'Tis this season to deck the halls of Pitt with as many flyers as we can print out! For students this is our main avenue for advertisement so it is really important that we put a flyer in every possible place that someone would look. To make this easier, we've split everyone up into small groups and assigned a portion of campus to be flyered from now until race day. If you weren't at the meeting and would like to be assigned a group, email SLIM and we'll hook you up with a team. Aside from that, everyone in these teams will be responsible for contacting a campus organization so that we can promote our race at their meeting. If you can I encourage you all to speak out in your classes about the race. We're really itching to get at least a thousand runners for this race, so we've got to advertise like crazy.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
SLIM Meeting Minz 2/1/10
Hey peeps! Things are rolling smoothly along this semester as we're gearing up for the 5K/10K. We've reserved South Park for race day and are working on getting police officers and paramedics at the race. Liz is meeting with our other collaborator KPHP from Pitt Med School to talk about the race, so if you are interested stop by Caribou at 5 pm tomorrow.
Dave, a student from CMU, talked to us this week about his newly formed organization, Kenya Community Partnership. The whole idea started when a faculty member from CMU's business school went to Kenya and discovered in the rural villages that many of the orphanages were overcrowded. To fix this, the Kenya Community Partnership is planning to set up what is called a social enterprise model, where a business is set up to raise funds to met a social need, in this case, expanding orphan care. This model is similar to what we hope to do with our network of community-based organizations in Malawi to help them maintain their services. Because of our similar interests, Dave wants to collaborate with us in future.
JJ Krais and Rachel Murray spoke to us about their trip to Tanzania this last summer. The majority of their trip was taken up performing individual research projects at a local hospital. They learned an incredible amount about how medicine works in the Third World and the problems they face. One of Rachel's biggest setbacks during her research was the lack of extensive patient records. Many of the "doctors" in the Tanzania are not MDs but are rather given special training to perform all of the necessary tasks, most especially childbirth and pediatric care, but at times the same doctors can be psychiatrists! JJ found during his research that many of the machines and medical equipment the developed world "donates" to the hospital goes unused because the doctors and nurses lack training, the equipment is broken, or they simply have no use for it, as if the developed countries just dumped their old equipment on them with no question of whether it was needed. I think this is an important lesson for what we as a country do overseas: it is important to assess the needs of the community before we send aid or start projects.
Anyway, we are still planning to bring a speaker from Partners in Health to speak here at Pitt, and considering the dire situation in Haiti (where Partners in Health are headquartered) this would be a great opportunity to hear firsthand about work being done there. Stay tuned and I'll see yinz next week.
Great News for the Poor of the World
Check out the Melinda Gates podcast from January 29th. I think we should definitely hop on this opportunity considering our direct links to community groups in Malawi. If anyone wants to help me draft a letter to the Gates that would be awesome.
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