British Polio Fellowship
Founded | 1939 |
---|---|
Founder | Patricia Carey & Frederic Morena |
Type | Charitable Organization |
Registration no. |
England & Wales (1108335) Scotland (SC038863) |
Location |
|
Origins | London, England (UK) |
Area served | UK |
Slogan | "There are 120,000 reasons why we are here today." |
Mission | The British Polio Fellowship is a charity dedicated to helping, supporting and empowering approximately 120,000 people in the UK living with the effects of Polio and Post Polio Syndrome (PPS) |
Website |
www |
Formerly called | The Infantile Paralysis Fellowship |
The British Polio Fellowship is a charitable organisation supporting and empowering people in the UK living with the late effects of polio and post-polio syndrome (PPS). It provides information, welfare and support to those affected, to enable them to live full, independent and integrated lives and campaigns to raise awareness of PPS.[1]
Purpose
The charity's purpose is to empower and support all people in the UK living with the effects of polio and PPS by providing information, welfare and support to enable them to live full independent and integrated lives; by supporting a regional/branch/group structure that enables mutual support amongst members to be carried out in a caring and inclusive environment; and by developing world-wide alliances with other polio and post-polio groups. It aims to be the first resource on polio and post polio syndrome.[2]
Activities
It has around 8,000 members and over 40 branches and groups across the UK. It publishes a bi-monthly newsletter, the bulletin; and campaigns to raise awareness of PPS among healthcare professionals, members of parliament and the general public and supports the efforts of fellow Polio organisations in their attempts to eradicate the disease worldwide.[3]
History
The British Polio Fellowship, then called The Infantile Paralysis Fellowship, was founded on the 29th January 1939 by Patricia Carey, who had contracted polio aged eight, and Frederic Morena, who had contracted the disease at the age of 42, as a self-help and mutual aid society for those affected by polio. They called a meeting in January 1938 at Bloomsbury, London which was attended by 30 people and which acted as the foundation of the organisation being formed the following year. The first issue of the charity’s newsletter was published in April 1939. On 18 May 1939 a letter from Hugh Moulton, Liberal politician, was published informing the public of the formation of the Infantile Paralysis Fellowship which "seeks to help the sufferers help themselves and to afford each other mutual aid and sympathy". The letter went on to say the principal objective of the Fellowship was to help members find work and suggested that there were (at that time) somewhere between 5,000-7,000 people with the after-effects of infantile paralysis in Britain.[4][5]
Over time the focus of the charity's work has shifted due to the eradication of polio in the UK during the 1980s and the discovery of post-polio syndrome, and the fellowship's work has become more about supporting those with PPS.[4]
Patrons
- Dr. Moira Anderson OBE
- Michael Cassidy CBE
- Hannah Gordon
- Andy Love MP
- Lionel Blair
- Sir Bobby Charlton
- Joe Fisher
Ambassadors
- James Crisp
- Julia Roberts (QVC presenter)
- Anne Wafula Strike MBE
- Professor Gareth Williams
External links
References
- ↑ http://patient.info/support/british-polio-fellowship
- ↑ http://www.britishpolio.org.uk/about-us/our-vision-and-mission/
- ↑ http://www.britishpolio.org.uk/
- 1 2 North, Barry "Something To Lean On". The British Polio Fellowship, 1999, p.1-3
- ↑ Tony Gould (11 September 1997). A Summer Plague: Polio and Its Survivors. Yale University Press. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-300-07276-1.
- ↑ http://www.britishpolio.org.uk/about-us/patrons/
- ↑ http://www.britishpolio.org.uk/about-us/ambassadors/