Posts Tagged ‘Minus Malaria’

Minus Malaria Week 2010

Friday, January 15th, 2010


proto_mmi4The week of February 7-14, 2010 is Minus Malaria Week.  Swarthmore College’s GHF is spearheading this week of college students coming together to support the eradication of the burden of malaria.

Our goals for the week:
$5,000, the equivalent of 1,000 bednetsCourtesy of Lois Park
750 letters sent through the Give a Net, Get a Vote Campaign

Students participating in Minus Malaria Week will do this in three ways: education, fundraising, and advocacy. Student organizations in support of the Minus Malaria Initiative (MMI) will host both an educational campaign and a fundraising campaign on their college campus.  Through their campaigns, organizations will work to raise awareness about lettermalaria in their communities and to advocate for malaria relief by participating in the Give a Net, Get a Vote campaign: for every $5 donated (the equivalent of one net), supporters of MMI will have the opportunity to sign a letter to Congress, expressing support for legislation that furthers the goals of MMI.  All funds raised will be used to purchase bednets to be distributed in Malen chiefdom in Sierra Leone, a community where MMI has previously focused its efforts.

Interested in joining? We’ll provided extensive support to all individuals and groups interested in participating, including toolkits, help with planning, materials, event ideas, etc.  Participation take the form of a small scale event that serves the two-fold purpose of fundraising and educating or it can be a week long series of events.

Contact Cariad Chester at  and John McMinn at  to join!  Visit “For Students” section (link above right) for more information and click “Partner With Us”.

Minus-Malaria’s Campaign: Malaria, Mosquitoes, and More Bednets

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

The Global Health Forum kicked off its “Give a Net, Get a Vote” campaign on October 4, 2010 with an incredibly successful two-part program.  After raising over 120 bed nets in 2 hours with an all-you-can-eat pancake breakfast, students whetted their intellectual appetite by attending malaria-expert and historian Randall Packard’s lecture.

Swarthmore College’s Daily Gazette on October 7th, 2009 covered the event.

You can also read a blog post on Randall Packard’s talk by Swarthmore College History Professor Timothy Burke to learn about an important debate in the struggle to address the burden of malaria.

As a GHF member wrestled with pancakes on the griddle, other students are signing letters and waiting patiently for the next batch. Photo by the Daily Gazette.
As a GHF member wrestled with pancakes on the griddle, other students are signing letters and waiting patiently for the next batch. Photo by the Daily Gazette.
Historian Randall Packard visited Swarthmore College to give lecture titled, "Can We Eradicate Malaria?: A Historical Perspective."
Historian Randall Packard visited Swarthmore College to give lecture titled, “Can We Eradicate Malaria?: A Historical Perspective.”

Pictures from the Daily Gazette

GMin

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

mmi_bannerGlobal Health Forum is extremely excited to have partnered with Global Minimum (GMin), a student organization dedicated to the transparent distribution of long lasting insecticide treated bednets (LLINs) in Sierra Leone, West Africa.  GMin is a student organization with similar goals as those of GHF’s Minus Malaria Initiative (MMI).  Our partnership with them is a sublime example of what MMI is all about—bringing together students dedicated to addressing the burden of malaria and their distinct resources to create a concerted effort to eradicate malaria.  While we specialize in raising awareness about malaria and funds for bednets, they specialize in distributing bednets to local communities.  The money collected this past year for bednets by MMI fundraising has been used to purchase, through the intermediary of AgainstMalaria, LLINs—the best kind of bednets—that GMin is distributing this summer in Sierra Leone.  Learn more about GMin at www.gmin.org.  Here updates about their distribution at gmin.org/blog.