Simon Berry is piggybacking on Coca-Cola's distribution system to bring life-saving medicine to the places that need it most. You can buy a Coke pretty much anywhere on Earth. Thanks to a vast network ...
Coca-Cola is teaming up with the non-profit ColaLife to help better distribute much needed medicine along with Coca-Cola beverages to developing countries. Beginning as an online movement in 2008, ...
Delivering medicines to remote parts of the developing world by packing them in a crate with Coke bottles might seem like just the sort of fresh thinking aid agencies need. It was while working in ...
Diarrhea kills 800,000 kids under the age of five every year–deaths that we can easily avert by administering oral hydration salts and zinc tablets. The challenge is getting the treatment to where ...
Documenting the launch of a radically new aid distribution model in rural Africa “Claire, are you enjoying?” says Albert, in sing-song Zambian English. He’s passed me a handful of "African ...
To get vital medicines to children in need throughout Zambia, entrepreneur Simon Berry started taking cues from Coca-Cola. How did you get the idea for ColaLife? I was working in a remote part of ...
The original AidPod packs – also known as Kit Yamoyo – was designed by Pi Global as a wedge-shaped container that could carry anti-diarrhoea medicines and slot into unused space between Coca-Cola ...
ColaLife, the campaign to use Coca Cola’s international distribution network to distribute life-saving medicines, has once again come up with an excellent way of capitalising on their supporters’ use ...
Diarrhoea is one of the biggest killers of children in Africa. Cheap and simple remedies can be effective, but only if they reach those in need. So one British couple came up with a way to solve this ...
Globally, diarrhoea is the second biggest killer of children under five, second only to pneumonia. ColaLife, a small UK charity, has proved that sheer size is not an impediment to finding solutions to ...
Diarrhoea is one of the biggest killers of children in Africa. Cheap and simple remedies can be effective, but only if they reach those in need. So one British couple came up with a way to solve this ...