Saturday, June 16, 2012
Club AGM is the next meeting
The next meeting of Llanelli Rotary Club will be the Club AGM, Friday, June 22, 1pm at the Stradey Park Hotel.
Labels:
AGM,
Llanelli Rotary Club,
Stradey Park Hotel
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Club meeting schedule
The next series of meetings for Llanelli Rotary Club will be as follows -
Club Assembly, June 13, tonight, 7.30pm at the Stradey Park Hotel, Llanelli.
Club AGM, Friday, June 22, 1pm at the Stradey Park Hotel.
Club Handover Dinner, Wednesday, June 27, 7.30pm at the Stradey Park Hotel, Llanelli.
Club Assembly, June 13, tonight, 7.30pm at the Stradey Park Hotel, Llanelli.
Club AGM, Friday, June 22, 1pm at the Stradey Park Hotel.
Club Handover Dinner, Wednesday, June 27, 7.30pm at the Stradey Park Hotel, Llanelli.
Labels:
Llanelli Rotary Club,
meetings,
Stradey Park Hotel
Friday, June 8, 2012
Two new members for Llanelli Rotary Club
Two new members were inducted into membership of Llanelli Rotary Club at the weekly meeting at the Stradey Park Hotel, Llanelli.
Dr Kevin Jones (left) and Mr Simon Rowley (right) were welcomed into the club by President Graham Williams.
The two new Rotarians were proposed as members by Rotarian Jeff Wheeler.
Dr Jones was born in Llanelli and attended Llanelli Boys Grammar School before receiving his medical training at Cardiff University and St Andrews in Scotland.
He returned to Llanelli in 1982 to join the Ty Elli medical practice.
He is a senior partner in the practice.
Mr Rowley is a retired surgeon. Born in Leeds, he was brought up in Zambia.
He was educated at Shrewsbury and at Birmingham and Heidelberg universities.
The next meeting of Llanelli Rotary Club is the annual Club Assembly meeting on Wednesday, June 13, 7.30pm at the Stradey Park Hotel, Llanelli.
Website -
http://llanellirotary.com/
Dr Kevin Jones (left) and Mr Simon Rowley (right) were welcomed into the club by President Graham Williams.
The two new Rotarians were proposed as members by Rotarian Jeff Wheeler.
Dr Jones was born in Llanelli and attended Llanelli Boys Grammar School before receiving his medical training at Cardiff University and St Andrews in Scotland.
He returned to Llanelli in 1982 to join the Ty Elli medical practice.
He is a senior partner in the practice.
Mr Rowley is a retired surgeon. Born in Leeds, he was brought up in Zambia.
He was educated at Shrewsbury and at Birmingham and Heidelberg universities.
The next meeting of Llanelli Rotary Club is the annual Club Assembly meeting on Wednesday, June 13, 7.30pm at the Stradey Park Hotel, Llanelli.
Website -
http://llanellirotary.com/
Splendid lunch at Llanelli Rotary Club
Splendid lunch at Llanelli Rotary Club at the Stradey Park Hotel, Llanelli, today.
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Reminder to Llanelli Rotary members
Remember to get your sponsorship money in before next Wednesday for the charity bike ride just completed by Mark Evans.
See post below -
http://llanellirotary.blogspot.com/2010/05/llanelli-rotary-members-bike-ride-fund.html
See post below -
http://llanellirotary.blogspot.com/2010/05/llanelli-rotary-members-bike-ride-fund.html
Labels:
Charity Bike Ride,
HARK,
Llanelli Rotary Club,
Mark Evans
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Rotary's work on polio
Rotary International has worked hard to eradicate polio worldwide.
Here are some facts about Rotary's work -
What is Polio?
Polio is the shortened name of poliomyelitis which is the crippling disease caused by the poliovirus. One in 200 cases result in paralysis, which leads to the limbs of the victim becoming limp and disfigured. Among those paralysed, 5-10 percent die when their breathing muscles become immobilized. The poliovirus can strike at any age, but affects mainly children under five years of age. It is passed through person-to-person contact, via oral-faecal route. The virus enters the body through the mouth and multiplies in the intestine. Initial symptoms are fever, fatigue, headache, vomiting, stiffness in the neck and pain in the limbs. In the parts of India where polio is still endemic, mass immunisation campaigns are being held 8 times a year to break the chain of infection. Polio knows no borders and carriers frequently move from one country to another. Therefore, the virus can reappear in previously polio free countries. In 2007 there were cases of polio in 9 African countries although polio is only endemic in one of them. We have not had polio in United Kingdom and Ireland for a long time now, yet many people aged 60 and over will remember warnings about the use of swimming pools or swimming in the sea in hot summers and also the pictures of victims in iron lungs. There are still polio victims living in our communities – they have stories to tell. Polio is only an air flight away from the United Kingdom and Ireland.
History of Polio
1954 - Breakthrough by Dr. Jonas Salk with development of first polio vaccine. 1961 - Further advances through development of oral vaccine by Dr Albert Sabine. This allowed for administration of vaccine by trained volunteers. 1985 - Start of Rotary International’s PolioPlus campaign. Some125 polio-endemic countries with 1,000 children infected every day. 1991 - Last case in the Americas. 1996 - 85% reduction in cases with 150 countries polio free. 2000 - Western Pacific region polio free. 2002 - Europe polio free. 2003 - Only endemic in 7 countries. 2004 - 23 African countries unite to hold multi-national immunisation day.
2005/6 - Development of monovalent vaccines. 2008 - Only 4 remaining polio endemic countries – Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan. Less than 2,000 cases per annum – a 99.4% reduction. The final 1% will be the most difficult and the most expensive to eliminate.
The progress
Since Rotary made polio eradication its top priority in 1985 and joined forces with the Global Polio Eradication Initiative in 1988:
Polio cases have fallen from 350,000 a year to 1,315 in 2007 125 endemic countries has been reduced to just four; Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan Rotary International is the largest private sector contributor to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative Rotary members have raised £376 million ($700 million) to fund polio immunization activities Rotary clubs in Great Britain and Ireland have donated £10.5 million (US$20 million) to polio immunization initiatives Two billion children have so far been protected from the disease 5 million have been spared from disability 250,000 deaths have been averted
The Global Polio Eradication Initiative, whose partners include Rotary International, World Health Organization, UNICEF and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, works to:
Hold national immunization drives for all children under age five in endemic and high risk countries
Maintain high levels of routine immunization Track possible incidences of the disease Re-immunize all areas with reported cases Improve public health infrastructures worldwide to strengthen the fight against other infectious diseases
The challenges
Challenges faced by the Global Polio Eradication Initiative include:
Funding Political commitment Weak infrastructure in developing countries War and internal conflict Lack of health services Difficult-to-reach refugee, migrant, and displaced populations
Here are some facts about Rotary's work -
What is Polio?
Polio is the shortened name of poliomyelitis which is the crippling disease caused by the poliovirus. One in 200 cases result in paralysis, which leads to the limbs of the victim becoming limp and disfigured. Among those paralysed, 5-10 percent die when their breathing muscles become immobilized. The poliovirus can strike at any age, but affects mainly children under five years of age. It is passed through person-to-person contact, via oral-faecal route. The virus enters the body through the mouth and multiplies in the intestine. Initial symptoms are fever, fatigue, headache, vomiting, stiffness in the neck and pain in the limbs. In the parts of India where polio is still endemic, mass immunisation campaigns are being held 8 times a year to break the chain of infection. Polio knows no borders and carriers frequently move from one country to another. Therefore, the virus can reappear in previously polio free countries. In 2007 there were cases of polio in 9 African countries although polio is only endemic in one of them. We have not had polio in United Kingdom and Ireland for a long time now, yet many people aged 60 and over will remember warnings about the use of swimming pools or swimming in the sea in hot summers and also the pictures of victims in iron lungs. There are still polio victims living in our communities – they have stories to tell. Polio is only an air flight away from the United Kingdom and Ireland.
History of Polio
1954 - Breakthrough by Dr. Jonas Salk with development of first polio vaccine. 1961 - Further advances through development of oral vaccine by Dr Albert Sabine. This allowed for administration of vaccine by trained volunteers. 1985 - Start of Rotary International’s PolioPlus campaign. Some125 polio-endemic countries with 1,000 children infected every day. 1991 - Last case in the Americas. 1996 - 85% reduction in cases with 150 countries polio free. 2000 - Western Pacific region polio free. 2002 - Europe polio free. 2003 - Only endemic in 7 countries. 2004 - 23 African countries unite to hold multi-national immunisation day.
2005/6 - Development of monovalent vaccines. 2008 - Only 4 remaining polio endemic countries – Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan. Less than 2,000 cases per annum – a 99.4% reduction. The final 1% will be the most difficult and the most expensive to eliminate.
The progress
Since Rotary made polio eradication its top priority in 1985 and joined forces with the Global Polio Eradication Initiative in 1988:
Polio cases have fallen from 350,000 a year to 1,315 in 2007 125 endemic countries has been reduced to just four; Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan Rotary International is the largest private sector contributor to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative Rotary members have raised £376 million ($700 million) to fund polio immunization activities Rotary clubs in Great Britain and Ireland have donated £10.5 million (US$20 million) to polio immunization initiatives Two billion children have so far been protected from the disease 5 million have been spared from disability 250,000 deaths have been averted
The Global Polio Eradication Initiative, whose partners include Rotary International, World Health Organization, UNICEF and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, works to:
Hold national immunization drives for all children under age five in endemic and high risk countries
Maintain high levels of routine immunization Track possible incidences of the disease Re-immunize all areas with reported cases Improve public health infrastructures worldwide to strengthen the fight against other infectious diseases
The challenges
Challenges faced by the Global Polio Eradication Initiative include:
Funding Political commitment Weak infrastructure in developing countries War and internal conflict Lack of health services Difficult-to-reach refugee, migrant, and displaced populations
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
