Projects

Project 1: 10K Small Business Recovery

Summary:

10K small business recovery program at Teranga restaurant at the Africa Center is an initiative to help 10,000 small businesses with at least half going to women and minority-owned businesses. Struggling restaurant owners will receive a revolutionary solar-powered pod for social-distanced dining to help get them through the pandemic and beyond, and technical assistance such as mentorship, accounting, and social media help.

Details:

The company has launched an initiative to help 10,000 small businesses with at least half going to women and minority-owned businesses. Struggling restaurant owners will receive a revolutionary solar-powered pod for social-distanced dining to help get them through the pandemic and beyond, and technical assistance such as mentorship, accounting, and social media help. This will kick-off at Teranga at the Africa Center located at 1280 5th avenue. At Teranga each Privé pod will have an African inspired theme to give you a vibe of being in Africa on Fifth avenue.

“Not only are the Prive pods a functional need for Teranga’s customers, we are also excited to be associated with a brand that is environmentally conscious and proactively working to support minority-owned businesses. Minority and women businesses are at a disadvantage. Many small businesses are going out of business. While we all try to weather the same storm, but many of us don’t have the same access to resources”, Stanley Lumax.

SolarFi Cares is calling on large companies that have committed funds to racial equality and diversity such as banks, insurance companies and foundations that take economic development, sustainability, and racial equality seriously. For instance Bank of America has committed $1 billion to racial equality and diversity. Those interested in partnering should contact impact@solar-ficares.org Restaurants will be selected by a committee after they submit their application and video.

The initiative was launched by SolarFI’s creative director Antonio Dixon, an MIT-trained social-entrepreneur. What better place to start to make a difference then the African center? It is the gateway to Africa and will help bring awareness to provide access to solar education and health to people in Africa. The SolarFi Privé pods come equipped with solar power, hepa air filters and will feature art that promote local artists.

One of the reasons we picked Teranga is because of their commitment to their community, the African diaspora and into several countries in Africa. The owners are running basketball clinics, etc. Those values are important to us and we respect their mission Antonio Dixon, Creative Director says.

These two organizations took covid and made it a good thing, said H.E. Ekwow Spio-Garbrah a former Ghanaian Ambassador to the USA.

Companies like door dash have expressed interest as well as the deputy borough president of Queen’s, Rhonda Binda.

Project 2: Rwandan Dental School

Summary: 

This multi-stakeholder project aims to develop a model for partnership between the Rwandan Dental School and District Hospitals throughout the country to effectively and consistently train the next generation of the community oral health workforce while simultaneously providing preventative oral health care to large numbers of children in rural communities often out of reach for health workers.

BACKGROUND

Located in East Africa, Rwanda is home to a population of over 12 million people. Despite significant investment and gains Rwanda has made in health in recent years, oral health remains drastically under-resourced. Throughout the country, oral health services are available at district, provincial and referral government hospitals and at select private clinics. At the village level, health posts provide only pain management and referrals to larger hospitals, leaving the rural population – approximately 70% according to the World Bank – largely without any oral heal services whatsoever.

According to the National Oral Health Survey completed in 2019, nearly all (98.7%) of those who sought oral care was due to pain, suggesting very low awareness of and a huge need for basic preventative oral health.

The University of Rwanda School of Dentistry – the only dental training institution in the country – is responsible for both dental surgery and dental therapy training. With a provider (including dental assistants, therapists and surgeons) to population ratio of approximately 1: 92,000 (as of 2011), the school has huge strides to make in closing the gap in the workforce.

Both the School of Dentistry and the District hospitals have mandates to carry out school-based outreach services, however, each institution has limited resources to act on this mandate.

Such large gaps and limited resources demand a focus on cost-effective prevention efforts rather than curative services, as well as collaborative and creative solutions to equitably achieve improved oral health for Rwandans.

THE SOLUTION

Building on the model of MCW Global’s Dental Therapy Outreach Training program in Tanzania, which provides practical training for dental therapy students in leadership and primary school-based oral health programs, this project aims to engage the University of Rwanda School of Dentistry, the District Hospital of Bugesera and SolarFi, to develop a model for sustainable high quality primary school oral health outreaches which can be replicated across the country.

Leveraging the potential of SolarFi’s solar powered kiosks will introduce additional learning methods for children and parents, provide effective on site treatment and link even the most remote schools to the country’s top experts at the School of Dentistry through e-dentistry technology.

Bugesera District will serve as a model for how the Dental School may roll out partnerships with District Hospitals across the country to simultaneously provide practical field-based training for dental therapists and to assist the districts across the country provide services to children in rural communities.

With such a framework in place, this project will simultaneously ensure that the next generation of Dental Therapists are prepared to be leaders in community oral health and that there is a system in place to support them and connect them after they are placed in rural communities.

OBJECTIVES

  • Develop a model for Dental School and District Hospital collaboration to sustainably run outreach services to rural schools throughout the country based on Public-Private-Partnership
  • Provide community-based practical training for dental therapist students
  • Provide school-based preventative oral health care to primary school children
  • Leverage solar technology to (1) coordinate digital, remote consultations with Kigali-based specialists at the Dental School and (2) reinforce education for children and parents

 

OVERVIEW OF STAKEHOLDERS

 

Partner

Mandate

Contribution

Benefit

MC-Rwanda

Improved Health, Education and Economic Security for the people of Bugesera

Project Lead in coordination

Leadership Training

Progress towards the strategic initiative to Connect Credible, Relevant and High Impact Development Partners with Bugesera

SolarFi

Bridge the health gap between rural and urban areas across Africa

Solar-powered kiosks and equipment

Develop a replicable model for rural oral health clinics which can be rolled out across Africa

Dental School

Training of dental and dental therapy students.

Teachers and students, Learning & Promotional Materials

Enhanced practical community training for dental therapy students

Bugesera District Hospital

Provide oral health services to the district, including school-based preventative services

Dental staff to supervise dental therapists 

Progress towards primary school outreach