Monthly Archives: December 2010

Your goodwill without end
15 December 2010
Dear Friend of Tshikululu
Amid all the din and clutter of national debates and news of hardship and suffering, we are constantly and profoundly impressed by what you do to make positive change happen in our country. Your support has deep meaning in the lives of literally thousands of people. It will affect the generations to come as well.
Tshikululu thanks you sincerely for that, and I should be grateful if you would view a short clip on what you have helped to make happen in 2010. Please click here to view this special message about your ongoing season of goodwill.
We wish you a restful last part of this year, and a 2011 full of joy and promise.
With warm regards
Tracey Henry
Chief Executive Officer
Tshikululu office closure
Please note that Tshikululu’s offices will close on 22 December 2010 and will reopen on Monday 3 January 2011.
For information on our work, or to apply for project funding, please visit www.tshikululu.org.za.
For any urgent matters, kindly telephone Paul Pereira on 078 823 1025.

Anti-malaria drive saving lives: WHO
A “phenomenal expansion” in efforts to curtail malaria is saving hundreds of thousands of lives each year, the World Health Organization said Tuesday.
The disease still killed an estimated 781,000 people in 2009 — including about 650,000 children younger than five — but that figure has been reduced from 985,000 in 2000, the UN health agency said.
The distribution of millions of insecticide-treated mosquito nets and increased spraying against the insects is having a dramatic impact, according to the WHO’s World Malaria Report 2010 report.
Forty-two percent of African households now have a treated anti-mosquito net and 11 African nations have showed a greater than 50 percent reduction in confirmed malaria cases or malaria admissions and deaths over the past decade.
“The phenomenal expansion in access to malaria control interventions is translating directly into lives saved,” added Ray Chambers, the UN special envoy for malaria.
He predicted that a UN goal of ending malaria deaths by 2015 could be achieved.
International spending in the war on malaria is predicted to peak at 1.8 billion dollars in 2010, but WHO estimates that about six billion dollars a year is needed to wipe out the disease.
Read the full article at AFP and share your views in our Comments section below. More news headlines can be found in our News Archive.

Daily aspirin linked to steep drop in cancer risk
7 December 2010
Long-term use of a daily low-dose aspirin dramatically cuts the risk of dying from a wide array of cancers, a new investigation reveals.
Specifically, a British research team unearthed evidence that a low-dose aspirin (75 milligrams) taken daily for at least five years brings about a 10 percent to 60 percent drop in fatalities depending on the type of cancer.
“These findings provide the first proof in man that aspirin reduces deaths due to several common cancers,” the study team noted in a news release.

Pay-as-you-go healthcare launches in South Africa
3 December 2010
Pay-as-you-go healthcare is now available in South Africa but, while this could provide cost savings for the man on the street, some say the quality of private health services may suffer.
In November the Yarona Healthcare Network, a company that provides network management for medical aid schemes, launched Yarona Care, the world’s first prepaid healthcare product.

Unicef says HIV-free generation achievable
1 December 2010
A generation of babies could be born free of Aids if the international community stepped up efforts to provide universal access to HIV prevention, treatment and social protection, the United Nations said yesterday.
While children have benefited from substantial progress made in the fight against Aids, it said, more must be done to ensure all women and children get access to the medicines and health services designed to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission.
Aids is still one of the leading causes of death worldwide among women of reproductive age and a major cause of maternal death in countries with Aids pandemics. In sub-Saharan Africa, 9% of maternal deaths are attributable to HIV and Aids, Unicef said.

