Algoa FM celebrated the installation of solar panels at the Childhood Cancer Foundation South Africa (CHOC) accommodation facilities in Gqeberha and East London recently.
CHOC was the beneficiary of the Algoa FM Big Walk for Cancer that took place in Gqeberha, East London and George in November last year, attracting 11 000 participants.
“The CHOC House is a beacon of hope to many families, and we are pleased that the Big Walk for Cancer could make this solar panel installation possible. We are all affected by loadshedding, and alternative power sources have become necessary to keep the lights on,” Algoa FM managing director, Alfie Jay, said.
The CHOC houses in the Eastern Cape provide accommodation for families and their children while the patient undergoes cancer treatment.
“Families stay at these facilities at no cost and receive nutritious meals and transport to and from the hospital when required,” CHOC chief executive officer, Hedley Lewis, explained.
Out-of-town patients and their parents or caregivers travel from across the Eastern Cape to receive cancer treatment.
“The families appreciate the home away from home with the sounds of moms chatting and children playing. On average, we accommodate close to 4 000 bed night services per annum in the Eastern Cape,” Lewis added.
Mavis Louw from Kirkwood, confirmed Lewis’s sentiments. She is the grandmother of 13-year-old twin boys of whom one was diagnosed with brain cancer. While her grandson was in hospital, she was accommodated at the CHOC House in Parsons Hill.
“The families of the patients become one big family at the CHOC House. I am grateful for the accommodation and the transport to and from hospital that we get here for free. Kirkwood is too far to travel in and out every day,” Louw said.
The solar power supply will ensure that parents and patients are not left in the dark during the night.
– ISSUED BY NEXT INNOVATION SOLUTIONS




