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Archive for November, 2011

2 meals for $1

First, why are meals at a CURE hospital noteworthy?


Most hospitals in the developing world don’t provide meals for their patients. Instead, families are expected to provide for their loved ones needs, regardless of their means. At CURE, we do things differently. Our patients need a nutritious diet to help them before and after surgery, and we provide meals for our patients and their caregiver.

In this post in our Gift of Healing series, we’re talking about food, and I have a few interesting numbers to share with you.

600,000

That’s the number of meals CURE will serve to our patients and their caregivers in 2012.

$600,000

That’s the cost to provide nutritious meals to our patients and their caregivers for one year.

$1 per meal

For those of you doing the accounting at home, that comes out to $1 per meal. $1 per meal is a pretty good bargain. There’s not much you can get for $1 these days, and to prove it, this week, I kept a list of all the things I could buy for $1.

- 2/3 of a soda at my favorite burrito joint
- a pack of gum
- 1/4 gallon of diesel in my VW Golf
- a personal-sized bag of chips
- 8 olives at the grocery store olive bar

You get the point. There’s not much you can buy for $1, so the fact that you can provide a nutritious meal to a CURE patient for $1 is pretty cool, especially when you think about how many things we buy throughout the week for far more than $1.

A Donor Challenge Fundraiser

A generous CURE family has a challenge to offer you. They’ve offered up a $300,000 match for Food in CURE hospitals. That means that right now, every $1 you give in support of Food for CURE patients and caregivers will be matched.

$20 will provide 40 meals. $50 will provide 100 meals. $100 dollars will provide 200 meals. You get the point. Your gift will be doubled, and you’ll join a community of people providing food and care to CURE patients.

2 meals for $1 – just another way you can be a part of healing the sick and proclaiming the kingdom of God with CURE.

Join the Food Match Challenge

CURE at 2011 National Youth Workers Convention

Recently we joined hundreds of youth leaders and lay youth workers from around the country for the 2011 National Youth Workers Convention (NYWC) in Atlanta.

And just about everyone we spoke with connected with the fact that you can use your Facebook account to login and follow a child’s treatment, giving them the ability to be notified when the child goes in for surgery so they can pray for that child.

We also showed them how our new personal fundraising system works, and how it will give them the ability to find a child in CUREkids, and then set up a fundraiser for that child on our site in their group’s name. Read the rest of this entry »

Get Well Soon – CUREkids


Watch the Get Well video here: http://www.youtube.com/cureinternational#p/u/7/fVLSJO8ojVk

CUREkids has brought the work of CURE to your inbox and Facebook wall through the lives of the kids we’re privileged to serve, but now our kids want to hear from you. That’s why we’re pleased to announce CUREkids Get Well messages!

Now your family has the chance to share words of encouragement with a child in a CURE hospital. Here’s how:

  • Go to http://cure.org/curekids/getwell
  • Fill out a personal message to a child currently in treatment at CURE hospital.
  • Optionally, upload pictures to send along with your message.
  • You can even link a YouTube video to your message.
  • Click Send, and your message will be sent our our CUREkids coordinator.
  • We’ll notify when your Get Well message is received.

Get Well messages are a great new way to become part of the ministry of CURE International. They’re also a wonderful opportunity to connect your own children to kids thousands of miles away that need their love and encouragement.

So what are you waiting for?
There are kids in CURE hospitals that need your encouragement today.

Send a Get Well message!

Post Script: A Real-Life Example

Last week, I sent this get well message to a young girl at CURE Kenya named Kiloret and received the following reply this weekend.

Hi Mr. Worrall –

My name is Jenny. I just wanted to thank you for taking the time to send a Get Well message to Kiloret. Her mom seriously couldn’t stop thanking me, and her and the other Maasai people in the room kept raving about your picture with Eliana…

Kiloret, meet Joel & his baby Eliana

I’m pretty sure her mom loves you…she couldn’t stop saying “Asante”. And the guy on the right is our surgery tech, Peter, who graciously translated your message into Maasai…how awesome is that!?

Thanks so much for investing in Kiloret & CUREkids. You’ve blessed Kiloret and her family in a way I can’t actually express…

His,
Jenny England ::: CUREkids Coordinator – Kenya
CURE International
“If you spend yourselves in behalf of the hungry and satisfy the needs of the oppressed,
then your light will rise in the darkness, and your night will become like the noonday.”
Isaiah 58:10

Josh & Julie Korn: Indomitable Lions

Derrick is a young man from Cameroon. He is only 21 years old, but he has already experienced enough suffering and hardship to last a lifetime. A few years ago he developed a tumor on his leg. His parents took him to see various doctors who were not able to help him, and they began getting desperate. They heard about a preacher in Nigeria who was performing miraculous healings, so they saved up as much money as they could (not much), and sent Derrick to Nigeria to find him. Read the rest of this entry »

CURE Malawi holds first-ever clubfoot soccer match

On 21st October 2011, CURE Malawi held a soccer match in which every single player on the pitch was a child who been cured of clubfoot, thanks to the Malawi National Clubfoot Programme (MNCP). The match was held at the Blantyre College of Medicine Sports Complex.

The 40 children present, ages 3 to 7 and all united in their freedom from this debilitating disability, first underwent a training course organized by coaches from the Malawi National Football Team. The two teams of players then played a match in front of an audience of hospital staff, supporters of the MNCP and CURE International, representatives from the Malawi National Football Team, and the national press. Following the match there was a presentation of certificates and prizes to the players.

This soccer match was an international first of its kind. It was primarily a celebration of the work the MNCP has done in conjunction with CURE International and the Ministry of Health. Since its foundation in 2007, almost 4,000 children have been cured and can now lead normal lives, free from the struggles of such a disability and its associated social exclusion. The small act of kicking a soccer ball, one that is enjoyed but taken for granted by children all over the world, is a miracle and a reason to be thankful for these children.

Executive Director of the hospital, Stuart Palmer, said “This children’s football match epitomizes the work of CURE in Malawi. It demonstrates the complete transformation of young lives, previously blighted by an easily curable physical disability and very painful social stigma. And who knows, some of these children may go on to be international football players – after all, Steven Gerrard was born with the same condition.”

Technical Director of the Malawi National Football Team, Jack Chamangwane, said “It really was a day for the children – they are now on their way to becoming Malawi’s next generation of top athletes. It was a real testament to the great work being done here in Malawi by the National Clubfoot Programme.”

The aim of the match was to celebrate the invaluable work carried out by the MNCP, CURE International, and the Ministry of Health in changing these children’s lives, and ultimately to raise awareness and funds.

CURE in the news – week of November 20, 2011

In addition to the article from the Egyptian paper Watani that we brought you earlier today, CURE was mentioned in two other articles this week:

‘Tremendous benefit’ for the Philippines” from OneNewsNow

Tebow announces creation of new hospital in Philippines” from the Greeley Gazette

CURE Nominated for a Pixel Award

We’re pleased to announce that cure.org has been nominated for a Pixel Award in the category of Best Non-Profit website. There are two different awards for which we are eligible. The first is determined by a panel judges between the six sites in our category. The second is a “People’s Choice” award, where your votes are tallied.

Public voting for the “People’s Choice” is open now until December 18, and anyone is eligible to vote once per day. Winners will be announced later in December.

You can vote for CURE at this address: http://www.pixelawards.com/nom_win_2011.php#Non-Profit.

We’ve also created a calender reminder that you can download if you’d like to vote for us every day. It’s a great, simple way that you can help promote CURE.


Established in 2006, the Pixel Awards takes a fresh look at the best on the web. They are the cutting-edge website award, annually honoring compelling sites that have shown excellence in web design and development. Sites are submitted in 24 diverse categories, including our unique Agency, Geek, and Green categories. Any site can enter. Only 24 exceptional sites will win.

CURE featured in article in Egyptian newspaper

We are very excited that CURE Egypt was recently featured in an article in Watani, a newspaper published in Cairo.  The staff of CURE Egypt, who were interviewed for the article, report that this is a sign of the good reputation that CURE has developed in the country as a professional organization. The article, originally written in Arabic, is translated below.

We Support You: CURE Helps in the Treatment of Children’s Congenital Deformities
by Madlen Nader

A lot of children suffer from congenital deformities in their bones, which lead to movement disabilities and difficulty doing the same daily activities as their peers. Many of these deformities can be treated by operating on the child, but most of the time these surgeries are very expensive. Many families can not afford it. In this “We Support You” column, we will talk about CURE International, an organization that cooperates with the families of these children, providing free medical services and free surgeries for their children.

We first talked to Dr. Mina Georgy about what CURE is providing to disabled children and children with congenital deformities, and about the procedure by which a family may request an operation for their child. Dr. Georgy, the program coordinator, said, “CURE International began activities in Egypt a year ago, working with children who need surgery for their birth defects, particularly in the field of motor impairment. During this year, the organization has done about 50 operations to fix the bones of these children.” Dr. Georgy added, “CURE International performs all surgeries and all medical care for children from ages 2 to 18 at Good Shepherd Hospital in Cairo. The child comes to us with one or both parents or the person responsible for them, and after we verify national ID card of the person responsible, we schedule a clinical examination with the specialized doctor. The specialist is the one who determines the child’s need for surgery.  We follow up with the child, ensuring he or she gets necessary procedures, like x-rays.  We provide the child with good care before and after any surgeries.  We follow up after surgery, guiding them where to go for physiotherapy.  We have centers in Cairo, upper Egypt, and the coast side where they can have their physiotherapy sessions.”

Dr. Edwar Ayoub, the national representative of CURE in Egypt and a member of the Egyptian Society of Surgeons, said, “The organization was established and licensed in Egypt in July 2006, and the goal of the organization is to treat physically disabled children and those injured in accidents for free by offering orthopedics surgeries, prosthetic devices, all pre-surgery investigations, and post-surgery follow up for free. 50 surgeries were done last year, and about 220 clinical examination and follow up sessions were done, too. Our wish and goal is for CURE to provide about 150 surgeries and offer prosthetic devices for 50 children in the next year.”

Dr. Ayoub went on, “The main goal for CURE is changing the life of the child who suffers from congenital deformities that make him or her disabled and unable to live a normal life like other children.  We want this child to have a good, active life in his or her community.”

CURE International has about 15 branches in African and Asian countries.

Mead Minutes: Thanksgiving in Al Ain

Happy Thanksgiving from the Meads!! For the first time in many, many years I was not in charge of baking a turkey. For our first Thanksgiving in UAE, we were invited to two different homes. We celebrated both Thursday and Friday. I truly enjoyed “Black Friday,” as instead of shopping, we had a time of worship; Friday is the day of organized worship here. This morning I woke up with a smile, knowing I was to enjoy my favorite holiday breakfast—a cup of coffee (of course!) and a slice of left over pumpkin pie! I am sure it is healthy. Read the rest of this entry »

How can a hat change lives?

Today, Christmas is exactly one month away, and if you’re on my Christmas list, there’s a good chance you’re going to get a hat.

No need to thank me yet. Wait until Christmas morning. I promise, it will be worth it. Because this hat is going to change lives.

Every year at Christmas, we run around looking to buy each other something that is practical and meaningful and (ideally) something that the recipient won’t return the next day. We want our gifts to have purpose because we care deeply for the people to whom they’re given.

At CURE, I think we have a present to fit that tall order, and it starts with this hat.

Read the rest of this entry »