mothers2mothers
The First 15 Years
Annual Report 2016-2017
Fiscal Year 2016 PAGE 11
Table of Contents
01
10
22
Letter from our CEO
2 0 1 6 Mil esto n e s
Financials
02
12
24
Our Vision and Mission
C h ar tin g O ur Growt h
Donors
14
Core Programme
Where We Began
16
Early Childhood Development
06
18
Paediatric Care and Support
20
Adolescent Health and Positive Youth Development
04
Major Milestones
08 15 Years Later
Photography by Karin Schermbrucker, Slingshot Media Designed by ChadĂŠ Diener, mothers2mothers Written by Carolyn McEwen, mothers2mothers
32 Board of Directors
Dear m2m Family, Friends, and Supporters, This past year was a big one for mothers2mothers (m2m)—we turned 15 and achieved exciting results for our clients through increased scale, scope, and impact! In this special birthday edition of our Annual Report, we look back to m2m’s birth in 2001 at one site in Cape Town, South Africa, with the goal of preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV, to growing to provide a range of services designed to eliminate paediatric AIDS and to improve the health of mothers and families in hundreds of health centres and communities in eight countries. When m2m started, the prognosis for women testing HIV-positive was bleak in sub-Saharan Africa. I will never forget the tragic death of Gugu Dlamini in 1998, a brave woman living with HIV/AIDS, who was beaten to death by her neighbours in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, for “bringing shame on her community” by publicly speaking on the radio on World AIDS Day about being HIV-positive. Back then, rampant stigma and discrimination, a lack of accurate information, and severely overcrowded health centres made it difficult for pregnant women to access lifesaving testing and treatment. m2m Founder Dr. Mitch Besser’s simple solution—employ local, HIVpositive women as Mentor Mothers to provide essential health education and behaviour change support to newly diagnosed pregnant women—was a game changer. Because peer-to-peer support and eliminating paediatric AIDS are at the heart of our work, we are driven to innovate and improve our outcomes to comprehensively address the causes and effects of HIV. m2m Mentor Mothers now provide family-centred support for a range of intertwined health and social issues such as poor nutrition and gender-based violence spanning pregnancy, birth, a child’s early years, and adolescence. •
In 2016 alone, m2m and our partners enrolled 1.95 million clients—including women, infants, children,
adolescents, and men.
•
Moreover, in addition to our core clients (pregnant women and infants), m2m directly provided services
to almost 220,000 adolescent girls and young women, one of the most impacted population
segments of the ongoing AIDS epidemic.
Today, m2m is a robust, evidence-based organisation, passionately analysing our data and refining our programmes to drive and foster a world without AIDS. •
Among our enrolled clients, m2m has contributed to the virtual elimination of mother-to-child
transmission of HIV for the third year in a row, with an average transmission rate of just 1.6%.
(Please take a moment to re-read that statistic and let it sink in.)
We are both humbled and proud to recognise the thousands of women m2m has employed as Mentor Mothers over the last 15 years. They are the embodiment of Raising the Future—leading by example, mentoring, and driving positive change, just as Gugu Dlamini courageously championed. Furthermore, we are deeply grateful to everybody who has contributed to our growth and supported us to become a globally-recognised leader in our field, including our donors, partners, board members and trustees, staff, and friends. As you read through our 2016 accomplishments, please take a moment and connect m2m to the significant milestones of your life; we hope you will count your relationship with us as one of them.
PAGE PAGE 11 1
mothers2mothers (m2m) believes in paediatric AIDS and create health a babies, families, and communities. Our mission is to impact the health of mothers by putting them at the heart of improving reproductive, maternal, newborn, child, and adolescent health. Our Mentor Mother Model empowers mothers living with HIV, through education and employment, as role models to help other women and their families access essential services and medical care. We work with governments, local partners, and communities to:
Eliminate
Reduce
Improve
HIV infections
maternal and
the health of women,
in children
child mortality
adolescents, and families
Support
Promote
Advance
livelihood development
universal access to
healthy development of
for families
reproductive health
newborns and children
and communities
and family planning
Overcome
Champion
stigma and discrimination
gender equality
PAGE 2
n the power of women to eliminate and hope for themselves and their
PAGE PAGE 11 3
Where We Began Name:
mothers2mothers2be
Where Concieved:
Our Founder, Dr. Mitch Besser, came up with the concept in a
Date of Birth:
4 October 2001
Place of Birth: First Home: Size:
place where many great ideas come from. . . the shower
Cape Town, South Africa, in the trunk of Mitch’s car, thanks to a $7,000 grant from The Starr Foundation
Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town
5 Mentor Mothers educating and supporting approximately 25 HIV-positive women each week on how to protect their babies from HIV and stay healthy
HIV/AIDS Then Resource-rich countries:
Resource-poor countries:
Drugs to prevent mother-to-child
Few pregnant women knew their status and
transmission (PMTCT) of HIV introduced in
few health centres had medicine to prevent
mid-1990s.
mother-to-child transmission of HIV.
Mother-to-child HIV infections almost
1,500 babies infected with HIV each day
entirely eliminated; fewer than one baby
globally, the majority in sub-Saharan Africa.
infected with HIV a day.
PAGE 4
First Year: 2001 Back then, HIV was hectic. What women knew is that if someone was diagnosed with HIV, that person was going to die. If they disclosed their status to their partners or husband, they would be left or beaten up. Some of them would be kicked out of their home. It was very desperate times. – Nosiphiwo Ntshanga, Former Nurse and Midwife, now a trainer at m2m
When I arrived in Cape Town from the U.S., I was surprised that many pregnant women at my clinic who tested HIV-positive were so frightened that they never came back to get treatment. And while I didn’t have the words “Mentor Mother” in mind, I realised that my former patients could join me at the clinic after they had their babies and be peer mentors
When m2m started 15
to women who were about to experience what they had just
years ago, my mind was
completed. And so I started to enlist my patients to educate and
just zoomed into seeing
support these women so they would return to the clinic for care.
mothers looking good and being able to look
– Dr. Mitch Besser, m2m Founder
after themselves. m2m’s support structure made it easier for mothers to At the clinics, there are always a lot of babies, there are children. It’s a very lively place. But before m2m, the clinics were a place of people and silence. After m2m, they became a place of connection. m2m was a huge player in the change from no hope to hope. – Dr. Donna Futterman, Board Member 2001-present, current Board Chair, m2m U.S.
PAGE PAGE 11 5
start moving from that space of being terrified to accepting their status. The dream was to give support to the women and tell them this is not the end of it. You can still live your life to the fullest. – Elaine Maane, Founding Mentor Mother
Major Milestones We started in one clinic with a good idea. It took off, not because we were so smart, but because we were smart enough to put mothers at the heart of the solution. When mothers make up their minds to have healthy children, regardless of the obstacles, there is no stopping them! – Robin Smalley, Co-founder and Chief Connector
New Name
New Parents
Became
Robin Smalley became the first Executive
mothers2mothers
Director; Gene Falk the first CEO two years later
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006 Lifelong Friends
Early Growth Opened five more
Received first direct grant
First Steps
from the United States Agency for International
Moved into the Northern
sites in the Cape
Cape of South Africa
Town area
with a site in Kimberley
Development (USAID)
Early Friends Received funding from Johnson & Johnson, our first and largest corporate funder; partnered with Pathfinder to bring the m2m model to Botswana and with IntraHealth to bring it to Ethiopia
When I was helping Mitch develop the first strategic plan, I asked him what his vision was for m2m and he said at its core this is such a simple intervention, mothers talking to other mothers. It can be used for HIV/AIDS, but it could be used for other challenges as well. – Andrew Stern, Former Board Co-Chair, m2m U.S., Board Member 2005 - 2016
PAGE 6
Graduation
Growing Up
Kenya became first country to adopt
Launched integrated Early
m2m’s Mentor Mother Model as national
Childhood Development (ECD),
policy; South Africa followed one year
Paediatric Care and Support,
later with Provinicial programmes
and Adolescent Health initiatives
Bigger Footprint Scaled to Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, Swaziland, and Zambia, and two years later to Tanzania and Uganda
Broader Horizons Began offering
British Invasion
comprehensive reproductive,
Registered as a charity
maternal, newborn, child,
in the U.K.; opened
and adolescent health
European office four
(RMNCAH) services
years later
2007
2008
2012
2013
2016
2017
Birth of Sibling Community Mentor Mothers
First Trip Abroad Expanded programme into Lesotho with 34 sites
—who reach women and
Latest Adventure
families in communities and
Expanded into
link them to medical care—
Mozambique, bringing the
became an integral part of the Mentor Mother Model
number of countries we currently work in to eight
When I tested HIV-positive while pregnant with my second child, Mentor Mothers made me believe that women with HIV could live openly with the virus and be strong and healthy. In 2003, I became a Mentor Mother to share what I learned with other mothers. Our goal as women, as mothers, is to end paediatric AIDS and help mothers keep themselves and their families healthy. My countryman, the late Dr. Nelson Mandela, wrote of his long road to freedom. This too, has been a long road for us as women, but we are getting there. – Babalwa Mbono, one of m2m’s first clients and Mentor Mothers, now a Junior Trainer at m2m
PAGE 7
15 Years Later
The scale and scope of m2m’s work continues to grow, with more than 1,600 Men
around sub-Saharan Africa. While eliminating paediatric AIDS is s till at the hear
way by focusing not only on mothers and babies, but on the health of everyone in a
2016 in numbers* 1,948,376 new clients were reached by a Mentor Mother, either directly, or by partnering with governments or other non-governmental organisations (NGOs) Together with our partners, we helped to prevent HIV infections among more than
700,000 infants under two years of age. m2m provided services directly to 811,179 individuals, including... 235,326 women, aged 25+
219,284 adolescent girls and young women, aged 10-24
264,690 infants and children,
91,879 adolescent boys, young
aged 0-9
men, and men, aged 10-25+
1,639
97,083
m2m Mentor Mothers and Site Coordinators were
families were engaged through
employed in health centres and communities
m2m community outreach
1,009,137
190,630
12,512
one-on-one sessions
home visits were
group sessions were held by m2m
were conducted by
carried out by m2m
Mentor Mothers in health facilities and
m2m Mentor Mothers in
Mentor Mothers in
communities, such as adolescent clubs,
health facilities
communities
information sessions, and play groups
PAGE 8
ntor Mothers providing services in hundreds of health centres and communities
rt of our efforts, we now combat HIV’s causes and effects in a comprehensive
a household.
Since our founding 15 years ago, m2m has reached nearly 1.5 million HIV-positive women in 10 countries in subSaharan Africa. We currently operate in:
*
Kenya
Malawi
South Africa
Uganda
Lesotho
Mozambique
Swaziland
Zambia
m2m 2016 Annual Evaluation
Disclaimer: mothers2mothers strives to provide accurate performance data. Our data quality and routine monitoring and evaluation systems are regularly reviewed and updated. We benchmark and validate internal systems though external evaluations and data quality assurance processes. National and site comparisons often rely on public domain data; mothers2mothers has no control over the quality of such data.
PAGE PAGE 11 9
2016 Milestones m2m 2016 Annual Evaluation Virtual Elimination of Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV Achieved Among m2m’s Clients For the third year in a row, m2m’s Mentor Mothers helped to virtually eliminate mother-to-child transmission of HIV. The final transmission rate among HIV-positive mothers who are m2m clients was
2.1%
2016
3.7%
2015
2014
just 1.6%—far below the UN benchmark of 5%.
1.6%
Mother-to-child transmission rates among m2m clients are lower than national rates. HIV+ babies of m2m clients
HIV+ babies nationally * 11% 8.7%
8.3%
3.3%
3.1%
2.7%
2.9%
2.0% 1.6%
1.3% 0.8%
0.6% Kenya
Lesotho
Malawi
South Africa
PAGE 10
Swaziland
Uganda
m2m Clients Are More Likely to Stay on Treatment m2m successfully supports HIV-positive pregnant women to remain in care and adhere to their antiretroviral therapy (ART)—two of the biggest globally-recognised challenges to eliminating paediatric AIDS.
Early Uptake of ART m2m HIV-positive pregnant clients who started ART remained on treatment after three
93%
months, a critical period when many women drop out of treatment due to fears of stigma and discrimination. By comparison, nationally in Uganda,** 73% of HIV-positive pregnant women remained on treatment after three months.
Adherence
98%
m2m clients consistently took ART more than 80% of the time, which is sufficient to reduce a person’s viral load to an undetectable level. This supports a key UNAIDS goal—90% of all people receiving ART achieve viral suppression by 2020.
*
On the Fast-Track to an AIDS-Free Generation, UNAIDS, 2016
**
Ministry of Health, Uganda, Dec. 2014
PAGE 11
Charting our Growth
As m2m enters adolescence, our work has “grown up� too, now encompassing a ful
children grow up healthy and reach reproductive age with the skills and knowledg become a reality.
Orphans and Vulnerable Children (OVC)
Early Childhood Development
Core Programme Facility Mentor Mother
Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV (PMTCT) and Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, Child, and Adolescent Health (RMNCAH)
PAGE 12
ll cycle of life . . . from pregnancy, through childhood, to adolescence. When
ge to protect the next generation from infection, an HIV-free generation will
Adolescent Health and Positive Youth Development
Paediatric Care and Support
Taking a family-centred approach, Mentor Mothers and Community Mentor Mothers are trained to deliver integrated services that extend beyond a child’s first two years.
PAGE 13
Community Mentor Mother
Core Programme: PMTCT and RMNCAH Pregnancy to Age 2
While tremendous progress has been
Approximately 60% of HIV infections
made to reduce paediatric AIDS, more
among children occur during
than 200 children are still infected
breastfeeding.***
with HIV each day in eastern and southern Africa.** AIDS-related illnesses are a leading cause of death in the region, especially among young women and girls aged 15 to 24 years .**
PAGE 14
H
*
Healthy Mothers, Babies, and Families At the heart of m2m’s work is our core PMTCT and RMNCAH Mentor Mother Programme which unlocks the potential of mothers living with HIV to empower other women and families in their communities to stay healthy.
Using a family-centred approach, m2m employs Mentor Mothers to engage women, their
partners, and families in health centres, households, and communities. They promote uptake of HIV
testing and other health services, retaining them in care, and improving adherence to treatment.
Mentor Mothers support HIV-positive mothers through pregnancy and breastfeeding and until their
children have their final 18-24 month HIV test and are no longer at risk of infection.
In contact with their clients over an extensive period of time, Mentor Mothers also provide
essential RMNCAH services. They include linkages to care and referrals for family planning,
cervical cancer screening, child immunisation, gender-based violence support, neonatal male
circumcision, malaria, nutrition, and TB.
months pregnant and my HIV test
In 2016...
came back positive. Fortunately,
m2m HIV-positive
the nurse took me to meet the m2m
clients adopted
My life changed when I was five
Mentor Mothers who helped me understand that it wasn’t the end of my life and I could have an HIV-
behaviours linked to preventing mother-to-
negative child. The hardest part was disclosing my status to my
child transmission of
family who separated the utensils I was using in the house from
HIV, including:
everyone else’s. But that changed when I started working for m2m in 2016. I used what I learned to educate my family about HIV and they started treating me like a human being again. – Wilbroda Awuor, former m2m client, currently a Community Mentor Mother in Kenya
90% disclosed their status 97% gave birth in
health centres 84% of babies had an
*
Prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT), Reproductive,
Maternal, Newborn, Child, and Adolescent Health (RMNCAH)
**
Ending AIDS, Progress Towards the 90-90-90 Targets, UNAIDS, 2017
*** How AIDS Changed Everything, UNAIDS, 2015
PAGE 15 11
HIV test result at
6-8 weeks
Early Childhood Development Pregnancy to Age 5
Research shows that children exposed to risks and adversity, such as HIV or poverty, in their early years are particularly vulnerable and need additional support to help them reach their potential.*
Evidence suggests that early interventions, from pregnancy into early childhood, can lead to positive outcomes, including: increased cognitive, physical, and social development; improved school performance; and higher earning potential. *
Strategies for reducing inequalities and improving developmental outcomes for young
children in low-income and middle-income countries, The Lancet, Engle et al, 2011Â
PAGE 16
Thriving Children, Brighter Futures m2m is committed to ensuring that every child not only survives, but also thrives with early childhood development (ECD) services integrated into our core Mentor Mother Programme.
Specially trained Mentor Mothers provide essential ECD services at home and in communities,
supporting parents and caregivers to understand the importance of nurturing a
child’s development.
The intensive intervention is designed to support children’s cognitive, social, emotional, motor,
and language development, and physical growth through stimulation activities and referrals, and
creating an enabling environment for their optimal development.
By engaging mothers through their child’s early years, m2m is able to support them to stay on treatment or regularly test for HIV or viral load for their own health.
Mentor Mothers also identify orphans and vulnerable children (OVC), up to age 19, and link them to health and social services , and provide hands on support to create healthy, resilient households.
In 2016... Many of the women I see are single
m2m provided
women, whose own parents have
integrated ECD services
died of AIDS-related illnesses and
in Kenya, Lesotho,
who don’t know the importance
South Africa, and
of stimulating their babies. The
Swaziland for the first
grandmothers are taking care of their children and always have
1,000 days (pregnancy
them on their backs so they can
to age two), and in some
work. We teach the mothers
areas up to age 5.
and grandmothers how to help babies develop in all of the domains, which are physical, cognitive, socio-emotional, and language. We also make sure the mother is taking her medication and that the baby is getting immunised. – Thobile Nyamane, ECD Mentor Mother, Swaziland
PAGE 17 11
14,093 children benefitted from our ECD services.
Paediatric Care and Support Birth to Age 12
Leaving No Child Behind m2m is working to make sure that all children are tested and access the treatment they need.
Mentor Mothers, who are trained in a comprehensive package of
services, identify HIV-exposed children at health facilities and in
communities. They educate their families about the importance
of testing them for HIV, and facilitate and support the testing process.
For children who test HIV-positive, Mentor Mothers ensure that they
are linked, initiated, and retained in care, providing ongoing follow up
and adherence support to the children and their families.
Identification of HIV-positive children, and initiating and retaining them in care, has not progressed at the same rate as improvements in PMTCT* services.
An estimated 2.1 million children
Only one out of two HIV-exposed
under age 15 are living with
children in the 21 countries with
HIV globally.**
the highest HIV burden was tested 6 to 8 weeks after birth as recommended.***
Without treatment, half of all children born with HIV will die by the age of two.***
PAGE 18
It was painful to learn my older girl had HIV. At the same time, this weight was lifted off my shoulders by finally being able to know. Some months after I started giving her antiretrovirals (ARVs), I noticed that my sweet daughter was doing so much better. Her energy has returned and she plays a lot and enjoys being with other children from the neighbourhood. I feel like my daugher has been rescued. – Mefa, an m2m client in Malawi who was encouraged to test her older children for HIV by a Community Mentor Mother
In 2016... In Malawi, where the Paediatric Care and Support initiative first started, Mentor Mothers identified 90,293 infants and children and linked *
Prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT)
**
UNAIDS Fact Sheet, 2017
*** UNAIDS Children and HIV Fact Sheet, 2016
PAGE 19 11
them to services.
Adolescent Health and Positive Youth Development Age 10 to 24
Healthy Choices m2m is working to reduce HIV infections and deaths among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) through our integrated service platform that links communities and health centres.
Peer Mentors, aged 20 to 24, promote HIV counseling and testing,
as well as critically needed sexual and reproductive health education,
through youth clubs and support groups in schools and communities.
They refer and link adolescent girls and young women to health
centres for the medical services they need.
For those who test HIV-positive, Peer Mentors link them to Mentor
Mothers at health centres for education and support to help them
access lifesaving treatment.
Only 13% of adolescent girls, aged 15
Nearly 7,000 adolescent girls and young
to 19, were tested for HIV in sub-
women, aged 15 to 24, are infected with
Saharan Africa over the past year and
HIV each week globally, the majority in
received the result of their last test.*
sub-Saharan Africa.**
Transactional and intergenerational sex, gender-based violence, and gender inequalities make adolescent girls and young women disproportionally vulnerable to HIV infection.
PAGE 2 0
Many adolescent girls become pregnant and infected with HIV in my community. One of the challenges is poverty. This makes girls vulnerable to older men taking advantage of them with promises to buy them expensive things. I promote HIV counseling and testing, as well as safer sex education. It is my duty to educate these girls about the risks of having sex with older men and help them say “no” to things that would ruin their future. Over the last year, I have seen positive change in many of the girls I meet. I want every young woman in my country to have the same opportunity to make healthy choices about how they live their lives. – Noscelo Kubone, Peer Mentor, South Africa
In 2016... 86% of m2m’s HIVpositive AGYW clients were initiated on ART. 97% of m2m’s AGYW clients were adherent more than 80% of the time, which is critical to reduce viral load to *
Seventh Stocktaking Report, UNICEF, 2016
**
UNAIDS Data, 2017
an undetectable level.
PAGE 2111
Our 2016 Financials We are pleased to report that m2m maintained a consistent level of revenue in 2016, despite an uncertain global economic and political climate. We continued to diversify our revenue base to support the growth of m2m services (including new institutional and individual donors, new programmes, and new countries of service that will kick off in 2017). This diversification, together with the implementation of new site- and community-level services, made it possible for us to meet our strategic objectives. Notably in 2016, we expanded our service platform: implementing m2m’s Adolescent Health and Positive Youth Development Initiative in South Africa (supported by the United States Government’s DREAMS Initiative, Johnson & Johnson, and MAC AIDS Fund); demonstrating our Paediatric Case Finding approach in Malawi (with support from the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation, through a subgrant from the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, and Johnson & Johnson); integrating our Early Childhood Development (ECD) programme with core reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health services in Lesotho, South Africa, and Swaziland (funded by the United States Agency for International Development/USAID); and rolling out our mHealth initiative across country programmes (supported by a capacity strengthening grant from Comic Relief). Due to ongoing contributions and donations we received from a wide range of supporters, we were able to deepen our services reaching women and infants, and expand our family-centred approach to entire households. Our supporters included individuals, corporations, institutions, foundations, other international organisations, as well as the invaluable, ongoing support of USAID through the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). We are proud to report that our commitment to maximise resources reaching our beneficiaries has meant that more than 90% of all resources received are spent on our programmes. Separate audited financial statements for m2m’s three global entities (South Africa, U.K., and U.S.), prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), U.K. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, and U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, are available on our website, m2m.org.
PAGE 2 2
Statement of Financial Position
Statement of Activities
Current Assets
Revenue and Support
Cash and Cash Equivalents
4,653,853
Grants and Contracts
Contributions and Other Receivables
1,959,7 1 6
Contributions
2,333,908
Other Assets
437,963
Other Income
72,1 4 8
Total Assets
$7,051,532
Liabilities and Net Assets
18,7 7 1,1 2 9
Total Revenue and Support
$21,1 7 7,1 8 5
Expenses
Total Liabilities
3,1 76,969
Programme Services
Net Assets - Unrestricted
1,3 13,7 1 1
Management and General
Net Assets - Temporarily Restricted
2,560,852
Fundraising
Total Ending Net Assets
3,874,563
Total Expenses
22,330,708
Changes in Net Assets
($1,153,523)
Total Liabilities and Net Assets Explanatory note:
$7,051,532
20,030,588 431,948 1,868,1 72
Audited figures are available for each of the three entities that make up the m2m group, but these consolidated financial
statements are unaudited. All figures are in U.S. dollars.
Functional Expenses
90%
Revenue by Category
8% 2%
58%
7% 3%
32%
• Programme Services
• Government Grants
• Management and General
• Corporate/Foundation Grants
• Fundraising
• Multilateral Grants • Private Contributions
PAGE PAGE 2113
DONORS with gratitude from mothers2mothers $500,000+ Comic Relief Department for International Development (DFID) The Children’s Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) Sub-Award: District Health System Strengthening & Quality Improvement for Services Delivery in Malawi (via Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation (EGPAF)) Johnson & Johnson MAC AIDS Fund United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Uganda United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
Prime Award:
HIV Innovations for Improved Patient Outcomes in South Africa Reducing Pediatric HIV/AIDS through Education and Psychosocial Support in Africa Sub-Award: Build Capacity for HIV Prevention, Treatment and Care in Malawi (via Partners in Hope) Support for Orphans and Vulnerable Children (OVC) in Nairobi and Coast Counties of Kenya (Nilinde) (via Plan International USA) Strengthening Tuberculosis and HIV & AIDS Responses in East Central Uganda (STAR-EC) (via JSI Research & Training Institute, Inc.)
$100,000 - $499,999
$50,000 - $99,999
$10,000 - $24,999
Anonymous
Gilead Sciences, Inc.
Jonathan Bush
Bickerstaff Family Foundation
The Hunter Foundation
Kurt Chapman
Bohemian Foundation
Edward E. Matthews
Discovery Fund
Denise Coates Foundation
Carolina & Martin Schwab
Veronica Escudero & Luis Segui
Department of Health, Mpumalanga
Selfish Mother
Global Health Corps
Province
Starr International Foundation
Carol Hill & Richard R. Pickard
The Elizabeth Taylor AIDS Foundation
The Trustees’ Philanthropy Fund of
Innovation Edge
(ETAF)
Caroline Janda & Michel Glouchevitch
The ELMA Foundation
Vitol Foundation
Fidelity Charitable
Enel Green Power S.P.A. (EGP) FHI 360 ICAP plc Jasmine Charitable Trust LGT Venture Philanthropy Mulago Foundation United Nations Children’s Fund
(UNICEF) Malawi
United Nations Children’s Fund
(UNICEF) South Africa
Western Cape Department of Health
Frieda Levycky Katy Levycky
$25,000 - $49,999 Anonymous Leslie Brunner & Ryan Wise Elton John AIDS Foundation (EJAF) Nancy Gallt Sabrina Henry & Dr. David Fett Imago Dei Fund Newman’s Own Foundation Porticus Africa Limited Stephen Lewis Foundation
PAGE 2 4
Ana Maria & Bertrand Lafontaine Lighthouse Trust Kuty & Christer Manhusen Celia & David McCarty The Curtis W. McGraw Foundation Susan & William Oberndorf Ngozi Nnenna Orji The Relate Trust Segal Family Foundation Maartje & Esteban Skare
Robin & Jeffrey Smalley
Amber Sakai LLC
Carolyn & James MacDonald
Carl Stewart
Anonymous
Drs. Susan & Howard Mandel
Victoria Beckham Limited
Romilla & Simon Arber
Caty Matthews
Amy Wilson-Janice
Laura Bartlett
Ian McBride
Shirley Baskin Familian
Alex Meneses Simpson
Robin Beningson & Salvatore Yannotti
Emily Miller & Andrew Stern
Ruth & Dr. William Besser
Linda Miller & Bruce Wolff
Claire Bonnefous
Elisha & Ali Naini
Bionda Castana
Alexandra Neil & John C. Vennema
Elizabeth & Bill Bottreill
Matt Norris
Kimberly Campbell & Edgar
Aidan O’Neill
Sabounghi
Orchid Investments
Peter Clark
Paulomi & Rakesh Patel
Kathryn Clubb & Linda Reid
Alistair Pettey
Sylvie Corbelin & LDG Associates
Steve Rabin & Jon Winslow
Sabina & Santiago Corral
Raise Marketplace
Katinka Donagemma
Chad Rathner
Mary Jane & William Driscoll
The Hon. Natasha Rayne
Adrianna Ennab & Johannes Graf von
Catherine & Thomas Reagan
Schaesberg
Dr. Bill Resnick & Michael Stubbs
Alejandro Escudero
Angie & Miles Rogers
Pedro Escudero
Theresa & Russell Rhodes
Farmglade Ltd
Julia Ruchman
Caroline & Paul Flanagan
Mary & Peter Savin
Mary C. Foley
Kate Schachern
John W. Franklin, Jr.
Sondra & Marvin Smalley
Dr. Donna Futterman
Paree Sobhani-Moradpour
Gescobro Collection Services
Andrea Soler-Roig
Silvia & Rafael Gil-Alberdi
The SRM Charitable Trust
Judith & Steven Gluckstern
Jennifer Tilly
Kenneth Gotlib
Samantha Tipples
Holly & Robert Gregory
Catherine M. Torres & Jose Andreu
Simon Griffiths
Patricia & Enrique Torres
Lisa Gruenberg & Martin
Vild - House of Little
Dorrie Virden
$5,000 - $9,999 Christine & Timothy Adams Anonymous Be One Percent Bellaser Marianne Bokan-Blair & David Blair Paul Boskind Damiana Foscari Cameron Schrier Foundation Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), South Africa Sub-Award: Programmatic Implementation and Technical Assistance for HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis (via TB/HIV Care Association) Laure Heriard Dubreuil Susan Gibson & Mark Bergman Emily Taylor & John Goodall Danai Gurira Joelle & David Jennison Janet & Derek Lubner Angus McGregor Charles McGregor Louis Dreyfus Company The OUTNET Edward Park Sanjay Patel Stephanie Power Sue Richardson & Peter Coward Tara Health Foundation thredUP Kathryn & David Torres The Webster Pia-Sophie Wool & Heath Tipton
$1,000 - $4,999
Carmichael III
Julia Guryera-Motlokhov & Alexei
Wanita Weaver
Motlokhov
Alice Wilson
Alex Hess & Pete Gutman
Derek Whitworth
Marjorie J. Hill, Ph.D
Ariel & Jason Wortendyke
Intel Jaume Buxó Ascaso Julian A. & Lois G. Brodsky Foundation Alice Kavanagh & Robert Wade
Alexandra & Corrado Abbattista
Tanya & Conor Keogh
Josefina de Achaval
Elena & Marco Lippi
Aid for Africa
L.J.C. Fund Limited
Constanza & Toby Ali
Dr. Barbara Loeb & Daniel Goetschel
All Saints Anglican School
Sara López Cabezón
Millie Allinson
Estee Lauder Companies UK & Ireland
...Continue on next page
PAGE 2 5
$500 - $999 Rosie & Max Assoulin Atalanta Invest Jeanne & Dr. Richard Besser Dalistso Blamu Gloria Borger & Lance Morgan Vicky Bradshaw Joannie Burstein & Andrew Besser Tonia Buxton Victor Chimota Timothy Church Sherett Dahlstrom Wayne Dankner Kimberly Dasher Tripp Nick Ede Joel Feinman Roberta Fisher Kate Langrall Folb & Brian Folb Mark Friedman Mark Gallagher
Clare Pharoah
Rayann Belloise
Bérengère Pictet
Fabiola Beracasa Beckman
Jessica Lemarie-Pires & Robert Pires
Pamela Berenbaum
May Rihani
Alan Bernstein
Karen & Andrew Roberts
Andrea Bertone
Kate Robert-Tissot
Kathy Beyer
Royal Mail
Anthony Bienstock
Laura Sanchez
Sarah Blake
Isabelle Schwab
Blake’s on the Park, LLC
Soroptimist International of
Daniel Blatt
Athina Boardman
Lakewood/Long Beach
M Spriggs
Nancy Bodmer
William Spurgin
Melissa Bogdan
Standard Bank
Ingrid Boivin & Michael Stewart
Jeffrey Streeper
Janet Boonstra
Sarah & Christian Thun-Hohenstein
Janis Bowdler
Samantha Tipples
Karen Bowen & Dirk Imhof
Maria Torres-Fasano
Anne Bowhay
Vademecum Ventures
Sarah Bowman & Bill Temko
Victoria Wall & Jason Bacon
Elayne Braga Samantha Brink
Gill St. Bernard’s School Google.org
Under $500
Ora & Lance Gordon
Robert Adams
Edward Grissell
Jacqui & Chris Ahrends
Aneta Gunn
Cesar Alvarez
Colleen Hancock
Amazon Smile
Brett Heyman
Sarah Andelman
Kate Hollyer
Amy Anderson & Thomas Friedmann
Elisabeth Hove
Jenna Anians
Huron Consulting Group
Anonymous
Alysha Jannotta & Joseph Jannotta III
Hugo Aponte
Sarah Kaye
Amy Aquino & Drew McCoy
Robin & Richard Leonard
Vanessa Arelle
Maria Leoni-Sceti
Ana Maria Arias-Le Marie
Cecilia & Jose Linares
Pippa & Kyle Armbrester
Adam Lippes
Ruth & Neil Armstrong
Anna Manhusen
Cedric Aumonier
Bobby McCarty
Annie Azzariti
Annabelle McGregor
Sarah Bailey
Maria Carolina Melo
Victoria Barbour
Claire Merry
Roli Barker
Microsoft
Julie Barnes
Izabela Minkiewicz
Marian Barretto
Allison Mitchell
Adam Bartlett
Lucy & Phil Morelle
Giovanna Battaglia
Karen Moss & David Familian
Marlene & Ken Beckman
Peter Nelson
Molly Beebe
Obiora Onyeabo Obi
Irina Behar
Caroline Opinde
Terri Belcher
Chandra Broadwater & David Leonard BROWN FM Suzanne Browning Eva Broz Bonnie Bruckheimer Barbara Buloff Karin & Markus Bültbrune Gwendolyn Burke Robert Burke Gigi Burris Joshua Busby Rebecca Butterworth Maria Campasso Amy & Patrick Carney Todd Carpenter Aileen Carrigan & Gareth Coville Neil Cassar Simon Castets Ruany Castro Kevin & Richard Caulfield Terri Cavanaugh & Charles Dayton The Rubi and Anne Chaitman Foundation Parosha Chandran Arthur Chen Liwei Chen Daisy Chetwode Hillary Chiba
PAGE 2 6
Caroline & Colin Church
Miguel Fernandez
Frank Guo
Marina Cid
Fiduciary Trust
Ruth Gurevitch
James Citron
Debbie Finnegan
Steven Guy
Delia Clark
Alfreda Fitts
Jackie Hall
Alison Collington
Michael Flax
Tracey Hanbury
Timothy Collins
Tessa Foot
Abbie Hantgan
Niall Considine
Charles Fortin
Elizabeth Harris
Shari & David Coster
Julia Fortin
Emily Harris
Jeffrey W. Cox
Emma France
Don Harrison
Nicola Crawley
Blake Franklin
Kynderly Haskins
Kimberly & John Crimmins
Michele Frazier
Samina Hassan
Caroline Crochet
Dane Fredenburg
Katherine Havard
Lisa Cross
Casey Fremont
Rick Havard
CSU Dominguez Hills
Marjorie Friedman
Laurence Hazell
Sharon Cunningham
David Futterman
Paula Heartland
Breanna Datesman
Barbara & Michael Gach
Ana-Maria & Mark Heffernan
Evie & Matt Davis
Anna Galatsinou-Nayar
Lisa & Steve Hendricks
Susan Davis
Santiago Garcia Castellanos
Carl Henn
Davison Charitable Account
Zachary Garcia
Mary & John Henry
Daniel De Freitas Adiwardana
Anne & Dan Gardiner
Flor Hernandez
Ann Dearden
Janice Gault
Diane Hessan & Bob Stringer
Terry DelBalso
Jo-Ann Geffen
Marie Heyes
Adrienne Deming
Dr. Michele Gerard & Tim Chunn
James Heywood
Cydnee DeToy
Melinda Gesuale
Lesley Hinder
Audra Deveikis
Doug Getter
Cassandra Hobbins
Davina Dickson
Anu & Arnie Ghatak
Ruth Hodges & John LeClaire
Annya Dixon
Franรงoise Gibbison
Laura Hois
Jeffrey Dobrinsky
Sheila Gibbs
Jane Holdsworth
Dollar Academy Trust
Jeremy Gibson
Judy Holmes
Margaret Dombkoski
Betty Gilbert
Jill Honor
Christopher Dominick
Lindsay Gilchrist
Paul Honor
Herlin Donohue
Catherine Gill
Julia Hopper
Garance Dore
Nina Girvetz
Jill Horowitz
Sidney Druckman
Jane Given
HSH Property Consultants
Paivi Dubois
Givergy UK
Matthew Hurst
Kelly Duffy
Kevin Goetz
Pablo Hurtado
Joyce Dunagan
Deepa Gopalarathnam
Laura Hussong
Colleen Ebbitt
Emily Gordon
Charlene & Chuck Hyle
Gareth Edwards
Noah Gotbaum
Anthony Incerto
Aytan Eldarova
Simone Gourguechon
Helen Jackson-Grimes
Reedah El-Saie
Christine Graham
Nancy Jacobs & John Schmitz
Bebe Emerman & Steve Wolff
Karen Grant
Leslie Jaffe
Danny Engelberg
Barbara & Fabio Greco
Myra Jambrone
Judy Engelberg
Judith Greenwald
Henry James
Karen Engelhardt
Derek Justin Griffith
Jane & Bronek Masojada Charitable
Dr. Tim Evans
Jeanie & David Grimm
Trust
Lorena & Kent Faerber
Sara & Michael Gruber
Sue Jarvis
Gene Falk & Tim Savin
Peter Grudin
Isabel Jasinowski
Stephanie Fattorini
Jasmine Guinness
...Continue on next page
PAGE 2 7
Bud Johnson
Elizabeth Lower-Basch
Diane Murray
Barbara Johnson
Maxine Lubner & Paul Goldberg
Justin Myles
Kequa Jones
Ronnie Lubner
Irene Nabanoba
Gent Kadare
Diana Lynch
Bonnie Nadell & Patric Kuh
Adriana Kalborg
Angela Lynch
Naked Princess
Celine Kaplan
Widad Machmouchi
Gina Nanni
Daniela Karnuts
Christina Magnani
Mridu Baldevraj Narang
Serena Kasaboski
Emma Mainoo
Janet Neal
Jennifer Kates
Annie Makela
Craig Newmark
Trudi Kay
Cynthia Manchester
Gugu Nhlapo
Pete Keating
Gregory Marchand
Gwen Nichols
Melissa Keeslar
Elizabeth Margid
Mary Njuguna
Avanti Kelkar
Florence Mars
Gayle Northrop
Carole Keller
Sam Martin
Nathan Novielli
Carol Kenner
Valerie Mazza
Alex O’Brien
John-Paul Kernot
Phil Mazzara
Douglas O’Connor
Daniel Kershaw
James McAllen
Shelley Odenthal
Benedict Kingsmill
Kevin McAteer
Dolores Odogwu
Tamara Kirson
Katherine McCormick
Darren O’Kelly
Louise Kleberg
Lindsay & Taylor McCormick
Henry Oldfield
Sarina & Dr. Jeffrey Klemes
Tracey & Patrick McCormick
Mary Opee
Leslie Klotz
Victoria McEneney
Dennis O’Shea
Knight Frank
Bruce McEwen
Marie Osterman
Bonnie Kobak
Carolyn McEwen & Ed Derse
Christopher Osvai
Sonja Kotze
Maia McFadden
Tony Packer
Anna Koules
Sally & Peter McGleughlin
Jerome Page
Dave Koz
Hamish McGregor
BJ Paik
Hope Krakoff
Sandy McGregor
Jennifer & Steve Palmer
Tania Kravath
Maureen & Bruce McKenna
Pappa Ciccie Munster Limited
Robin Krusenoski
Wendy McKenna & Suzanne Kessler
Jade Parfitt
Carol LaBue
McKinsey & Company
Jenny Parker
Ilda Ladeira
Carol McManus
Patti Parson
Jean Lalonde
Anne McNally
Priyanka Patel
Michael Lancaster
Leandra Medine
PayPal Giving Fund
Marc Lande
Helen Meenan
Daniel Pearce
Deborah Larkin
Monica Mendez
Béranger Pène
Marie & Peter Laugharn
Patrick Meriweather
Katrina Perez
Laurence Coste
Sabrina & Jamie Merold
Paul Perrotta
Anton Di Centa Le Van Kim
Michelle Milford Morse
Emma Peyton
Iris Lee
Judy Milrad
Nicole Pezold Hancock
Denisse Leon
Pat Mitchell & Scott Seydel
Brad Phillip
Kendrick Leung
Michelle Moffatt
Belinda Pickford
Sarah & Bob Levitt
Nasra Mohamed
Kimberly Pieniazek
Lucy Liben
Daniel Molloy
Terri Powell
Guowei Liu
Reinhard Moors
Bettina Prentice
Sophie Lloyd-Jones
Carlos Mota
Ann & Tyler Prochnow
Morris Loeb
Gillian Mthandi
PwC Charitable Foundation
Loews Corporation
Jennifer Mulkey
Stephanie Quintero
David Lott
Philippe Müller
PAGE 2 8
Lisa Rabbe
Lynn Shapiro
Dennis Whelan
PwC Charitable Foundation
Sidd Shenoy
Alice Whitehead
Stephanie Quintero
Chris Sherry
Chance Whitehurst
Lisa Rabbe
London Shirley
Michelle & Michael Whitfield
Susan Rabizadeh
Helena & Tom Sikorski
Suzanne Whitty & Andrew Zehner
Ashish Raniwala
Ann Simpson
Melonie Jane Wilkins Salam
Sarah & Daniel Rashtbaryan
Mara Simpson
Kyle Williams
Helen & Barry Rathner
Barney Singer
Helen & Mike Wills
Jan & Jeff Rathner
Lynne Sinnott McCauley
Mark Wilson
Sarah & Mark Ray
Debra Smalley & Catherine Gray
Nic Wiltshire
Rebecca Redding
Hannah Smalley
Arabella Windham
Connie Reeder
Andrea Soler-Roig
Chrysula Winegar
Louise Reichmann
Bodil Sorensen
Karen Wint
Kaitlin & Chris Reimann
Marion Sossen
Fern & Dave Wolt
Bonnie & Bill Rembacz
Ian Southey-Swartz
Richard Woodward
Patrick Rhea
Robin Spear
Tony Wool
Vanessa & Jon Richart
Kathryn Speechley
Myriam Worthington
Victoria Rideout
Elaine Spitz-Berke
Christopher Wright
W M M Ridley
Spur Group (Pty)
Andrew Wright
Joan Robbins
Alice Stek
Yin Wu
Kate Robert-Tissot
Herma Stewart
Calum Wyllie
Nicole Rodriguez
Natasha Stotesbury
Alex Yates
Julia Restoin Roitfeld
Nicola Studt
Peiqi Yu
Steven Rosandich
Baochen Sun
Jessica Zaino
Beverly & Melvin Rosenthal
Richard Sutton-Mattocks
Evone Zander
Dede Rossi
Cynthia Sward
Jana Zdenkova
Margarita Rozenfeld
Victor Tabbush
Robin Zendell
Trinity Ruggio
Reika Terada
Parissa Zier
James Rutledge
Marion Terrizzano
Leone Zion
Morihiro Ryu
Judith Thoms
Heather Zitlau
Yasamin Sadreddini
Leslie & Paul Tillotson
Clare Zurawski
Marybeth Salerno
Jennifer & Peter Torres
Vinni Samara
Jose Miguel Torres Villarroel
Tara Sandler & Jennifer Davidson
Jacqueline Tsuma
Josep Sanfeliu
Pere Turro
Parsa Sanjana
UK Land Estates (Services)
Jose Santos Filho
Marco van Embden
Sarah Saunders
Eugenie van Nispen tot Sevenaer
Holly Scarsella
Tijl Vanden Eynde
Stephen Schade
Sam Virden
Brent Scharschmidt
Christopher Walter
Michael Schechter
Julia Wan
Henry Scheuller
Naomi Ward
Kathrin Schmitz
Freya & Chris Warren
Tamara & Michael Schwartz
Gillian Waterton
Jana Sepec
Andrew Webster
Samarth Shah
Julie & Steve Weinhouse
Eric Shaphran
Pilar Weiss
Annette & Leonard Shapiro
Ann Wheatley
...Continue on next page
PAGE 2 9
A Gift in Tribute is a lifesaving way to celebrate a special event or honour a loved one Debbie & Glen Bickerstaff
Brynn Kolada
Stefanie & Peter Tiger’s Wedding
Desiree Blumenthal
Sandra G. Krakoff
David Torres
Leslie Brunner
Dr. Barbara Loeb
Jonathan Bush
Tammy & Ian Mackaskill
In Memory of
Ayana Cadres
Maiden Mohowe
Sandy Allinson
Laure Heriard Dubreuil
Dr. Charles Meriweather
Arlene & Danny Dayton
John W. Franklin, Jr.
Chad Rathner
Chrysanthy Hadjipateras-
Nancy Gallt
Theresa Rhodes
Souglides
Judith Gluckstern
May Rihani
Melissa Havard
David Grant
Elizabeth Beatrix Femke Schwab
Frances G. Smith
Ellen Greubel
Robin & Jeffrey Smalley
Craig Virden
Emily Hyle & Phillip Nelson
Molly & Stephen Sobhani’s Wedding
We wish to extend special thanks to the following individuals and organisations for their exceptional help and support in 2016 4A’s
Hillary Chiba
Pablo Hurtado
Josefina de Achaval
Julie Christopher, eOne Licensing
ICAP
Neville Ackerman
Kelyn Clark
Hilton & Annalynne Kaplan
All Saints Anglican School
Niki Conforti
Jodie Kidd
Nathan Ambach
Sylvie Corbelin
Mollie King
Animas
Peter Coward
Mindi Knebel
Amber Atherton
Jane Desmond
Robin Krusenoski
BabyCenter
Jens Diester, African Bikers
The Lanesborough Hotel
Sarah Bailey, Hearst UK
Laure Heriard Dubreuil, The Webster
Veronica Law
Emma Beckett, Emma Beckett PR
Nick Ede, East of Eden
Lee Thomson Quartet
Victoria Beckham
Sophie Ellis-Bextor
Annie Leibovitz
Shiarra Bell
Evans Cycles
Annie Lennox
Miraya Berke, Babyccino
Richard Ferrara, Event Planning &
Frieda Levycky
Debbie & Glen Bickerstaff
Liberty
The Birley Group
Emma Forde
Dr. Barbara Loeb
Marco Bizzari
Simon Galletley
Louis Dreyfus Company
Susan Bloom
Lionel Geneste
MAC Cosmetics UK & Ireland
Gavin Blumenthal, Raise Marketplace
Rafael Gil-Alberdi
Derek Mackillop
Bodas
Stanley & Sheryl Ginsburg
Una Maguire
Samantha Bond
Tara Goldsmid Paterson
Daniela Marano, Tones of Note
Hugh Bonneville
Warren Goodman
Beth Mbaka, Comic Relief
John Brownsword
Kenneth Gotlib
Stella McCartney
Jonathan Bush
Molly Gunn
Alessandro Michele
Gonzalo Camacho
Sabrina Henry & Dr. David Fett
Pollyanna Midwood, The Birley Group
Laura Carmichael
Hezron Chetty
Jo Milloy
Raquel Cassidy
Charlie Howarth, House of Garrard
Joanne Milner, House of Garrard
Kim Chappell
Rochelle & Marvin Humes
Atalanti Moquette
Catering NYC
PAGE 30
Karen Mulligan, Leibovitz Studio
Responsible Safari Company
Emma Tivnen
Naked Princess
Marie Noelle Riboud
Sarah Tomczak, Red Magazine
Rus Nerwich, Tones of Note
Jenny Rose, HappyPR
Robert Triefus, GUCCI
Bernardo Neville, Chango Empanadas
The Rus Nerwich Quintet
uBack
Veliswa & Phawoluhle Nkantini
Amber Sakai
Ulendo Travel
Megan O’Hare
Karin & Rob Schermbrucker,
Union J
April Olivas
The Waiting Room, Cape Town
Aidan O’Neill
Carolina & Martin Schwab
Victoria Wall & Associates
Ottoman Slap
Sentebale
Victoria Wall
Karishma Patel
Mara Simpson
Zingara & Manny Walters
Jade Parfitt
Nathalie Vaandrager van Spaendonck,
Kirsty Wark
Davin & Katerina Phillips
Chris Warren, Charterhouse Capital
PMK•BNC
Michael Spencer
Partners
Mike Podmore, STOPAIDS
Jaco van Staden, African Bikers
Wattbike
Stephanie Power, MAC
David Stone, Missing Piece Film
Samuel Weeks
PushPR
Tallia Storm
Ruth Wilson
Poorna Ramasubramanian
Natasha Stotesbury
Chrysula Winegar, UN Foundation &
Gemma Rees
Nikki Studt, ICAP
Suzanna Rees-Delizo, Leibovitz
Candice Swanepoel
Young Blood Art Gallery
Studio
thredUP
YOXO
Slingshot Media
Sloane Stationery
Global Mom’s Challenge
m2m Global Giving Circle:
A group of like-minded individuals who have made a sustained financial commitment to m2m to end paediatric AIDS. Debbie Bickerstaff
Michel Glouchevitch
Carolina & Martin Schwab
Leslie Brunner
Carol Hill & Richard R. Pickard
Maartje & Esteban Skare
Kurt Chapman
Janet & Derek Lubner
Carl Stewart
Laure Heriard Dubreuil
Michael Marsh
Amy Wilson-Janice
Nancy Gallt
Celia McCarty
Monica Winsor
Susan Gibson & Mark Bergman
Ngozi Nnenna Orji
m2m Cycle to Zero: These cyclists supported m2m’s work through a 4-day challenge event in Malawi. Josefina de Achaval
Ana Maria & Bertrand Lafontaine
Chad Rathner
Frank Beadle de Palomo
Frieda Levycky
Carolina & Martin Schwab
Dalistso Blamu
Katy Levycky
Maartje & Esteban Skare
Claire Bonnefous
Derek Lubner
Lauren Smith
Victor Chimota
Kuty & Christer Manhusen
Andrea Soler-Roig
Peter Coward
Angus McGregor
Carl Stewart
Katinka Donagemma
Charles McGregor
Kathryn & David Torres
Veronica Escudero & Luis Segui
Ngozi Nnenna Orji
Wanita Weaver
Alejandro Escudero
Matt Norris
Derek Whitworth
Pedro Escudero
Carolyne Opinde
Pia-Sophie Wool & Heath Tipton
Damiana Foscari
Sanjay Patel
The wonderful kids who joined us
Kenneth Gotlib
Stephanie Power
PAGE 3 1
on the Kid’s Programme
The South Africa, U.K., and U.S. Board o of a diverse group of individuals commi child transmission of HIV and creating Board Chairs Derek Lubner Chair, m2m South Africa Marketing Director, Innovate Services Limited
Carl Stewart Chair, m2m U.K. Global Head of Hedge Funds Coverage, HSBC
Dr. Donna Futterman Chair, m2m U.S. Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Kimberly Dasher Tripp Founder and Principal, Strategy for Scale
Ngozi Nnenna Orji Philanthropist
Board Members The Reverend Canon Chris Ahrends Anglican Church of Southern Africa Laura Bartlett Retired Chief Financial Officer & Chief Operations Officer Samantha Bond Actress Leslie Brunner President, MiniLuxe Lynn Cornelissen Medical Officer/SubInvestigator, Stellenbosch University’s Family Clinical Research Unit
*
Dr. Tim Evans Medical Director, Grace Belgravia Colleen Hancock Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, BabyCenter Marjorie J. Hill, Ph.D CEO, The Joseph P. Addabbo Family Health Center, Inc.
Louise Palmer Board Advisor and CEO, Velvet Architect Stephanie Power Communications Director, MAC Cosmetics Kate Schachern Partner, Rabin Martin Charneill Sickle Chartered Accountant
Carolina Manhusen Schwab Economist and Philanthropist
mothers2mothers South Africa, mothers2mothers U.S., and mothers2mothers (UK) Limited are separate, nonprofit organisat
mothers2mothers is registered as mothers2mothers South Africa NPC under Section 10 of the South African Companies Act 2008 (Re mothers2mothers is registered in the United States as mothers2mothers International Inc., a nonprofit organisation under section 5 mothers2mothers is registered in the United Kingdom as mothers2mothers (UK) Limited, a charity registered with the U.K. Charity
PAGE 3 2
of Directors/Trustees* are comprised mitted to the elimination of mother-tog healthy families and communities. Non-Voting Members
Officers of the Corporation
Frank Beadle de Palomo President and Chief Executive Officer, m2m
Sonja Kotze Treasurer, m2m South Africa and m2m U.S., Finance Director, m2m
Dr. Mitch Besser Founder, m2m Robin Allinson Smalley Co-founder and Chief Connector, m2m U.S.
Chad Rathner Secretary, m2m South Africa, Chief Operating Officer, m2m
David Torres Secretary, m2m U.S., Senior Advisor to the President and CEO, m2m
tions, governed independently.
eg Number: 2002/013453/08) and as a South African nonprofit and public benefit organisation (Number: 930000109). 01 (c) (3) of the Internal Revenue Code in the United States of America (EID: 30-0545760). Commission (Number: 1119721).
PAGE PAGE 33 11
Evolution of our logo
(2005)
(2015)
The logo symbolises the Mentor Mother Model upon which m2m was founded. It shows a Mentor Mother with her HIV-positive client and her HIV-negative newborn baby. The circle that contains the figures represents the programme itself. As for the colours, they represent the diverse and rich array of colours in the African landscape. - Alex Levetan, Graphic Designer, creator of m2m’s logo (2005) - Chadé Diener, Graphic Designer, keeper of m2m’s brand (2015 - present)
HQ: mothers2mothers South Africa Frank Beadle de Palomo President and Chief Executive Officer
To partner with us or support us, please contact: Emma France Global Development and Strategic Engagement Director
33 Martin Hammerschlag Way 5th Floor, Foreshore Cape Town, South Africa 8001
Europe: mothers2mothers U.K. office: +44 (0) 203 867 7120 contact: europe@m2m.org
office: +27 (0)21 466 9160 contact: info@m2m.org
North America: mothers2mothers U.S. office: +1 323 969 0445 contact: us@m2m.org www.m2m.org
ACCREDITED CHARITY ®
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