
Malaria is a crisis-three thousand deaths every day. It needs to be communicated that way. Malaria No More orchestrates breakthrough marketing campaigns and media events that put malaria where it belongs: at the top of the agenda for policymakers and the general public alike.
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What's American Idol Doing in Africa?
Malaria No More and America's most popular television show, American Idol, have put malaria on the map through a combination of broadcast specials, White House trips and domestic awareness campaigns.
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Inspiring Gen Next
16-year-old Allyson Brown of Melbourne, FL was inspired to do something about Africa after an episode of Oprah in 2007. "I heard about Malaria No More and I decided to dedicate our school's Valentine's Day dance to raising money for mosquito nets," she recalls. She managed to raise more than $1,600 in a single night.
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Something to Believe In: Tony Blair Faith Foundation
Malaria does not distinguish between faiths and we must work across faith lines to fight it. This is the motivating principle behind Faiths Act, the inaugural project of the Tony Blair Faith Foundation. Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair chose malaria as an issue to rally interfaith action and encourage youth involvement.
The project will raise money for millions of nets while engaging youth of various faith backgrounds from the U.S., U.K., Australia and Canada to travel to Africa to see the problem and then bring the message of malaria control back home.
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White House Summit on Malaria: How to Brand a Disease
In December 2006 the President and First Lady hosted the White House Summit on Malaria, bringing together leaders of government, public health, business, NGOs and faith groups.
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