Merck Connections Featured Retiree - Jean Semler



        
Merck Connections

Featured Retiree – Jean Semler

A DREAM, INSPIRATION AND OPPORTUNITY


Ever since she was 10 years old, Jean Semler dreamed of helping those in need in Africa. Growing up, she donated money in school for children in Africa; later in life, she continued that support by having her own family sponsor children there. But on a relaxing day in August 2006 – three years after Jean retired from Merck – she was inspired to help in an even bigger way and really fulfill that dream.

It began with a visit in their New Jersey home with Father Lawrence Kimbowa, a native of Uganda. He shared the story of his childhood there – the civil war, the refugee camp and the Chicago couple who sponsored his education and changed his life. He also shared the promise he made to himself – to give the children of Uganda the rare opportunity he was given as a child: the gift of education.

Inspired by Fr. Kimbowa’s story, Jean and her husband, David Thelen, traveled to Uganda that same year and witnessed great need – half of Uganda’s population is under 15 years old and many children have lost one
or both parents to HIV/AIDS. For most of these children, a quality education was not an option. Jean recognized the opportunity to truly make a
difference, and she knew that the knowledge and business and
management skills she learned at Merck – in addition to the network of people she built during this time – would play a large role in this effort.

INVALUABLE EXPERIENCE
Jean was employed for nearly 21 years at Merck. As a business manager for hospitals in New York and later, a business manager for the HIV group in New York City, she was part of the team that brought the lifesaving antiretroviral drug CRIXIVAN® to people dying from AIDS. Through her work at Merck, she was acutely aware of the AIDS epidemic in Africa.
“I am very grateful for my Merck experience. It has opened many doors, and by going through them, many Ugandan children and families have hope for healthier and more prosperous lives,” said Jean.

CHANGEALIFE UGANDA
 
Jean showcasing ChangeALife's positive impact on the lives of Ugandan women.
Beginning with the sponsorship of 10 Ugandan children by friends who wanted to help, Jean and David created ChangeALife Uganda (CALU), which was formally incorporated in March 2007. Modeling itself after the UN Millennium Development Goals to end poverty, followed by a 501 (c)(3)
non-profit classification in April 2008, CALU was poised to make a difference.

“ChangeALife Uganda focuses on education, health care and income-generating opportunities,” explained Jean. “And it concentrates on children, because ‘children, are the catalyst for change.’”  She continued, “And, with so many Ugandan parents with HIV/AIDS, it’s important that at least one

child be educated so that he or she can take care of the family once the parent(s) dies. Our goal is to provide these children and other children living in poverty with the education and skills they need so that they and their families have the opportunity for better futures.”

IT’S JUST THE BEGINNING…
One of the most fulfilling accomplishments for Jean took place in August 2012. CALU opened a new health center in Migyera – a truck stop town on the way to the Sudan. In partnership with Mildmay Uganda, the health center began providing testing, HIV care and antiretrovirals to 167 patients diagnosed with HIV.

“Our work here has really just begun,” explained Jean. “I remember back in 2006 when a nurse here told me about the large number of people dying of HIV because of a lack of medication. I immediately recalled the 1996 New York Times headline highlighting a 50 percent reduction in mortality because of the new protease inhibitors, especially CRIXIVAN®. Here it was 2006 – 10 years later – and people here were still dying of AIDS in large numbers.”

Now – 16 years later – the treatment and medication are finally available here, thanks to CALU. “Having the opportunity and the gift of meeting so many wonderful and generous people – and many are Merck people – who are making a difference in changing the lives of Ugandan children and families is one of the things I enjoy most about my retirement,” beamed Jean. “I am blessed to be living my childhood dream.”

Feb 2013 Newsletter




February 2013

ETS Global Donates Pencil Boxes to the Students of St. Lawrence School
    
"Pens for Success" from ETS Global
Thanks to a chance conversation on an airplane, students at St. Lawrence School in Migyera now have basic writing tools to begin the new school year.  On his journey to Uganda last summer, CALU Vice President Dave Thelen sat next to Lucia Loyo, Director of Global Affairs for ETS Global on the flight to Amsterdam, the first leg of his trip. Dave told Lucia about CALU and its mission to empower children to become change agents in their country through improved education, health care and income generating activities.

Lucia told Dave about ETS Global's program "Pens for Success" to provide basic school supplies to children in developing nations. She agreed to help CALU.

Pens Success classroom
St. Lawrence Students will begin the 2013 school year well prepared.

A few months later, a van pulled up to St. Lawrence School and delivered cartons filled with metal school boxes. Each box contains a pen, pencil, ruler and eraser and every student received one.

Parents are responsible for providing writing tools for their children attending government-sponsored schools, like St. Lawrence. However, in Migyera, many parents cannot afford these supplies or they are not educated themselves to realize the importance of equipping their children with the required items.

  Pens Success two  girls

"The best gift you can give a poor country like ours is to educate the children who are the future of our nation," said Fr. Lawrence K. Kimbowa, CALU's Director. "Education will empower them, open doors for them, and forge a destiny of opportunity for them."

CALU remains grateful to Lucia Loyo and ETS Global for their support and partnership in our mission.  ETS or Educational Testing Service is best known in the United States for its college and graduate school entrance examinations. 



New Student Photos and Report Cards Coming Soon


photo rebeccah
Ambasize is promoted to Gr. 4
Rebbecah Report
Ambasize Rebeccah's Report
This year we are trying a new approach to inform our sponsors about their child's performance. Our CALU team in Uganda has been e-mailing us updated student photos and report cards which, over the next month, will be printed and mailed to you. Our goal is to keep you updated and committed to the educational journey of your student. Your feedback is important so let us hear from you.

Ambasize in the photo above is from a family consisting of 11 members.  Most of her siblings have dropped out of school because the family was unable to pay school fees. Ambasize is a good student and ranks 3 out of 66. We are grateful to the Chen Family for making this educational opportunity possible for Ambasize.

 QuartersForWater  

 "Let it H2O" Brings Water Project Closer to Completion

In the spirit of the holiday season, Kathy Fable of Quinn Fable Advertising in New York City, creator of CALU's beautiful website, announced to her clients that she had made a contribution in their name to the QuartersForWater Program.

Let is H2O
Holiday "Let it H2O" card from Kathy Fable and Quinn Fable Advertising
  

With the help of famed advertising photographer Chip Forelli, Kathy designed a special holiday "Let it H2O" card explaining our effort to provide a steady supply of clean water to the students at St. Lawrence School, to the patients and staff at St. Francis Health Center and to the people of Migyera. She invited her clients to donate to the project, too.
 

"Through the program, we're helping build water collection tanks for on-site drinking water, enabling the continuing educational studies of many children at their new school in Uganda," she wrote. "So your donation will truly help change a life."
 
Let is H2O Photo
From Chip Forelli's water photography collection.

As a memento of their donation to the QuartersForWater program, each client received a beautiful signed print from Chip's water photography collection. Clients were invited to visit the CALU website to  learn more about our mission, become Corporate Sponsors, and receive a complete set of four framed Chip Forelli water images.

A big thanks to Maria Quinn and the staff of Mammoth Advertising for their holiday contribution.  
___________________________________________________________
QuartersForWater
Power Lines Bring Water Project Closer to the Finish Line
Power lines
Power lines installed!
It has been a long journey from 2009 when our CALU team committed to bringing water to St. Lawrence School and health center. The recent installation of power lines, funded by a Segal Family Foundation grant, moves the project closer to the finish line. The "race for water" began four years ago when our school children had no water and previous attempts to drill traditional wells in this semi-arid area failed. 

The beginning of any journey is the first step. For CALU, it was research and community input. This was followed by project planning, installing rain water collecting tanks, hiring a hydrologist, searching for and finding water, drilling a well, building a pump house and constructing a 50,000L water tower and of course key to all of this, fundraising. We have raised over $154,000!   
water tower pump house  

With two thirds of the work behind us, our 2013 goal is to install a pump and lay the network of pipes to connect the pump house to the water tower, school and health center. 

Wouldn't it be wonderful that during the next DRY season, instead of filling jerry cans with dirty pond water, the children will drink clean water from our new well? Remaining project balance is $73,000.  $20 buys one yard of pipeline.  
Can you help?


St. John's Academy New QuartersForWater  
School Partner

Schools are participating in the QuartersForWater Project and CALU welcomes St. John's Academy in Hillsdale, NJ as a new school partner. Students at St. John's donated $1200 - or sixty yards of pipeline - at their Thanksgiving service project.

St. John's  

Schools interested in learning more about our water project click here to view our video and may view the list of ideas for projects for their students.


QuartersForWater  

Community Partners  
CALU supporters might reach out to churches, schools, businesses, organizations and corporations near where they live and invite them to become Community Partners.

That's what sponsor, Bill Flynn did with the Rotary Club of Spring Lake, NJ. The Rotary is committed to community, national and international service projects. CALU appreciates their generous donation to our water project and thanks Bill for his leadership and initiative.  

CALU welcomes our newest community partner, the
CColts Neck Churcholts Neck Reformed Church in Colts Neck, NJ. In addition to sponsoring a child and funding a unique women's sewing project, the congregations has embraced  
QuartersForWater as the Church's Lenten service project. We are also excited to have Jill Niehaus and Ginne Hooper travel to Uganda this June to launch the women's sewing project.  Stay tuned for more updates about our exciting partnership with the Colts Neck Reformed Church.  Thank you Rev. Scott Brown for your leadership and caring.
  
The children and families of Migyera remain grateful to you - individuals, families, groups and schoolchildren - who have made this "pipedream" a pipeline of clean water for them.

QuartersForWater  

Be Part of the Team That Makes It Happen
Pond
Pond during the dry season.

Dear Friends of CALU,

We are so close to completing the water project in Migyera that we hope to wrap it up as soon as possible. We invite you to be  part of a team that makes that happen!
   
With $72,000 to go, we are seeking 60 friends to pledge a monthly gift of $100 for one year. That's 60 people contributing $1,200 each for a total of $72,000. Gifts may be made through credit card, on-line via PayPal, or a monthly billing and payment. You decide what works best for you.
   
We hope to have the 60 pledges in place by the end of March so we can proceed with the final phase of the project.  A team, all 60 of us, working together to lay the last yards of pipe line, install the pump and supply clean water to the school and health clinic.
   
Please join our Team of 60. Every time you make your $100 monthly pledge payment, you will be turning on the faucet and giving a Ugandan child a fresh cup of clean life-sustaining water.
   
Email or call today! Let's get it done!     girl getting water
 jsemler@changealifeuganda.org   732 833-1736











Piecemakers Quilting Group



Piecemakers Quilting Group of Colts Neck Reformed Church in Colts Neck NJ give generously of their time and handiwork for our children in Uganda. The little dresses they sewed speak to their generous hearts and busy hands. Some went to children from St. Lawrence School, others the pastor took to sub parishes during his pastoral visits and gave them to the children who came in torn clothes.


and the children sent thank you letters to the Group




Nov 2012 Newsletter

 November 2012

Water Project & Segal Family Foundation: Perfect together and moving forward    
    
Grant Advances Clean Water Project
 A generous $24,000 grant from the Segal Family Foundation narrows the gap to bring clean water to St. Lawrence School students and patients in the new St. Frances Health Center before the approaching January dry season. The 510' well is drilled, the pump house is built, and the water tower, soaring above the school buildings, promises an exciting future without yellow jerry cans filled with dirty pond water. The pump house and empty water tower stand like beacons of hope, thirsting for clean water to flow across the mile and a half that separates them. How will this happen? 

water tower
Water tower tank stands empty...waiting for water from the well!
Thanks to the Segal grant, the installation of poles and wiring to electrify the water pump will begin. Digging the long trench and laying pipes to connect the pump house to the tower and installing a distribution network to the school and health center requires a remaining $90,000.

Our partner schools have raised over $50,000 and combined with Merck & Co. Inc.'s $35,000 and other contributions our QuartersForWater Project has steadily progressed. To help us accomplish our new goal, we ask you to reach out and invite churches, schools, businesses and corporations to become a CALU partner. We invite you also to be a part of CALU history.

$20 Buys a Yard of Pipeline.
You can change the lives of an entire African community with the $20 purchase of a yard of pipeline from the 2,973 yard distance between the well and the tower. This holiday season, consider giving the gift of water with a special gift card to a family member or friend.  Whether it is 1 yard or 50 yards, each yard brings us closer to clean water for our children.                (If you have trouble downloading the card, email jsemler@changealifeuganda and she will send it to you.)
Fr. Lawrence, Gabrielle Francesco, Andy Bryant, Jean Semler

QuartersForWater 

Chester Community Charter School Donates to the Water Project!

Students from Chester Community School located in Chester PA, an economically challenged city, are proud of how they helped students in Uganda. Having raised $1,340 in the first half of 2012, they are excited to start again with cake sales, Friday dress down day and "I changed a life" bracelets. Fr. Lawrence, during his recent visit to Chester Community School, thanked the students and personalized QuartersForWater with his stories about the school and the children's daily fetching water chores. 

Lawrence in school

CashForCrafts and FundsForFarming

Fr. Lawrence Thanks Rumson Country Day School for Children's Microcredit Program

For the last two years, Rumson Country Day School has funded a successful micro credit program for CALU students, women and teachers. Members of the teacher's group received small loans for individual income-producing projects, as did the women craft's group. The children's program is an animal rearing project involving chickens, pigs, and goats. The child learns skills to raise and sell the animals and to keep accurate records. We can proudly report that all the children, teachers and women have paid back their loans. A new component to this partnership is the opening of individual savings accounts which could help fund the children's future educations. 
RCDS & Lawrence  
RCDS & Pig  


Festivities and Celebration Marked CALU's 

5-Year Anniversary during Fr. Lawrence's Visit 

  

A festive and fun-filled African Picnic at Knightsbridge Farm in Middletown, NJ honored CALU's 5-year anniversary. Cotton candy, a delicious pig roast, traditional African food, a competitive Uganda vs. US soccer game (in which Father Lawrence exhibited his goalie skills), Ugandan music and dancing and an evening barn fire made for a fabulous family event. 


BBQ  

Chandler & Lawrence   
Siobhan Fallon Hogan, our master of ceremonies, hosted a lively auction to raise money for pigs, goats, chickens for FundsForFarming, pipes for the QuartersForWater project and children's sponsorships. Special thanks to Sophia Kho and her family for providing their horse farm, a perfect venue for our celebration. Thank you Kerry Chandler, Gaye Nicholson, Sophia Kho, and Christina and Tom Durney for making this fabulous family event happen.

Hands down, Father Lawrence's trip was a great success. In addition to the African picnic, he updated our supporters at a wonderful afternoon event hosted by Kathy & Mark Fable in Old Tappan and at a special fundraiser for QuartersForWater at the Buona Sera Restaurant in Red Bank. A warm thank you to Chris Mariani, owner of Buona Sera for his generous support and for the organizing expertise of Mary Maralla and Liz Annino.

We have so much to be thankful for.
HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO ALL.

Aug 2012 Newsletter





AUGUST 2012

CALU Staff Attends Dedication 
of Completed, Furnished Health Center in Migyera   

Over 200 residents of Migyera, dressed in their finest, took seats under two large tents shading them from the afternoon sun to witness the formal dedication of their new St. Francis Health Center in Migyera, Uganda on Wednesday, July 4.

Under a third tent sat dignitaries from state and regional government, Bishop of Kasana-Luweero Paul S. Semogerere, and ChangeALife Uganda's Rev. Lawrence Kitzito Kimbowa, guests, and members of the U.S. ChangeALife Uganda team. 

Speakers, including a representative of the local townsfolk, praised and thanked the commitment and generosity of their "American friends" who helped to complete construction of the clinic and provide funds to equip and staff it. The newly improved clinic now provides infant and family wellness care, and soon, maternal health services. The clinic staff treated 300 patients on the days immediately preceding opening day.  

The CALU Team included President Semler, Vice President David Thelen, Health Care team Karen Hinckley, MBA, Susan Peacock, R.N., Evelyn Wells, M.D. and Lito Fune, M.D., both of Jersey Shore Medical Center, and Rosemary Carroll, member of the CALU Board of Directors

Speaking on behalf of CALU and its many supporters in New Jersey, President Jean Semler said, "We are honored to have the opportunity to work with the people of Migyera to improve the quality of care you receive. We came today to celebrate with you the opening of the new St. Francis Health Center, and also to see what else is needed to enable the clinic staff to provide more comprehensive health care services. We will continue to work hand-in-hand with you and the staff to make this a premier health center."




 
The festive celebration included a medley of lively native dances by the children of St. Lawrence School and a buffet dinner for attendees.  
Dr Wells listens to a fetal heartbeat
Drs. Wells and Fune worked a full day treating patients alongside clinic Medical Director Dr. Ronald Lubega. Early laboratory tests of 98 patients revealed 20 cases of malaria and 10 of typhoid. Of 198 patients tested for HIV, 15 were HIV+ including two children. Since then, the number has grown to 86 HIV+ patients and other health problems have been identified.


Dr Lubega and Nurse Martha visit with a mother recovering from malaria
Friends of CALU were inspired to provide funds needed for the clinic after the unnecessary and tragic death last year of 
Christopher Bakwana, a child who contracted malaria, a preventable and treatable disease. The boy did not have access to a nearby clinic
Unlike Christopher, this young boy is treated for malaria
   







 "Now children in Migyera will have access to quality health care," said Jean Semler. "Our wonderful new facility is here to prevent deaths of other children 
from malaria."







MoneyForMedicine
Health Center Qualifies as AIDS/HIV Treatment Clinic


Beginning August 16, the new St. Francis Health Center in Migyera will become part of the Ministry of Health as it begins treatment programs for the 86 patients who tested positive for HIV.


In correspondence to Rev. Lawrence K. Kimbowa of CALU, Pheona Busingye of Mildmay Uganda, a national program  providing comprehensive care for patients with HIV and AIDS-related health problems, said Mildmay will start an outreach station at St. Francis Health Center this month, and it also has begun the process to accredit the Center as an antiretroviral medication site. Mildmay Uganda recommends a team comprised of a physician, nurse counselor and data management supervisor to manage the HIV clinic. Mildmay Uganda will provide HIV treatment drugs free of charge to the patients as well as testing kits for the health center.

Jean and Dave began the CALU journey in 2007 with the idea of providing medical care to those who need it. The dedication of the health center made that idea a reality.

Money For Medicine
CALU Pledges Completion of Women's Care Unit



While the new St. Francis Health Center is providing child and family wellness services, the maternity rooms remain unfinished.
 







"We are determined to provide the equipment needed for the antenatal, delivery and recovery rooms as soon as possible," said Jean Semler, CALU President. "Women's health, particularly pre-natal and obstetrics, is vital to our health care program."  

Items needed include: Doppler fetalscope; large sink for the delivery room; incubator with UV light; safety goggles; nine IV stands for beds in delivery, recovery, antenatal rooms; three mobile GYN lamps; GYN exam beds with stirrups; waterproof covers for beds; side cupboards for each bed; two autoclave sterilizers plus two additional drums; antenatal scale; blood pressure pump and cuff; bedpans, kidney shaped basins, gloves, masks and other supplies.

Summer Religious Ed Students Get Involved!

For the fourth summer, religious education classes at St. Pius Church in Old Tappan, NJ raised money to sponsor a CALU student. Because of three classes' fundraising efforts, Erineo Kawooya will attend school again this year. Erineo and the students write to each other, sharing stories of school, home and interests. The Old Tappan students enjoy receiving Erineo's letters, which are always filled with pictures and descriptions of his school accomplishments. Thank you, St. Pius Summer CCD!