm sure he will talk about that as well.


Egoli Gas has 7 500 consumers which is remarkably small for the gas network and it will be interesting to hear if the increasing cost of electricity has meant that more people are thinking of gas as an alternative.


Our new shirts have arrived and here is Greg Smith sporting one!



Former Rotary Scholar educates, supports new mothers with HIV



 


Aadila Sabat is passionate about her work inmaternal and child health, one of Rotary’s areas of focus under the Future Vision Plan.Photo courtesy of Aadila Sabat



Aadila Sabat is on a personal mission to help achieve one of the United Nations Millenium Development Goals.  
“We can all do something to heed the call to action from the United Nations to eliminate by 2015 all new HIV infections among children and keeping their mothers alive,” says the former Rotary Foundation Ambassadorial Scholar from South Africa. “Because the transmission of HIV/AIDS from mother to child is preventable.” 
The rate of transmission is as high as 45 percent for mothers with HIV who don’t receive antiretroviral drugs, according to the World Health Organization. Use of the drugs, however, decreases the transmission rate to less than 2 percent. 

Helping mothers

Sabat works in Los Angeles for mothers2mothers (m2m), a nongovernmental organization that educates and supports pregnant women and new mothers on issues related to HIV and maternal and child health. She helps train new mothers living with HIV to provide such support to women like themselves. These “mentor mothers” then work alongside doctors and nurses to serve the needs of this population group, helping to lessen the burden on critically understaffed health systems.  
In addition to saving lives, achieving the UN’s goal is an economic imperative, says Sabat. “It costs less then $100 to stop the transmission of HIV/AIDS from a mother to her child during pregnancy, but if that baby is born HIV-positive the cost [of treatment] is $150,000.”  
Since 2001, m2m has grown from a single site in Cape Town to more than 700 in nine countries in sub-Saharan Africa, with offices also in London and Los AngelesOne of the first donations to the organization came from the Rotary Club of Waterfront in Cape Town.  
Sabat’s connections with m2m and Rotary go back to her teenage years in Cape Town. She was president of her Interact and Rotaract clubs, and a Rotary Youth Exchange student to France.  

AIDS orphans

“Thanks to the guidance of my parents and Rotary District 9270, I have always been involved in some kind of activism,” Sabat says. “Many projects the district is involved with are related to the care of the nearly two million AIDS orphans in South Africa. I was fortunate to be part of many of these projects, and this instilled in me the desire to do more work related to AIDS.” 
Sabat, who was a 2007-08 Rotary Scholar at the University of San Diego in California, traveled back to Cape Town earlier this year and met with mothers involved in the program. 
“Some of the women spoke about their reactions when they found out that they were HIV-positive and what it was like sharing the news with their partners,” she says. “They thought their lives had ended, because they had such little knowledge of HIV/AIDS. Only after being introduced to mothers in the program did they think that their babies could be born HIV-negative and that they could live long, productive lives caring for their families.”


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