This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
ColaLife is an independent non-profit organisation, which became a registered charity on 21 June 2011 (charity number 1142516). ColaLife's name comes from the following question: “Coca-Cola seems to get everywhere in developing countries, yet life-saving medicines don't. Why?”. ColaLife studied the techniques used by the producers of fast moving consumer goods (FMCGs) to get their products into the hands of people living in remote areas of Africa and applied the same techniques with the aim of improving access to diarrhoea treatment. From May 2008 until the end of 2013, ColaLife received advisory support from The Coca-Cola Company (TCCC) during the planning and implementation of a quasi-experimental design and distribution trial in Zambia to test ColaLife's approach.
Formation | 2009 |
---|---|
Type | Registered charity (1142516) |
Headquarters | London, United Kingdom |
Official language | English |
Co-founder | Simon Berry |
Staff | 3 |
Volunteers | 10+ |
Website | www.colalife.org |
ColaLife works through partnerships with local organisations in each country to help them to adapt and adopt ColaLife's approach. The organisation is not affiliated to The Coca-Cola Company (TCCC) or any other organisation and its work with others does not imply an endorsement of any product or brand.
History
edit1988 - 2008
editIn 1988, Simon Berry was working on the British Aid Programme in NE[where?] Zambia, conscious that while he could buy a bottle of Coke anywhere, one in every five children under the age of five died in these areas through simple causes such as dehydration through diarrhea.[1] So he had the idea that Coca-Cola's distribution muscle could be used to distribute oral rehydration salts in developing countries. At that time, with only a telex machine available, he struggled to get any attention for his idea.
2008 - mid-2010
editIn 2008 Coca-Cola's participation at the Business Call To Action event re-kindled the idea. The active work for Cola Life was started with a first blog post in the [ founder's personal Blog.[2] This Blog post did not attract Coca-Cola's attention, so Berry decided to try to get the idea debated on the BBC Radio 4 programme, iPM.
In parallel, the first attempts to communicate with Coca-Cola failed, because it was not possible to get past the first line in Coca-Cola's CSR department. Social media technologies such as Facebook, Flickr and Twitter, helped get more people behind the idea quickly.
On 21 May 2008 Berry was interviewed by Eddie Mair for the iPM[which?] Programme. The interview was broadcast on 24 May. Three days before the broadcast, the iPM team received a written statement from Coca-Cola's then Global Director for Stakeholder Relations, Salvatore Gabola, that he would "be happy to have a chat on this subject with Simon in the near future".[3] Eddie Mair coined the term Aidpod in his interview with Simon Berry broadcast on 27 Dec 2008[4] to describe the container containing medicine that fitted between the necks of the bottles in Coca-Cola crates.
This was the start of an ongoing relationship between the ColaLife campaign and TCCC. Since this first contact with TCCC and the first report about ColaLife on the BBC, the campaign has won supporters from all around the world. In August 2009 Simon Berry and Jane Berry co-founded ColaLife as a Company Limited by Guarantee.
mid-2010 - 2013
editIn 2010, ColaLife's co-founders (Simon Berry and his wife Jane Berry) decided to work full-time for ColaLife to move it from a campaign into a trial phase. They short-listed five countries where they considered a trial would be feasible and Zambia was among these. They first visited Zambia in October 2010 to gauge interest amongst local actors including Zambia's Ministry of Health. Interest was high and two further visits were undertaken in January and May 2011 when a trial plan was finalised and agreed upon with local partners.
On 21 June 2011 ColaLife was granted Charity status (charity number 1142516). The co-founders resigned as Directors and handed control to four trustees, subsequently increasing to five.
During the same period, the ColaLife co-founders were invited to join Johnson & Johnson’s internal Innovation Boot Camp. Here they received training and mentoring from Johnson & Johnson staff and personnel from the Antwerp Management School. This culminated in an award of $250,000 from the Johnson & Johnson Corporate Citizenship Trust (JJCCT) towards the cost of the proposed trial.
In October 2011 the ColaLife co-founders moved to Zambia and in November 2011 the UK’s Department for International Development (DfID) agreed to provide the remaining funding to run the trial.
The nine-month set-up phase for the trial began in December 2011. During this period the design of the diarrhoea treatment kit was finalised in consultation with caregivers. The kit was branded Kit Yamoyo, meaning Kit of Life in local languages. It won the Design Museum’s ‘Product Design of the Year’ in 2013.[5]
The trial started in August 2012 and ran until September 2013. The trial was commissioned by UNICEF Zambia and the Principal Investigator was Dr Rohit Ramchandani then a DrPH Candidate at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. Rohit Ramchandani contacted the founders in April 2010, offering his services, voluntarily in the first instance. Doctor Ramchandani has gone on to publish the key trial findings.[6]
The results of the trial were published by the UK's Department for International Development, a co-funder of the trial.[7] In the 12 months of the trial, retailers serving the 2 implementation districts, remote rural communities, bought 26,000 diarrhoea treatment kits. Diarrhoea treatment rates with Oral Rehydration Salts (ORS) and Zinc increased from less than 1% to 46% and the distance caregivers had to travel to access the medicine was reduced by two thirds (from 7.3 km to 2.4 km). The full results were published in Dr Ramchandani's DrPH thesis which was successfully defended in December 2015.
Both DfID and JJCCT provided limited transitional funding from the end of the trial (Dec 2013) until 2014 while ColaLife sought funding to scale-up the approach in Zambia.
2014 - date
editAfter failing to raise funding for a nationwide scale-up in Zambia, Cola Life and its local partner – Keepers Zambia Foundation – changed strategy and bid for funding under sub-national programmes.
In February 2015 scale-up work started in the 14 most nutritionally challenged districts in Zambia under Zambia's Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) programme. In 5 of these districts the project works with small retailers. Eleven districts are being supplied with a public sector ORS/Zinc co-pack, based on the Kit Yamoyo design. This is being given away free through hospitals and clinics.
In October 2015 scale-up work started in Lusaka Province with ColaLife deploying its Healthcare Innovation Award from GSK and Save the Children, match-funding the UK Government's UK AID Direct Programme.
In December 2015 Zambia's largest supermarket chain, Shop rite, started stocking Kit Yamoyo in their 26 stores nationwide. Shoprite has subsequently expanded to 30 stores. In April 2016 ColaLife was accepted into the Ashoka Globalizer programme and in October 2016 presented its plan to spread its social impact beyond Zambia.
Selected awards
editYear | Description | Comment |
---|---|---|
2015 | The UK Packaging Awards | Winner: 'Resource Efficient Pack of the Year' [8] |
2015 | INDEX: Award 2015 (Designs to improve life) | Finalist with honourable mention [9] |
2014 | GSK and Save the Children Fund | Winner [10] |
2014 | FT/IFC Transformational Business Award (Health) | Winner [11] |
2013 | Business is Great (Innovation) | Elected as a Great British Innovation [12] |
2013 | Innovation by Design Award | Winner - Social Good Category [13] |
2013 | Breakthrough Innovation for Child Health (UN) | One of 10 innovations showcased at the UN General Assembly [14] |
2013 | Observer Ethical Awards | Winner - Products and Services [15] |
2013 | 25th DuPont Packaging Awards | Overall winner (Diamond Award) [16] |
2013 | Product Design of the Year 2013 (Design Museum) | Winner [17] |
2011 | Making More Health Award | Winner [18] |
2010 | Buckminster Fuller Challenge | One of 30 semi-finalists[19] and selected for the Ideas Bank Archived 2011-08-03 at the Wayback Machine |
2010 | UnLtd Award for Social Entrepreneurs | Awarded £15,000 towards living expenses to work full-time to move ColaLife to the implementation phase[20] |
References
edit- ^ "Diarrhoea:Why children are still dying and what can be done" (PDF). World Health Organization. p. 1. Retrieved 2010-08-11.
- ^ "Using Coca-Cola's Distribution Muscle".
- ^ "Is Coca-Cola it?". BBC.
- ^ "On this week's iPM: coke, games and 'cell' phones".
- ^ "Designs of the Year Awards category winners announced". Dezeen. 10 April 2013.
- ^ Ramchandani, Rohit (2016). Emulating Commercial, Private-Sector Value-Chains To Improve Access To ORS And Zinc In Rural Zambia: Evaluation Of The Colalife Trial (Thesis). Johns Hopkins School of Public Health.
- ^ "Evaluation report: COLALIFE operational report Zambia". UK Government.
- ^ "UK Packaging Awards 2016". New Statesman. 8 August 2016.
- ^ "Index: Award 2015 Finalists".
- ^ "Winners of the 2014 GSK and Save the Children Healthcare Innovation Award".
- ^ "FT/IFC Transformational Business Award Winners (2014)".
- ^ "Britain is GREAT".
- ^ "2013 Innovation By Design Awards: Social Good". 12 March 2014.
- ^ "Breakthrough Innovation for Child Health (UN)". 23 September 2013.
- ^ "Observer Ethical Awards 2013". TheGuardian.com. 15 June 2013.
- ^ "DuPont Packaging Award Winners 2013".
- ^ "Designs of the Year Award Winners 2013 (Design Museum)". 10 April 2013.
- ^ "Making More Health Awards (Boehringer Ingelheim and Ashoka)".
- ^ "The 2010 Buckminster Fuller Challenge Semi-Finalists". The Buckminster Fuller Institute. Archived from the original on 2011-07-25. Retrieved 2010-08-11.
- ^ "UnLtd Level 2 Award Winners" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-07-04. Retrieved 2010-08-11.