Saturday, June 5, 2010

Race for Dignity 2010

$285,000 raised! 250 participants! Another amazing race!

The funds we raised together will help save the lives of people with HIV and TB in Malawi. It will help keep families together and communities stronger.

A special thank you to the participants, volunteers and sponsors who made today another fantastic event!

We can't underestimate the importance of coming together to ride spin bikes in downtown Toronto. Together we've built a community that bridges an ocean. In common purpose we not only ride, laugh, and listen to great music, but we are taking real action to relieve the suffering of people we'll never meet. There is no other quality that defines us more as human beings.

Enjoy the photos below and we'll see you in 2011!






















R4D performers and participants at Young & Dundas Square.

















Me starting my 3hr remote R4D spin in Vancouver where I was celebrating my parents-in-law's 50th wedding anniversary - Congratulations Len and Selma!






















Nice hat! Must be hot under there.

















Bethany Elliott of Axe Capoeira Toronto

















R4D is driven by committed volunteers.





















My sister Michelle.



Photos courtesy of Shawn Saulnier and Barry Burciul.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Response to NYT "In Uganda, AIDS War Falling Apart" By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr. Published: May 9, 2010

(Click on posting title will bring you to article at NYT site.)

This article is disheartening indeed, but this current swing is not unexpected.

Funding for HIV specifically and global health generally will never be sufficient nor stable in amount of dollars, or for which types of programs will be targeted (HIV vs Maternal Child Health vs Millenium Development Goals, vs etc...). Commitments and significant announcements made by governments are often repurposed by new administrations in order to have their signature programs. The global recession has not helped the current situation that's for sure. The fact is that we are in a fight for the lives of millions, and this fight isn't going away. The ammunition that we have is the evidence we produce through our research and innovation that can back up the moral arguments we'll continue to make.

Our field team is managing potential stock-outs on a day to day basis to ensure that patients in our Zomba program continue to get access to ARVs. This is time consuming and frustrating for the team, and it looks like this will continue in the near future. There is a larger question here related to what happens if Malawi does not get renewed funding in the next Global Fund Round, and if PEPFAR, who recently signed a compact agreement with Malawi, will or will not step in if the Global Fund fails. There are too many shifting variables to reasonably predict what will happen at this moment. If tough decisions become necessary within our program, they will be made collaboratively with Dignitas staff in Malawi and Toronto, and with our partners at the Ministry of Health.

Seven years ago there was virtually no funding available for HIV treatment in the developing world. A lot of progress has been made since then. It looks like there will be funding setbacks in the short term, but precedents have been set, commitments have been made, and civil society organizations will need to continue to keep the pressure on. This is why the advocacy initiative we're putting together around the G8/20 is so important, and why developing and resourcing an advocacy agenda for Dignitas in the future is imperative.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Message from James Fraser, Co-founder and Executive Director, Dignitas International

From the Spring/Summer 2010 Newsletter


2010 MARKS the beginning of a new decade – and a new phase of growth for Dignitas International. I can hardly believe how much has changed since we first opened the Tisungane HIV/AIDS Clinic at Zomba Central Hospital. When I traveled to rural communities across the district in 2004, I would see people ravaged by disease, with no hope for treatment, ostracized by their loved ones, waiting to die.

When I visit Zomba today, I meet people who are living openly with HIV, who work and provide for their families, who raise their voices in song, who have hope that life is possible – that a future for their children is possible. I arrive at health centres where people can now access antiretroviral treatment, and I read through heavy binders that contain the names of thousands of people who would not be alive without this treatment.

Despite our progress, there are still many more people across Malawi who continue to die needlessly of illnesses that are both preventable and treatable. Beginning this year, Dignitas will start expanding HIV/AIDS- related services to five additional districts in Malawi, taking what we have learned in Zomba and working hand-in-hand with the Malawi Ministry of Health to ensure that tens of thousands more people gain access to life-saving treatment. This growth is only a first step in widening the reach of our work and strengthening the AIDS response.

We could not celebrate our past achievements or look forward to reaching new goals without the dedication and engagement of our many supporters across the globe. On a recent trip to Malawi, I sat next to a woman waiting to see a nurse at a health centre outside of Zomba. She asked me who I was and why I was there,so I told her about my work with Dignitas. She didn’t understand why people in North America would care about her family or whether she lived or died. I explained that there are others at home, just like me, who believe that her life is worth no less than their own lives. She leaned back, and her face lit up with a beautiful smile. We sat there like that – in silence, smiling at one another – for what felt like a long time, sharing the recognition of our common humanity.

Through compassion and a strong sense of equity, you are helping to not only raise awareness and resources that have a significant impact on our work, but you are exemplifying the shared sense of community and humanity that pushes us to keep moving forward – to realize our vision that one day, equitable access will be available to all.

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To read the full newsletter, please click on title of this posting.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

G8 donors keep your commitments!

G8 countries are turning their backs on their commitment to fund universal access to HIV treatment. The very same reasons that led to the initial commitment remain:
  • Millions of people will continue to fall ill, suffer and die painful and unnecessary deaths
  • AIDS guts societies of their most productive citizens, hampering, even turning back economic development
  • Families and communities disintegrate, orphans run riot
  • Looking away while millions of people suffer and die unnecessarily means we all become less human
These realities do not change, regardless of failing banks or market fluctuations. If we retreat now, the pandemic and its consequences will only grow, and will become ever more daunting.

Its been undeniably proven that with access to treatment people return to work, to raising their children, to contributing to their communities. Its also proven that placing people on treatment can stop the transmission of the HIV virus, reducing the spread of the pandemic.

Establishing the Global Fund for AIDS, TB and Malaria, PEPFAR, WHO 3X5 initiative, and UNITAID were wise and inspired global actions. Retreating from our commitments is not.

Yesterday, I was trying to explain to my 6 year old daughter the meaning of the word "betray". I don't think I could come up with a better example of betrayal than what we are witnessing now.

G8 citizens, write your MPs, your Senators, your Governors, your elected representatives, whoever they may be, and tell them that the commitment to universal access to HIV treatment must be kept.