Top Banner
It’s not what we bring. It’s what we leave behind. Surgeons of Hope Foundation Help finance our 2006-2007 children surgery program in developing countries. November 2006
21

Corporate Partnership Program

Nov 07, 2014

Download

Documents

simon23

 
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Corporate Partnership Program

It’s not what we bring. It’s what we leave behind.

Surgeons of Hope Foundation

Help finance our 2006-2007 children surgeryprogram in developing countries.

November2006

Page 2: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationTable of Contents

Our Vision …………………………………………………………………….….. 3Our Mission …………..………………………………………………….……….. 4Our Concept of Selfcare ………..……………………………………….……..…. 5Our Hospitals Worldwide ……………………………………………..………….. 6• Phnom Penh Heart Center .………………………………………………….…. 7• Phnom Penh Neurosurgery Center .………..………………………………...… 8• Maputo Heart Institute .…………………….………………………………..… 9• Kabul Medical Institute for Children .……………………………………….... 10• Dakar Cardiology Center .……………………………………………………... 11

Our Costs of Surgery ……………………………………………………………... 12Our Accomplishments and Projects …………………………………………..….. 13Our Founding Partners and Supporters …………………………………………... 15Our Financial Needs 2006-2007 ……………………………………………….… 17Our Board ………………………………………………………………………… 18Our Video Presentation and TV Ad …………………………………………...… 19Contact Us ……………………………………………………………………... 20Your Donation …………………………………………………………………….21

Page 3: Corporate Partnership Program

Everyday throughout developing countries all over the world, thousands of children need life-saving surgery. At Surgeons of Hope, we believe the best way to save each child is through empowerment – not pity.

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Vision

Page 3November 2006

Page 4: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Mission

Surgeons of Hope brings surgery and medical care to indigent children, while training local surgeons at state-of-the-art hospitals we

build in developing countries.

Recuperating after heart surgery in the Intensive Care Unit at Maputo Heart Institute.

Training local staff on the echocardiograph machineat Phnom Penh Heart Center.

Page 4November 2006

Page 5: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Concept of Selfcare

1. Building independent, sustainable hospitals fitted to local needs

2. Developing a training hospital in order to transfer knowledge and skill

3. Installing the highest technology to support training

4. Providing surgery to paying and non-paying patients: a balanced price system that allows50% of operations to be for indigent children (wealthier patients pay for disadvantaged patients); promoting self-sufficiency

5. Creating Children’s Pavilions at hospitals - a safe environment for indigent children and their families pre-and post-operation

Page 5November 2006

1.

2.

3.

4. 5.

Kabul Medical Institute for Children in 2003.

Training local surgeons at Phnom Penh Heart Center.

Interventional Cardiology at Maputo Heart Institute.

30-bed Children Pavilion at Phnom Penh Heart Center for non-paying children.

Page 6: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Hospitals Worldwide

Kabul Medical Institute for Children85 beds

Dakar Cardiology Center40 beds

Phnom Penh Heart Center - 50 bedsPhnom Penh Neurosurgery Center- 20 beds

SoHNEW YORK

Five training hospitals over five years.

Maputo Heart Institute30 beds

Page 6November 2006

Page 7: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Hospitals (cont’d.)

Phnom Penh Heart CenterCambodia

A 50-bed facility in Cambodia provides treatment for cardiovascular diseases on both a regional and national level. The hospital is designed to accommodate 1,000 operations and 20,000 examinations each year. The Center has been operational since October 2001, and by October 2006 had achieved over 39,000 examinations and 1,600 operations. The PHCC is expected to reach financial autonomy in 2007.

Page 7November 2006

Page 8: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Hospitals (cont’d.)

Phnom Penh Neurosurgery CenterCambodia

A 20-bed facility in Cambodia, adjacent to Phnom Penh Heart Center, started operation within the Calmette Hospital compound in Phnom Penh. The Center is designed to conduct 10,000 examinations and 1,000 surgeries each year. The Center has been operational since 2002 and by June 2006, more than 130 surgeries have been performed there. The hospital is a regional reference center for neurosurgery for Southeast Asia. Page 8

November 2006

Page 9: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Hospitals (cont’d.)

Maputo Heart InstituteMozambique

A 30-bed facility in Mozambique was designed to accommodate 10,000 examinations and 500 operations yearly. Operational since 2001, by July 2996, the Institute has performed more than 33,220 consultations, 568 invasive procedures, and 402 operations, with 362 surgeries and 125 catheterizations on non-paying indigent children. Currently, MHI examines 30 patients every day (7500 per year) and 90% of the surgical procedures are on non-paying children. MHI is expected to become financially independent by 2008.

Page 9November 2006

Page 10: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Hospitals (cont’d.)

Kabul Medical Institute for ChildrenAfghanistan

An 85-bed facility in Afghanistan to treat various maternal and pediatric pathologies with a center of pediatric surgery. The Institute is designed to accommodate 50,000 examinations and 2,000 operations each year. Since the opening in 2005, more than 14,000 examinations and 200 operations with 30 heart surgeries have been performed (as of July 2006).

Page 10November 2006

Page 11: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Hospitals (cont’d.)

Dakar Cardiology CenterSenegal

A 40-bed facility in Senegal has been operational since 2005 in the University compound of Fann in Dakar. The Center is designed to perform 3,000 examinations and 300 cardiac surgeries per year. The Center received its first surgical mission from our European partners to operate on 15 children in October 2005. More than 50 heart surgeries (as of May 2006) have been performed since 2005.

Page 11November 2006

Page 12: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Cost of Surgery

Surgery is provided by the mission’s medical team usually operating on twenty child patients.

Travel costs of medical team per surgery, per child 700

Surgery costs per child 2,300

Hospital operation cost and staff 700

Medical supplies 900

Hospitalization 700

Total cost of surgery per child 3,000

Two operating rooms at Phnom Penh Heart Center. 8-bed Intensive Care Unit at Maputo Heart Institute.

Page 12November 2006

Page 13: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Accomplishments and Projects

Over five years, SoH with its European partners have established five training hospitals where medical teams from the USA and Europe have operated on more than 3,000indigent children in their own countries and trained several hundred local staff.

• Since 2003, SoH has performed more than 100 surgeries on indigent children, involving US medical teams with prestigious surgeons and hospitals. In the countries in which we have built hospitals, SoH accomplished a number of surgical premieres:

Page 13November 2006

Page 14: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Accomplishments and Projects (cont’d.)

- March 2005 – The first US cardiac surgery in Cambodia ever was achieved by a tem of 8 from the New York Presbyterian Hospital led by Dr. Jonathan Chen.

- April 2006 – The first cardiac surgery in Afghanistan ever, per-formed by Surgeons of Hope founder, Professor Alain Deloche with a team of five from the European Georges Pompidou Hospital, Paris.

- December 2006 – The first cardiac surgery by an American team, to work in Mozambique, will result in at least 20 such operations. The team of 12 from Children’s Hospital, Denver is led by Professor Francois Lacour-Gayet.

• In 2007 – A program of five US surgical missions will operate on at least 100 indigent children at our Mozambique and Kabul hospitals;also an exploratory mission to determine the feasibility study of creating a mother-and-child hospital in Central America.

Page 14November 2006

Page 15: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Founding Partners and Supporters

For SoH accomplishments 2003-20061. They made it happen:

Their generosity, expertise, and encouragement have been essential to the establishment and the development of our Foundation. They have been instrumental in advising and funding our work from early 2003 to today.

Page 15November 2006

Delos (Toby) Cosgrove, M.D.Chairman & CEOThe Cleveland ClinicCleveland, OH

.

Alain Deloche, M.D.Chairman,Cardiovascular Dept.Hôpital EuropéenGeorges PompidouParis, France

Rev. Douglas GrandgeorgePastorCentral Presbyterian ChurchNew York, NY

Edward Rady, CEOPublicis HealthcareCommunicationsWorldwideNew York, NY

Marc Sage, Esq.Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, LLPNew York, NY

Page 16: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Founding Partners and Supporters (cont’d.)

2. They provided the medical expertise:• 40 volunteer physicians and medical teams• 4 prestigious US hospitals:

- the Cleveland Clinic, OH- The Children Hospital, Denver, CO- The New York Presbyterian Hospital, NY- The Reading Hospital Heart Center, PA

3. They contributed:• 10 corporate partners and grants• 250 individual donors

Page 16November 2006

Page 17: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Financial Needs 2006-2007

To achieve these projects:• December 2006 - $200,000• June 2007 - $300,000• December 2007 - $500,000Examples of donations and what they would buy:• $1,500 - Catheterization procedure on a child• $3,000 - Life-saving open-heart operation• $60,000 - Surgical mission of 8 to operate on 20 children• $100,000 - Echocardiograph machine• $150,000 - Fully equipped conference and training rooms• $15,000,000 - New 50-bed hospital in a developing country

close to the United States

Page 17November 2006

Page 18: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Board

Delos (Toby) Cosgrove, M.D. Jan Quaegebeur, M.D.Chairman & CEO Professor of SurgeryThe Cleveland Clinic Director, Pediatric Cardiac SurgeryCleveland, OH NY-Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY

Alain Deloche, M.D. Edward B. Rady, CEOChairman, Cardiovascular Dept. Publicis Healthcare Communications GroupHôpital Européen Georges Pompidou Worldwide Paris, France New York, NY

Rev. Douglas Grandgeorge Marc Sage, Esq. – Sec. TreasurerPastor Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, LLPCentral Presbyterian Church New York, NYNew York, NY

Philippe Lerch Daniel Sidi, M.D.SoH Executive Director Head, Pediatric Cardiology Dept.

Hôpital Necker Enfants Malades

Michel Longchampt Samdech Preah Maha GhosanandaSupreme Patriarch of Cambodian BuddhismCommunity of Khmer, MA

Judith O’Neill, Esq. Bernard Vasseur, M.D.Shareholder Cardiac SurgeonGreenberg Traurig, LLP The Reading Hospital Heart CenterNew York, NY Reading, PA

Page 18November 2006

Page 19: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationOur Video Presentation and TV AdVisit our website: www.surgeonsofhope.org or Contact Us for DVD and TV Ad

DVD – R10 minutes

It’s not what we bring... …it’s what we leave behind.

Page 19November 2006

Page 20: Corporate Partnership Program

Surgeons of Hope FoundationContact Us

Surgeons of Hope Foundation 825 Eighth Ave.Worldwide Plaza, 35thFloorNew York, NY [email protected]

Philippe Lerch Victoria BaxaExecutive Director Program AssistantTel: 212-474-5995 Tel: [email protected] [email protected]

Page 20November 2006

Currently, 16,000 children are urgently in need of cardiac surgery in Mozambique.

Page 21: Corporate Partnership Program

Page 21November 2006