Monday, 2 February 2015

Making a difference


 
My first impression of Claude Rigney was of a quietly spoken man with a calm and gentle manner. When we sat down to talk recently, what he said revealed that he is also a man committed to making a difference in life.

At the time, Claude had just completed arrangements to send 10 palettes of medications donated by pharmaceutical company Aspen Australia to recipients in neighbouring Timor-Leste (formerly East Timor). This was medicine freely provided where it was needed. Claude dealt with the auditing, regulatory and logistical requirements and the supply went ahead, transported by Toll Global Logistics to Darwin and shipped from there to Timor-Leste by shipping line ANL. 
He puts the matter from Aspen Australia’s point of view. ‘Peter Penn of Aspen Australia responded generously to my very first request for donations of suitable medicines. Peter is passionate about this work of charity and wishes it to continue and expand. While his company has the satisfaction of knowing that it is aiding the sick and poor of developing countries with its medicine donations, it also understands that it  avoids the waste and expense of having to destroy its 'decommissioned' (but not out-of-date) products. Alpha-Pharm was the first drug company to support this work, and most recently John Timmins and his Nova Pharmaceuticals company have come on board.’
Claude has been helping supply medication to needy neighbouring people for around 50 years. Working as an employed pharmacist (he later ran his own pharmacy in the Sydney suburb of Balmain) he saw the matter clearly.  
On the one hand, people in developing nations, and in situations of poverty overseas, were in great need of pharmaceutical products.
On the other hand, he saw the large drug companies and suppliers of pharmaceuticals in Australia able to supply products in abundance to meet our health needs here. These pharmaceutical products were all required by law to carry an expiry date and those approaching this date could not legally be supplied to Australian outlets. They were labelled as ‘decommissioned stock’ and, in Australia, were required to be destroyed – at considerable cost to the companies concerned.
Claude knew, however, that such stock was still effective and useful. That is why in the 1960s and ’70s, he began working with the Red Cross to send medications, donated by pharmaceutical companies, to people overseas who needed them. ‘If you could nominate a clinic in the Third World, they would donate the pharmaceuticals and the donor would pay the shipping cost,’ he says. ‘I also worked with St Vincent de Paul.’
Since then, new regulations have changed this pattern. But Claude has continued his work, organising and co-ordinating supplies of ‘decommissioned stock’ to places where it is gladly received and much needed. He continues to use personal contact with well-established pharmaceutical suppliers, as he has explains above.   
Claude’s main recipients these days are in Timor-Leste. In addition to the 10 palettes of stock shipped this January, last year Aspen Australia also donated eight pallets of pharmaceuticals to Bairo Pite Clinic in Dili, Timor-Leste’s capital. Supplies are also sent to the Philippines, to Bangladesh and Myanmar.
When Typhoon Haiyan caused havoc in the Philippines in 2013, Claude arranged to send medications there. And he helped after the enormously destructive Boxing Day earthquake and tsunami of 2004 devastated countries around the Indian Ocean rim.   
How did he get started? Claude says it began when he met some Catholic nuns who were running a school at Niligiri Hills in southern India. They needed money to fund operations for children with cleft palates. ‘At first I used to send them money for the operations,’ he says, adding that disabilities such as cleft palates and hair lips, if untreated, condemned children to a life of discrimination. Through these initial steps, Claude began to see he was in a specially advantaged position to help supply decommissioned pharmaceutical stock to places where it could do a great deal of good. And he’s still at it.
‘Expired doesn’t mean that a medicine is toxic or ineffective,’ he says. ‘Sometimes companies over-manufacture, as the cost of manufacture in quantity is minimal, and they know they can write off donations as tax deductions.’ And these days medications are not all Claude  handles. ‘Sometimes people send clothes, as well,’ he says. ‘There’s a school in Timor-Leste that receives clothes, not second-hand, but new, unused clothes’ from a school in New South Wales.
Claude no longer has the pharmacy in Balmain and his workplace is his home in a leafy suburb of Sydney. When I asked what philosophy underlay all his endeavours he explained it as, ‘a Christian attitude of beneficence.’ He went on to say, ‘That’s what makes our society what it is. If you have a qualification or ability to do something, then you should.’
I salute him for doing so.          

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