Medical Care and Provisions to Earthquake Victims

Pakistan earthquake relief

Summary

The project is designed to meet the critical needs of victims of the South Asian earthquake. The project provides an immediate response to urgent medical needs and basic provisions to victims. progress reportread updates from the field

How Donors Like You Helped

Thanks to donors like you, a total of $49,944 was raised for this project.

Received $49,944 from 140 donations from people like:

More Information About this Project

Project Needs and Beneficiaries

The first need in earthquake assistance is medical care and medicines for the injured because all government hospitals in the area have been destroyed. Teams of independent doctors from other parts of the country, along with army medical staff, are providing some basic access. However, a recently created army medical camp in Muzaffarabad seems to have no bandages, gauze or painkillers. There is also a need for basic provisions, including food, water and tents.

Activities

Provide needed medical supplies and basic provisions to victims of the South Asian earthquake. Medical care workers need surgical supplies, bandages, antibiotics and painkillers, while victims need blankets, tents, food and water.

Funding Information

Total Funding Received to Date: $49,944

Funding Information

This project is now in implementation and no longer available for funding. Received funds will be used to accomplish concrete objectives as indicated in the project's "Activities" section. Updates will be posted under the "Progress Report" tab as they become available.

Donors' contributions and pledges to this project totaled $49,944 .  The original project funding goal was $100,000.

Additional Documentation

This project has provided additional documentation in a PDF file (projdoc.pdf).

Resources

Why this Project is Important

Potential Long Term Impact

Providing immediate medical support and supplies as well as basic provisions to victims of the South Asian earthquake.

Project Message

“Help [victims] who are suffering in anguish and pain, following the disastrous earthquake that hit Pakistan and has claimed thousands of lives. Over 25,000 people are feared dead…”
- Sungi Development Foundation, Islamabad

Who is Running This Project

Contact

Roshaneh Zafar
Managing Director
19 Aibak Block
New Garden Town, Lahore GPO Box No. 2507
Pakistan
92-42-584-7818
Email:

Project Sponsor

Acumen Fund

Organization

KASHF Foundation
19 Aibak Block New Garden Town
Lahore, Punjab 54700
Pakistan
+92-42-111981981
http://www.kashf.org

Where this Project is Located

Country

This project is located in PakistanPakistan and can also be found under HealthHealth.

For more information about Pakistan, read the Human Development Report on Pakistan or the Wikipedia entry for Pakistan.

When this Project was Updated

Last Updated

This project was last updated on November 6, 2009.

Date Added to GlobalGiving

This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on October 14, 2005

Latest Update from the Field

Kashf Receives Skoll Foundation Award

By Roshaneh Zafar - Project leader, March 20, 2007 01:59 PM

Dear Colleague and Friend of Kashf,

We are pleased to announce that Kashf has been selected for the Skoll Foundation award for this year. This award will enable us to provide financial access to communities in the province of Sindh and that way will help us realise our vision of “Financial services for All!”.

Warm regards,

Roshaneh Zafar
President
Kashf Foundation


Ten Innovative Social Entrepreneurs Receive Million-Dollar Awards From the Skoll Foundation

Grants to Allow Each Organization to Expand Their Reach, Address Social Needs Around the World

PALO ALTO, Calif., March 14 -- The Skoll Foundation today announced it is awarding $10,150,000 to 10 recipients of the 2007 Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship. The recipients, who will each receive three-year grants of $1,015,000, are organizations that target social issues in need of urgent attention.

This year's Skoll entrepreneurs include a former French businessman who is building networks to prevent the abuse of street children, two longtime environmentalists whose "Ecological Footprint" enables businesses and governments to measure their role in depleting the world's ecological assets, a community activist who helps villages in India run sustainable sanitation and clean water facilities, and a former accountant who is helping replenish the world's collapsing fish stocks with an international seafood eco-labeling and certification program.

The Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship honor and provide support for organizations led by social entrepreneurs who have a demonstrated track record of pioneering social innovations and offering measurable objectives for increasing and expanding the impact of their work. The Skoll Awards are designed to advance lasting solutions to critical social challenges and recognize programs effecting positive change in six issue categories: tolerance and human rights, health, environmental sustainability, peace and security, institutional responsibility, and economic and social equity.

"The social entrepreneurship community received an unprecedented level of recognition recently when the Nobel Peace Prize committee honored one of our own as the person who most embodies the creation of lasting peace," noted Sally Osberg, President and CEO of the Skoll Foundation. "Muhammad Yunus' vision for leading millions out of poverty through access to small amounts of capital has paved the way for hundreds of other social entrepreneurs to marshal their creativity, courage and fortitude to become 21st century change agents. And we need them now more than ever.

"This year's awardees -- as in prior years -- all reflect the essence of a Skoll social entrepreneur: a practical innovator who creates sustainable engines at the grassroots level, putting into place the lasting means to get housing, education, health care and other critical resources to the world's impoverished and vulnerable billions," said Osberg. "They offer a model for a new kind of leader who melds the discipline of business
with the perspective of those less fortunate, and brings a tough-minded optimism to bear on the biggest challenges confronting our communities, our countries and the planet."

Each year's recipients are identified through an open competitive process that surfaces social entrepreneurs whose work has created, or has the potential to create, large-scale, transformational benefit for disadvantaged or disenfranchised populations or for society at large. The Skoll Awards will be presented by Skoll Foundation Chairman Jeff Skoll on
March 28 at the fourth annual Skoll World Forum on Social Entrepreneurship at the University of Oxford in England. The World Forum convenes a global community of outstanding practitioners and thought leaders in social entrepreneurship to set the future agenda for visionaries who want to transform society.

The 10 organizations receiving the 2007 Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship are: Escuela Nueva Foundation, Friends-International, Global Footprint Network, Gram Vikas, Kashf Foundation, Free The Children, Manchester Bidwell Corporation, Marine Stewardship Council, Verite and YouthBuild USA.

Kashf Foundation -- Kashf is a microfinance institution that offers women below the poverty line in Pakistan a way out through access to financial services. Kashf began with 15 clients in 1996 and now assists 15,000 clients, with a recovery rate of 99 percent. It delivers collateral-free microloans, savings and life insurance products through branches that become sustainable within 10 months. Thirty-five percent of its clients move out of poverty within three years.

Social Entrepreneur: Roshaneh Zafar
Grant Objective: To expand operations to 600,000 clients by 2010 in Pakistan's Punjab and Sindh provinces.

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