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November 15, 2016

How your photos are giving newborns a better start in life.

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Since September, nearly 2,000 people have donated 3,676 photos to train medical teams in Tanzania

 

What is so amazing about 3,676 photos?

Ever heard the phrase ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’? Well now, your pictures are worth hours of training for medical teams, thanks to the free Donate a Photo mobile app from Johnson & Johnson. From now, until December 6th, for every photo donated through the app, Johnson & Johnson contributes $1 to our maternal health program in Tanzania, supporting training for healthcare workers and giving newborn babies the best chance for a healthy start.*

Since our cause launched on September 5, 2016, nearly 2,000 people have donated over 3,680 photos to Kupona, and these numbers increase every day. So far, this translates to 54 hours of training for medical teams serving in Tanzania’s labor and delivery wards. In a country where approximately one woman will die every hour from complications in pregnancy or childbirth, a highly skilled medical team can mean the difference between life and death. Those who have been trained go on to train their colleagues, and so the impact ripples out to touch hundreds of healthcare workers on the front lines of maternal and newborn healthcare.

By donating a photo a day, you are improving the quality of care available to thousands of families every year.    

For nurses like Intisar, training and mentorship empowers them to provide high quality care with confidence and skill.

Sister Intisar (center). Photo by Sala Lewis

Sister Initsar joined the CCBRT team following her graduation from nursing school. After a few months of training and mentorship, Intisar felt empowered to use her freshly honed skills and astonished her mentors with her progress. During an annual assessment, she received an incredible score of 100 percent in “assisting normal labor”. CCBRT’s midwife trainer Dorcas stated, “Intisar is a champion of delivery and resuscitating newborns”. Intisar’s impact has been so extensive and profound, two of her patients have named their babies after her.

Intisar’s passion for her work is tangible, “When I get a healthy baby I always clap and cheer, I just can’t help myself!” she says. “I want all mothers to have safe respectful care. I want every mother to enjoy giving birth – not regard it as a punishment”.

In her time with CCBRT, Intisar has also learned how to conduct a vacuum delivery, and is looking forward to sharing what she has learned with other healthcare workers. She says, “I’m happy to be able to pass the best practices on to even more nurses”.

What does she want for the mothers and newborns of Tanzania? “Seriously, I want zero deaths.”

By donating a photo a day, you are putting the skills and tools needed to save lives into the hands of people like Intisar.

Since the beginning of November, our team and supporters have been participating in the #DaysofThanks campaign, posting and donating a photo a day to highlight something they are thankful for. It’s not too late to join us! The #DaysofThanks campaign will run until Thanksgiving. Our goal is to reach 298 hours of training by December 6th.

So today, on National Philanthropy Day, do something different to give back. Download the Donate a Photo app, and start sharing today! The app is free, the process is easy, and the impact is profound. Thank you for all you have contributed to the hard work and dedication of these medical teams.

Best wishes,

The Kupona Team

 

*Johnson & Johnson has curated a list of trusted causes, and you can donate a photo to one cause, once a day. Each cause will appear in the app until it reaches its goal, or the donation period ends. If the goal isn’t reached, the cause will still get a minimum donation.


October 6, 2016

Time for Action: Reflections following UNGA Week

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Action (ˈakSH(ə)n/) noun – the fact or process of doing something, typically to achieve an aim.

CCBRT CEO, Erwin Telemans, joins Kupona’s Alexandra Cairns in NYC for UNGA week.

International gatherings, like the UN General Assembly and associated side events in New York City last week, are valuable. They hold us accountable to our promises, and solidify new commitments. But, as direct service providers, we’re always cognizant of the most important question: how do we make all of this happen? How do we ‘walk the talk’? Here, we summarize our 3 key takeaways from this year’s UNGA week, and reflect on how we are going to convert these discussions and commitments into action for the people and communities we serve.

1) SDG 17 is the star of the show

The Global Goals have been designed to be interconnected, meaning the most effective programs will touch upon a variety of issues such as healthcare, education and gender equality to name a few. Last year, we talked about how important it is to avoid becoming a ‘jack of all trades.’ The best way to do this? Partnerships. One of the biggest themes of last week’s discussions was multi-sector partnerships. This is music to our ears. Every sector brings something different to the table, and partnerships across sectors ensure that we can maintain both a breadth and depth of impact. SDG 17 really is the star of the show. Get that right, and the rest of the Goals will follow.

2) Our approach to funding and financing needs to change

As organizations like ours strive to become more financially independent, the global community needs to adjust its perspective when it comes to financing. As Diana Ayton-Shenker from Global Momenta commented on last Wednesday’s Roadmap to 2030 Safe Surgery panel, the mechanisms to unlock more innovative financing for social entrepreneurship don’t yet exist. Investing in social entrepreneurship may feel uncomfortable because it doesn’t fit with our traditional ideas of charity. But as implementers approach diverse and complex challenges in new and creative ways, the donor/financing community needs to keep up, keep an open mind, and invest in approaches that are taking ‘sustainability’ from buzzword to reality.

3) Never forget to put a name to the statistics

When we gather on an international level the conversation can quickly take on a scale that is hard to relate to. 5 billion people without access to safe surgery? That’s the majority of the global population. With figures of such magnitude, it’s difficult to comprehend the true impact of inaction. Putting a face to the statistics makes it easier to maintain perspective. As Pape Gaye, President and CEO of Intrahealth International stated last week, behind every statistic is a person, a life, that means something. Ruth is one of these people. Until recently she was one of the 5 billion people without access to safe surgery. She lived with obstetric fistula for three decades before finally receiving treatment. She could not work and her community turned its back on her. When we think about the impact of inaction, we think about Ruth.

Gathering at the global level is critical – to secure commitment, hold ourselves accountable to our promises and facilitate the partnerships that are so vital to making this happen. But we all need to make one important commitment before we leave and get ‘back to our day jobs’: That we will maintain momentum after these discussions, that we will take action, and that we will make something happen to achieve the global goals.


October 5, 2016

A Night (and Round) for Health & Hope

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Kupona’s inaugural event in Saratoga Springs, NY raises over $50,000

Last Thursday, we were thrilled to host our first fundraising event in Kupona’s hometown of Saratoga Springs, at Saratoga National Golf Club.

Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

Golfers enjoyed a round on Saratoga National’s award-winning golf course before friends, family, and supporters arrived for A Night for Health & Hope, a cocktail reception to unlock the potential of Tanzanian women and children living in poverty.

A few of our golfers enjoying a cocktail after playing 18-holes. Photo by Niki Rossi

A few of our golfers enjoying a cocktail after playing 18-holes. Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

Music from Just Nate and live painting from David Hill entertained guests as they sipped cocktails, indulged in passed appetizers and took in the magnificent Autumn views from the Ballroom patio.

Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

Items handmade by fistula survivors at The Mabinti Center were available for purchase and guests were invited to snap a photo in the photo booth donated by Johnson & Johnson’s Donate a Photo. There was fierce competition in our silent auction. The Kupona team was delighted to have such a great turnout and warm reception from the Saratoga community.

Kupona's Sami Bossalini and Alexandra Cairns in the Donate a Photo booth. Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

Kupona’s Sami Bossalini and Alexandra Cairns in the Donate a Photo booth. Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

In her remarks, our Executive Director, Abbey, thanked our guests and sponsors, including Polyset, Saratoga Hospital, and DRB Interiors. She then shared her own story of how her son’s life was saved during delivery in Saratoga Hospital because they had access to high quality healthcare. Had he been born in Tanzania, the outcome would have been very different.

Abbey sharing Kupona's story with our guests. Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

Abbey sharing Kupona’s story with our guests. Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

Thanks to the generosity of our guests, we exceeded our fundraising target for the evening, raising over $50,000 to purchase two new anesthesia machines for CCBRT. With this support, CCBRT will be able to continue to provide safe, high quality surgical care for thousands of people every year. By providing access to high quality healthcare through CCBRT, we can ensure more mothers, like Abbey, can celebrate their babies’ happy, healthy beginnings.

Abbey and her son in the photo booth. Photo by Niki Rossi

Abbey and her son in the photo booth. Photo by Niki Rossi Photography

We would like to extend our sincere thanks to our sponsors, golfers, guests, volunteers, and silent auction donors for their generosity and support. Thanks to Niki Rossi Photography for capturing the event, to artist David Hill and to musician Just Nate for contributing their time and talent to our event.

We would also like to extend our gratitude to our golf committee, Tom Longe and Steve Seaboyer and our evening event planning committee chaired by Kelly Trendell, and Kristi and Ryan from Saratoga National Golf Club for making the event possible.

Together, we made high quality healthcare more accessible for thousands of families in Tanzania.

Thank you.


September 26, 2016

Integrating Family Planning into our future.

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World Contraception Day 2016

Tim’s Corner
Photo by Sala Lewis

Launched in 2007, World Contraception Day serves as an annual reminder to the global community of the importance of safely planned pregnancies while encouraging individuals to make informed choices about their sexual and reproductive health. However, not everyone has access to the resources and support they need to do so.

In 2012, it was estimated that 222 million women wanted contraception information and resources but were unable to access them due to societal pressures or limited availability of information.1 Experts now estimate that the unmet need for family planning impacts over 225 million women globally.2  

Planning and spacing pregnancies can save lives

Estimates suggest that addressing the unmet need for family planning worldwide could prevent 79,000 maternal deaths3 : When a mother survives, her family thrives. When a family thrives, the community as a whole has a brighter future.

“Allowing women to choose whether, when, and how many children to have achieves progress on global health goals. It also helps break the cycle of poverty, and puts families, communities, and countries on a stronger, more prosperous and sustainable path.” ~World Health Organization (WHO)

A Tim’s Corner nurse counsels a client in safe contraception methods.

Doing our part: Meeting the need in Tanzania

Thanks to support from partners including EngenderHealth, PSI, FHI360, Johns Hopkins, and the Manchester Family, CCBRT is providing family planning resources and counseling to some of the most marginalized populations in Tanzania.

Tim’s Corner Family Planning Center, established in memory of Tim Manchester through the generosity of Tim’s family, friends and colleagues, is a place for people to buy what they need and learn something new. This innovative kiosk, constructed from a refurbished sea shipping container, sells snacks, toiletries and phone credit, as well as providing free informational resources. Visitors can make appointments for a more in depth consultation. In a private consultation room just next door, CCBRT’s family planning nurse is trained to provide a full range of short and long term contraceptive methods, one-on-one counseling, and screening for cervical cancer. Tim’s Corner empowers patients and staff at the Disability Hospital with the resources they need to make informed decisions about their reproductive and sexual health.

Today, Tim’s Corner marked World Contraception Day with a contest, prizes, and by distributing informational leaflets and free condoms at the CCBRT Disability Hospital.

Integration and empowerment

CCBRT is one of the largest providers of obstetric fistula treatment in the world. It is a common misconception that once a woman has had an obstetric fistula, she can never have another baby. The happy truth is, many women who have had a successful fistula repair can have safe pregnancies and deliver healthy babies. In order to ensure each fistula patient has the resources she needs after surgery, Tim’s Corner staff visit the Fistula Ward at CCBRT’s Disability Hospital every week to provide sexual and reproductive health education, and to instruct women about how to safely plan future pregnancies. Before a patient is discharged from the hospital, she has a one-on-one counseling session with a Family Planning nurse at the Tim’s Corner kiosk.

The integration doesn’t stop on the fistula ward. Tim’s Corner nurses have begun educating medical teams in each department of the hospital on the different methods of family planning available at the kiosk. They are also improving staff’s technical knowledge of Family Planning, enabling CCBRT’s healthcare workers to speak confidently and accurately about the options available to all patients.  

Looking ahead

The CCBRT Maternity and Newborn Hospital is in the final stage of construction, and the vision of integrated Family Planning at CCBRT is expanding. Family Planning resources and information will be made available to all patients before discharge and new recruits to the medical teams will receive training to prepare them to counsel patients in Family Planning options.

Globally, we have a long way to go to address the unmet demand for family planning services, but this World Contraception Day, we are proud of the progress we are seeing in Dar es Salaam. Through your support, and the support of our partners, we will work to ensure the patients and communities within our reach have access to the healthcare and resources they need and deserve.

 

 

1 Guttmacher/UNFPA. Adding It Up: Costs and Benefits of Contraceptive Services, Estimates for 2012. June 2012. 

2 United Nations Population Fund. http://www.unfpa.org/family-planning. Accessed 19 September. 2016.

3 Guttmacher/UNFPA. Adding It Up: Costs and Benefits of Contraceptive Services, Estimates for 2012. June 2012. 

4 “Programmes – Promoting Health the Life Course.” World Contraception Day. World Health Organization (WHO), http://www.who.int/life-course/news/events/world-contraception-day/en/. Accessed 9/19/2016

 


September 12, 2016

Maternal Monday Part 3: Sustainable Change

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Securing Life Saving Impact for the Future

In this final installment of our Maternal Monday blog series, we focus on how embedding life saving changes in the Tanzanian healthcare system ensures your collective impact continues for generations to come. While the improvements made to date are impressive, if they can’t be sustained or duplicated, they will only be temporary.

Photo by Dieter Telemans

One of the keys to sustainable impact in healthcare is training. Like most of the developing world, Tanzania has a deficit of trained healthcare workers. Not enough young men and women are entering the field, and many trained and experienced specialists choose to work abroad. This means current healthcare teams that are already stretched by a city’s booming population aren’t being joined on the frontlines by fresh reinforcements.

Many doctors and nurses work extended shifts to make sure their floor is covered, which can lead to exhaustion and burnout. Night and weekend shifts are not sufficiently staffed, so emergency cases are less likely to be attended by a qualified team. A shortage of specialists means that there are few trainers available to share their knowledge with the next generation: and the cycle continues.

Christina, Lilian, and Victoria. Photo courtesy of CCBRT.

Training of Trainers

Christina, Lilian, and Victoria are all nurses at the CCBRT Disability Hospital. Realizing that the impairments they treated at the Disability Hospital could be prevented by access to quality care during childbirth, they decided to become a part of the long term solution to disability in Tanzania. They left their homes and relocated to Cape Town, South Africa for a year of training in Pediatric Nursing, supported by CCBRT. Now they have returned to work after their training. They divide their weeks between the 200-bed Disability Hospital and CCBRT’s partner sites in Dar es Salaam, where they help teams identify and prevent disabilities at birth on the labor & delivery and post-natal wards.

“When managing a difficult case like neonatal asphyxia [when a baby is not getting oxygen], you have one minute to prevent disabilities like cerebral palsy,” Lilian remarked. “If you give good care to the baby, you stop it right there”.

When CCBRT’s Maternity and Newborn Hospital opens, these three nurses will move into new roles in what will be one of the largest dedicated maternity hospitals in the country.

Dr. Gloria Manyangu. Photo courtesy of CCBRT.

Empowering the Next Generation of Clinicians

For doctors like Dr. Gloria Manyangu, the hands-on experience gained as a clinician and a trainer under CCBRT’s capacity building program serves the doctors as much as it serves their trainees. Dr. Gloria joined CCBRT’s team this year after completing medical school and serving at other local medical facilities post-graduation. She now works with teams in 12 public healthcare facilities throughout Dar es Salaam, giving her ample opportunities to refine her own skills while mentoring her colleagues

“It’s very possible to reduce maternal death. Despite the many challenges — shortage of supplies, equipment, electricity — if we are motivated, we can get it done. The harder we work, the better the outcomes.” ~Dr. Gloria Manyangu

This spring, CCBRT oversaw the on-site training and mentoring of 196 trainees in topics like infection prevention control, maternal complication, post-partum hemorrhage, and standards to monitor best practices.

Moving Forward

As dedicated healthcare workers like Dr. Gloria continue to train others, and nurses like Christina, Lilian, and Victoria expand their own knowledge to curb disabilities at birth, we will see lives saved, medical teams empowered, and healthcare systems improved. Thank you for standing with us as we improve the status quo for patients and healthcare workers. By improving the quality of healthcare available, we can empower people and communities to realize their full potential. Healthy people build healthy communities.


September 5, 2016

Maternal Monday Part 2: The Life Changing Power of Information

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How family planning and mobile phones are impacting the people we serve.

In last week’s post, we shared a snapshot of how your gifts have helped save lives and strengthen medical teams in Tanzania.

But how can we further increase the reach of your impact? By putting critical information into the hands of women and their families, and by improving communication between healthcare teams and facilities.

Tim’s Corner
Photo by Sala Lewis

The Power of Information

In 2012, it was estimated that 222 million women in the developing world wanted access to contraceptives and information on how to safely space their pregnancies, but could not access those resources¹. A lack of access to information and societal pressure continue to limit the agency of women to make informed decisions about their future.

Estimates suggest that addressing the unmet need for family planning worldwide could prevent¹:

  • 79,000 maternal deaths
  • 1.1 million infant deaths

Doing our part.

The Tim’s Corner Family Planning Center at CCBRT is a place for patients and staff to receive one-on-one family planning counseling from a qualified nurse. Tim’s Corner also provides contraceptives and screening for cervical cancer. None of this would have been possible without the support of Kupona donors, in memory of Tim Manchester.

Situated just a few hundred feet from CCBRT Disability Hospital’s entrance, Tim’s Corner makes family planning counseling available to patients with disabilities, and some of the community’s most marginalized populations, empowering them to make informed decisions about their sexual and reproductive health.

Within the past year, CCBRT began providing one-on-one counseling sessions for every obstetric fistula patient at the Disability Hospital before they are discharged. This knowledge will help the recovering patient to safely plan and space her next pregnancy. Family planning education will also be integrated into the spectrum of services at CCBRT’s new Maternity and Newborn Hospital, serving over 12,000 patients a year.

We aren’t just putting information directly into the hands of patients. We’re also empowering healthcare teams to exchange the critical information need to save lives.

Acting Regional Commissioner Hon. Raymond Mushi, Regional Medical Officer Dr Grace Magembe, Dr Brenda D’Mello from CCBRT & Haika Mawalla, CCBRT’s Deputy CEO hand over phones to CUG representatives in 23 health facilities

Building bridges of communication between hospitals

For women experiencing complications at lower level facilities in Dar es Salaam, a potentially life-saving referral is now a phone call or text away. With support from the Vodafone Foundation through a public/partnership with USAID & PEPFAR, Global Affairs Canada, and Vodacom Tanzania, and the Regional Health Management Team, CCBRT has launched a Closed User Group to facilitate free communication between subscribers.

Ambulance teams, doctors and nurses in hospitals throughout Dar es Salaam, as well as  Regional and District health management offices have been given cell phones that can only call other numbers in the group. Trained in how to use these phones to coordinate patient referral, staff at neighboring hospitals can now alert each other to incoming patients, seek information or medical counsel, share patient history, and make life-saving decisions collectively and quickly.  

Information can only be transformative if it is shared.

Access to high quality healthcare begins with unlocking access to information. Whether it is a text message to a fellow doctor asking for a patient’s records, or a pamphlet that outlines family planning options, life saving information belongs in the hands of the people we serve.

Join us for our final installment in the Maternal Monday blog series next week.

 

1 Guttmacher/UNFPA. Adding It Up: Costs and Benefits of Contraceptive Services, Estimates for 2012. June 2012. 


August 29, 2016

Maternal Monday Part 1: How Capacity Building is Saving Lives

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More than a technical term, capacity building impacts thousands of mothers, newborns and healthcare workers.

 

In a country where nearly one woman will die every hour from complications in pregnancy or childbirth, Tanzania is one of the most dangerous places in the world for expectant mothers and their newborns.

You have heard us say this before.

The statistics are shocking and tragic, especially in light of the fact that most of these deaths are preventable. However, the odds are shifting. Your support is saving lives, building a stronger foundation for Tanzania’s healthcare system, and embedding best practices for generations to come. Together, we are preventing the preventable.

Through this 3-part Maternal Monday blog series, we will profile just some of the life saving initiatives your support makes possible, share the impact these changes are having on women, medical teams, and hospitals, and show how that impact culminates in healthier, more productive futures for people and communities in Tanzania. 

Building Capacity in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

We often talk about our support for capacity building in 23 public healthcare facilities in Dar es Salaam. While ‘capacity building’ may sound ambiguous, for the team in Tanzania, the goals are simple:

To strengthen medical teams, and empower them to save more lives.

Photo by Benjamin Eagle

Dar es Salaam is one of the largest, and fastest growing cities in Africa. This rapid growth is not without its challenges. A healthcare system that was designed to support 750,000 people is now supporting a population of 4.4 million. With the population projected to exceed 7 million by 2025, the city’s healthcare system needs to adapt quickly. Hospitals and clinics throughout the region are severely overcrowded and struggle to keep pace with growing demand. Healthcare facilities are understaffed, overwhelmed and under resourced, and patients are suffering as a result.

An insufficient safe blood supply means post-partum hemorrhage is often a death sentence. A shortage of fetal heart rate monitors means a baby’s distress often goes unnoticed. Overwhelmed nurses triaging overflowing delivery wards cannot see the warning signs of pre-eclampsia or other deadly complications through the crowd. With no formal neonatology programs in Tanzania, a sick newborn in need of specialist care relies on physicians with limited training.

The death of a mother or newborn rarely occurs because a medical team neglected their patient. It’s usually a matter of too few resources delivered too late.

Empowering teams to improve quality

CCBRT recognized that healthcare teams in the Dar es Salaam region were desperate to save their patients’ lives, and could be empowered to do so. With the support of the Government of Tanzania, CCBRT launched their Capacity Building program in 2010, offering on-the-job training and mentoring, distributing critical equipment and supplies and refurbishing labor wards and operating theaters. CCBRT introduced a Standards Based Management and Recognition tool (SBMR) to measure quality of care, raising the bar for quality across the region and encouraging the use of data to inform decision making.

  • Since CCBRT began building capacity in Dar es Salaam healthcare facilities in 2010, the average quality of care score (where 100% = perfection) has increased from 9% to over 79%.
  • The maternal mortality rate in the region has fallen by 30%.
  • As of mid-August, one of the largest referral hospitals in the region completed a 20-week run without any maternal deaths. This is a significant improvement on previous years.

But we’re not going to rest on these victories. We’re going to keep working to ensure every expectant mother in Tanzania has access to the high quality, individualized, respectful care she needs to bring her child safely into the world. We want every hospital in the program to celebrate consecutive months that are free from the tragedy of maternal deaths. With your support and the support of our partners, we can sustain these improvements.

Next week, tune in to read how greater access to information is empowering women and medical teams to make critical decisions about their health, and the health of their patients.


July 20, 2016

2016: A year of action

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The last 6 months have been all about action. And we’re not done yet.

This year, the global community entered a new phase of development with the launch of the SDGs. At Kupona, we’ve wasted no time leaping into action to affect the changes needed to empower people and communities living in poverty in Tanzania.

Your support is saving lives

In January, we hosted a Google+ Hangout with our friends at Girls’ Globe and Dr. Brenda D’mello of CCBRT, discussing the contrasting expectations and birth experiences of mothers in the U.S. and Tanzania. In February, we reported just a few of the improvements our teammates are now seeing in Dar es Salaam labor & delivery wards, as they deliver the high quality maternal healthcare the women of Tanzania need and deserve. In June, our cocktail reception raised over $16,000 to ensure that this incredible work can continue.

We’re part of a global community

In the last six months we’ve been privileged to connect with clinicians, advocates, youth leaders, healthcare workers, policy makers, fundraisers, philanthropists, and thought leaders, and even Muppets at the Unite for Sight conference in New Haven, Moms+ Social Good in New York City, and the Women Deliver 2016 in Copenhagen. These gatherings not only exposed us to inspiring discussions, but they also unlocked real opportunities to build new partnerships and engage with Kupona’s friends and supporters, both old and new.

We’re shining a light on a silent tragedy

With support from our friends at Johnson & Johnson, we co-hosted our first Twitter chat on International Day to End Obstetric Fistula with CCBRT, UNFPA and Fistula Foundation, making over 3.8 million impressions and sharing our vision of a world without fistula. On the same day, we launched the Drawing Out Obstetric Fistula Exhibition at the New York University Kimmel Center, shining a spotlight on the experiences of women living with and recovering from obstetric fistula. On May 25th we hosted a reception and private viewing of the collection that brought together clinicians, philanthropists, development professionals, advocates, business leaders, artists and students, all united under one cause: a commitment to the empowerment of women and girls.

But we’re not done yet.

We’re excited to announce that the Drawing Out Obstetric Fistula exhibition, originally scheduled to close on July 4th, has been extended until December 31st, 2016. We’ve been thrilled by the response to this project, and we couldn’t let it close just yet. Thanks to our friends at Johnson & Johnson, the UNFPA-led Campaign to End Fistula, Fistula Foundation, and New York University for their continued support. You can visit this powerful collection on the 6th floor of the NYU Kimmel Center.

The exhibition is a beautiful reminder that there is dignity and value in every person’s story. Not only does the artist capture the transformative power of a successful surgery, but also the inherent stigma-busting power of a woman who is unafraid to tell her story as someone living with or having lived with a fistula.

~Zack Langway, Kupona supporter

We’re also looking forward to participating in side events and meetings during UN General Assembly week in September, and to raising even more funds for expectant mothers and their newborns in Tanzania at our inaugural event to benefit Kupona Foundation in Saratoga Springs, NY: A Night for Health & Hope.

This is what makes the hard work worth it

The 2015 Kupona Foundation Annual Report is now available. These are the stories of individual lives changed, figures that depict the scale of our collective impact, and testimonies from members of our community, encapsulating a year where we embraced opportunities to unlock potential like never before.

You are the driving force that makes this progress possible. Thank you for standing with us to empower people and communities living in poverty in Tanzania to realize their full potential.


June 30, 2016

A moment to reflect after Women Deliver 2016

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When you invest in girls and women, everybody wins.

It’s hard to believe it’s been less than 6 weeks since the end of the Women Deliver Conference. Kupona’s Executive Director, Abbey and External Affairs Manager, Alexandra joined nearly 6,000 conference attendees in Copenhagen – an inspiring group of clinicians, advocates, youth leaders, healthcare workers, policy makers, fundraisers, philanthropists, thought leaders and Muppets (no, really), all committed to one idea: when you invest in girls and women, everybody wins.

Positivity, motivation and determination ran through every dialogue. Nobody was saying, “we can’t.” Every single person was asking “how can we?”

Alexandra shows her Binti doll pin to Chamki, a Sesame Street Muppet teaching children in India about sanitation.

As global health advocates, we were excited to see causes close to our hearts, including maternal and newborn healthcare, obstetric fistula and access to safe surgery, have more than one moment in the spotlight. As fundraisers, we were challenged to look at philanthropy and partnership in new ways. As women, we were empowered by the wave of support for the future development of our global community.

Celebrating Johnson & Johnson’s fistula program, for which they received the GBCHealth 2016 Women & Girls Business Action on Health Award

As we take a moment to reflect on the conference, three things stand out:

The importance of multi-sectoral partnership

We’ve talked about the importance of partnership before. Throughout the conference, speakers emphasized the value of multi-sectoral approaches, including HRH Crown Princess Mary of Denmark, Priya Agrawal and Naveen Rao from Merck for Mothers. We couldn’t agree more, and have seen this working effectively in our own programs. When we combine skills and expertise from every sector, we create a breadth and depth of knowledge that is required for sustainable change.

An address from HRH Crown Princess Mary of Denmark

 

We know the solutions

Throughout the week, it was reiterated that there are simple, effective and tested solutions to the challenges facing women and girls. We just need to mobilize to implement them, and harness the will to make change happen. Technology plays a role, but technology alone is not the answer. As Mohammed Yunus shared during a plenary session, “Poverty should be in a museum, not in human society.” We know what needs to be done to end poverty, and empower communities to thrive. The time to trigger that change is now.

The ripple effect

We heard this message several times a day in Copenhagen: when you invest in girls and women, everybody wins. We’ll keep repeating it, because it’s true. An investment in the health and wellbeing of girls and women has a ripple effect that amplifies impact across an entire community. Healthy women and girls are more likely to finish their education and secure gainful employment. Their children are more likely to go to school. Their families will be healthier, better educated and more prosperous, contributing to their community and triggering productivity gains for the entire country.

On the final day of the conference we were challenged to take action. At Kupona, we took this very seriously!

Abbey Kocan sharing Kupona’s work with our friends at Girls’ Globe

The day after the conference ended, we released a Huffington Post blog challenging readers to imagine a world free from fistula. On our first day back in the office we co-hosted our first ever Twitter chat with CCBRT, Fistula Foundation and UNFPA to mark the 4th International Day to End Obstetric Fistula on May 23rd. #FistulaDay made over 3 million impressions on the Twittersphere, spreading the word about fistula and the programs and partnerships working to eradicate it.

Two days later, we celebrated the launch of our Drawing Out Obstetric Fistula art Exhibition  at the NYU Kimmel Center and committed to do our part to end fistula within a generation. Exhibition sponsors Johnson & Johnson, UNFPA, New York University and NYU College of Global Public Health joined us, along with old friends and new, for an intimate reception and private viewing of the art with the artist, Dr. Jac Saorsa. We’re currently exploring opportunities to extend this powerful exhibition into the fall – stay tuned for more information. If you aren’t in NYC, you can check out the online exhibition hosted by our partner, Fistula Foundation, which features Dr. Saorsa’s work alongside an audio recording in which she takes visitors on a behind-the-scenes look at the subjects of her drawings.

 

(L-R) Abbey Kocan, Jac Saorsa, Alex Cairns, Katia Geurts, Samantha Bossalini

On June 17th, we welcomed a diverse and distinguished group to the home of our Board member James Mann, raising funds to support 30 safe deliveries for mothers and their newborns.

These last 6 weeks have been nothing but action for the benefit of women and girls living in poverty. Thank you for helping us maintain momentum! Visit our Learn how you can play your part: follow us on Facebook and Twitter and sign up for our newsletter to stay up to date with the latest news.


June 20, 2016

Cocktail Reception Raises over $16,000 for Maternal and Newborn Healthcare

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  • Under : Events, News and Updates

What it takes to change lives

On June 17th, Kupona Director James Mann hosted his annual Cocktail Reception in New York City to support our work to improve maternal and newborn healthcare in Tanzania.

Alexandra Cairns (Kupona staff) greets Advisory Board member, Elena Rubinov

We were delighted to welcome such a diverse and distinguished group of guests, including long-time supporters and new friends, representatives of UNFPA, the Diaspora Council of Tanzanians in America, and Safe Surgery 2020, as well as individuals who have been following our work for many years. We were also joined by members of Kupona’s Advisory Board, friends, family, and former colleagues from CCBRT.

A video message from CCBRT’s CEO, Erwin Telemans

Welcoming guests, James emphasized how cost effective investments in maternal and newborn healthcare can be. A video message from Erwin Telemans, CEO of CCBRT, gave guests a tour of the CCBRT Disability Hospital, setting the scene for the range of impairments that can be prevented and treated with access to high quality maternal and newborn healthcare. Kupona’s Executive Director, Abbey Kocan, reiterated the ‘ripple effect’ of an investment in our program – saving the life of a mother, the primary caregiver, means her entire family is likely to be healthier, better educated and more prosperous. She closed with a call to action, asking guests to join us. “We know the solutions; we just need to mobilize to implement them.”

$16,000 will fund 30 safe deliveries for expectant mothers and their newborns. On-the-job training for healthcare workers will simultaneously improve the existing medical infrastructure, embedding high quality care in the healthcare system for future generations.

James Mann (far left) welcomes guests.

We would like to extend our sincere thanks to our host, Mr. Mann for generously covering the event costs and matching donations made during the evening, and to all who showed their support before, during and after the event. Your contributions help us continue to strengthen the healthcare system and provide care to thousands of women and newborns every year. Thank you.

More photos from the event are now live on our Facebook page. You can also receive updates by signing up to receive our mailing list.


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