Smile Foundation says it's been 21 years since Madiba first had the vision to help one South African child access the specialist facial reanimation surgery that she needed — a move that birthed Smile Foundation.

Now, more than 4 000 families and 4 000 life-changing surgeries later, the foundation is celebrating its coming of age with a brand new look.

Smile Foundation's original red and black smile-shaped script logo has been given a makeover, and now sports a modern sans serif font with a 'smile' emoji in the name. This is with the aim to bring it in line with current social trends.

Kim Robertson Smith, CEO at Smile Foundation, says that this reflects the growth of the organisation as it celebrates its milestone anniversary, as well as its renewed focus and mission.

"While Smile Foundation still exclusively assists children with critical surgeries, we are changing our focus from being solely facial anomaly surgery to include burn reconstructive surgery. This is given the vast number of children affected by burns in South Africa every day," adds Smith.

"Practical and psychological parental support in both cases have become imperative. These aspects are reflected in our new mission statement, which is to transform the lives of children affected by facial abnormalities and severe burns through the best possible surgical and psychological care," Smith says.

The foundation says that it has two projects in this regard, being Cleft Friends and U Matter. Cleft Friends offers parent support from the perspective of lived experiences. Mothers speak from experience, helping other mothers overcome some of the challenges faced in the cleft journey with their babies.

U Matter is a parent and peers support group for burn survivors and their families. It aims to create positive experiences to build self-esteem, inspire dreams and ignite possibilities among burn survivors. It is using storytelling as a tool to help families heal.

WhatsApp groups in different languages enable the parents in both groups to communicate with each other. The two projects are active in both the public and private healthcare sectors and are supported by the Department of Health.

In addition, Smile Foundation is expanding its collaborative efforts with like-minded organisations to:

  • further grow the medical skills base in South Africa
  • partner with increased donors and NGOs, and
  • assist public paediatric patients, possibly in private hospitals.
On the skills front, the foundation currently helps fund local and international fellowships for qualified consultants in the specialist surgical areas of rhinoplasty (nasal reconstruction), cranio and hand surgeries. It will augment its support for the latter specifically to address the increase in hand burns as a result of children playing with illegal electricity connections.

According to the foundation, in KwaZulu-Natal, the incidence of paediatric burns has skyrocketed, prompting Smile Foundation to focus predominantly on these surgeries at Greys Hospital in Pietermaritzburg. It is also working towards establishing a burns unit at the hospital.

This collaboration with Grey's Hospital extends the foundation's working relationships with state hospitals, which to date tops 11 Academic Hospitals across South Africa.

For more information, visit www.smilefoundation.org. You can also follow Smile Foundation on Facebook, Twitter or on Instagram.