GlobeMed at Truman State Annual Report 2011-2012
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Transcript of GlobeMed at Truman State Annual Report 2011-2012
GLOBEMED AT TRUMAN STATE UNIVERSITY
students and communities improving health
around the world
2011-2012 Annual Report
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GlobeMed is a network of university students that partner with grassroots organizations around the world to improve the health of people living in poverty
AMHERST COLLEGE Pastoral de La Salud
San Salvador, El Salvador
FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY
ARM Orissa, India
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Medical AIDS Outreach Montgomery, Alabama
UNC-CHAPEL HILL Health Alert Uganda
Gulu, Uganda
BETHEL UNIVERSITY Rural Economic
Development Association Svay Rieng, Cambodia
GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
RVCP, Butare, Rwanda Community of Hope
Washington, D.C.
RHODES COLLEGE A Ministry of Sharing
Health and Hope Managua, Nicaragua
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME PEDA
Vientiane, Laos
BOSTON COLLEGE CCC-UNSCH
Ayacucho, Peru
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY
Primeros Pasos Quetzaltenango, Guatemala
RUTGERS UNIVERSITY Cooperation for Social
Services and Development Phnom Penh, Cambodia
UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER
Kallpa Iquitos Iquitos, Peru
BROWN UNIVERSITY Ungano Tena
Nairobi, Kenya
INDIANA UNIVERSITY CEMOPLAF Cajabamba
Cajabamba, Ecuador
TRUMAN STATE UNIVERSITY
Maison de Naissance Torbeck, Haiti
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
CareNet Ghana Hohoe, Ghana
BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY KIHEFO
Kabale, Uganda
LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY Health Development
Initiative Kigali, Rwanda
TUFTS UNIVERSITY Nyaya Health
Achham, Nepal
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN
Clinica Ana Manganaro Guarjila, El Salvador
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY GWED-G
Gulu, Uganda
LOYOLA UNIVERSITY CHICAGO
Jambi Huasi Otovalo, Ecuador
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO ASPAT
Lima, Peru
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA Build Your Future Today
Center Siem Reap, Cambodia
CORNELL UNIVERSITY CEPAIPA
Guayaquil, Ecuador
MIT Women Mobilizing for
Development Bokeo, Laos
UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI
Social Action for Women Mae Sot, Thailand
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
WDA Phnom Penh, Cambodia
CU-BOULDER HHC, Jawalakhel, Nepal
Courage Is Change Denver, Colorado
MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE Gardens for Health
International Gasabo, Rwanda
UCLA Nwoya Youth Center
Anaka, Uganda
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON
COWS Kampong Thom, Cambodia
DARTMOUTH COLLEGE Kachin Women’s
Association Thailand Chiang Mai, Thailand
NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY
Kitovu Mobile AIDS Organization
Masaka, Uganda
UNIVERSITY OF DENVER Buddhism and Society
Development Association Kampong Cham, Cambodia
VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY Dios es Amor
Lima, Peru
DEPAUL UNIVERSITY ASOSAP
Alta Verapaz, Guatemala
NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY HOPE Center
Ho, Ghana
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Tiyatien Health Zwedru, Liberia Joy-Southfield
Detroit, Michigan
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS
UDHA Iganga, Uganda
DUKE UNIVERSITY Salud Sin Límites Siuna, Nicaragua
OBERLIN COLLEGE Center for Community
Health Promotion Hanoi, Vietnam
UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-KANSAS CITY
KCRC Bushenyi District, Uganda
WHITMAN COLLEGE Burmese Women’s Union
Chiang Mai, Thailand
EMORY UNIVERSITY MAP Foundation
Chiang Mai, Thailand
PENN STATE UNIVERSITY ACUDESBAL
Chiapas, Mexico
GlobeMed aims to strengthen the movement for global health equity by empowering students and communities to
work together to improve the health of people living in poverty around the world.
We believe every human life has equal worth and every person deserves the chance to thrive. This
belief has drawn together our network of students, communities, and supporters from all walks of life and from every corner of the world. Health for all is within our grasp, but we can only
achieve it by working together.
“ ”OUR MISSION
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PRESIDENTS’ MESSAGE
IN THIS REPORT: !1 MISSION STATEMENT
2 2011 – 2012 AT A GLANCE
3 ABOUT US
4 OUR PARTNER
5 OUR PROJECT
6 CAMPAIGNS
7 GLOBALHEALTHU
8 COMMUNITY BUILDING 9 GRASSROOTS ON-SITE
WORK INTERNSHIP
10 WORLD DAY OF SOCIAL JUSTICE
11 GLOBEMED GLOBAL HEALTH SUMMIT
12 OUR FUTURE
13 FINANCES
14 STAY CONNECTED
15 THANK YOU
Friends of GlobeMed at Truman State, We would like to thank you with all of our 63 hearts for your support this year in helping our organization flourish and our partnership deepen. We are so blessed to share our successes with you and are honored to be playing a part in the remarkable successes Maison de Naissance achieves in rural southwestern Haiti each year. It has been a privilege to serve as a liaison between our communities. The success of our partnership can in part be measured by our huge fundraising success this year. We set our goals high, and surpassed them raising more than $10,000. This could not have been possible without the enormous enthusiasm and dedication of our members and the encouragement and support from our family and friends in our commitment to the mothers and babies and staff at MN. It is because of this incredible outpouring of love that we were able to purchase ship and install 48 new batteries to store solar energy and guarantee that the clinic runs twenty four hours every day, rain or shine. Finally, the growth of our organization and the strengthening of our partnership is realized through our very first Grassroots On-site Work (GROW) trip that took place this May. For the first time in our five year partnership, six of our staff members spent twelve days in Haiti helping MN implement a community health and needs assessment survey. The personal connections formed between our members and the MN community during this internship will serve as a cornerstone for our work in the future and ensure new, unimaginable achievements together. Thank you friends, families, professors and peers at Truman State, and our colleagues at Maison de Naissance. In Solidarity, Summer Jensen and Betsy Koehne 2011-2012 Co-Presidents
GlobeMed at Truman State University
2011-2012 AT A GLANCE
September 16, 2011 Fall Progressive Dinner We enjoyed a great progressive dinner, with each course of the meal hosted at a different GlobeMedder residence. Fun way for our members to relax and hang out over good food and great company.
October 5, 2011 Beyond Borders: Transform Health at Home and Abroad
Staff members attended Washington University in St. Louis's Fourth Annual Public Health Conference.
October 9, 2011 Staff Retreat We gathered at Thousand Hills State Park to enjoy a potluck by the lake, then discussed our roles in the global health world and excerpts from readings by Paulo Friere, Gustavo Gutierez, and Jeffrey Sachs.
October 17, 2011 MN Board Meeting
Co-Presidents Summer Jensen and Betsy Koehne attended a MNF board meeting in Kansas City. We introduced MNF's board to our chapter and shared goals for the semester. This face time led to a deeper connection with our partner.
November 11, 2011 Fall Harvest for Haiti Our chapter organized a Fall party on our quad complete with chili and hot drinks and plenty of flannel and bluegrass.
December 3, 2011 4th Annual Benefit Dinner: A Haitian Holiday Many professors, family, and friends joined us in celebrating Haiti and the successes of our partnership with MN. Dr. Betsy Wickstrom from MN joined us as the keynote speaker.
December 13, 2011 RAVE2SAVE Our chapter continued our new tradition of throwing an awesome end-of-semester party, complete with live DJs and tons of dancing. We had over 400 students join us in this epic celebration, dancing until after 3 A.M.
February 29, 2012 Equality Day
We joined the other organizations of Truman's Social Justice Council to celebrate Equality Day by promoting our organizations' missions and events with posters, flyers, and baked goods.
March 5-10, 2012 Midwifery Workshop Three of our members attended a midwifery workshop at The Farm in Summertown, TN to gain a greater understanding of the birth customs at MN and the role of midwives in a mother-centered childbirth experience.
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March 22, 2012 Maternal Health Panel In our Track 3 investigation of how childbirth relates to women’s empowerment and community health, we brought in a panel of a lactation specialist, OB/GYN nursing professor, and health education professor to discuss childbirth in the U.S. and their personal experiences.
March 26-30, 2011 Global Health Action Week We celebrated our annual educational Global Health Action Week with ice cream on the Mall, a round-table discussion of international students on healthcare, Clinic on the Quad, a trivia night at The Dukum Inn, and Haitian Celebration.
April 20, 2011 Dukum Show Five of the best bands in Kirksville rocked the night away at Dukum Up, bringing in many students, professors, and Kirksville community members to dance, dance, dance, and help us fundraise for our yearlong project.
since our founding in , our chapter
has grown from to members.
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GlobeMed at Truman State University
august 2006
In 2006, two Truman students visited rural Haiti with a local NGO, Maison de Naissance, to help complete work on several community-based health projects. They returned to Truman eager to find a way to continue supporting Maison de Naissance's efforts to improve the health of mothers and babies and founded the GlobeMed chapter at Truman State. Since then, our chapter has grown from ten to over sixty staff members and has raised over $37,000 to fund projects for MN such as bringing sustainable energy to the clinic with a solar-powered battery pack and inverter, creating educational materials for the midwifery staff and community health workers and supplying the clinic with much needed medical supplies.
ABOUT US
OUR PARTNER [Maison de Naissance]
KEY FACT: One in every 16 women in Haiti will die during childbirth.
ABOUT MAISON DE NAISSANCE FOUNDED IN 2004
The Maison de Naissance Foundation is a non-profit maternal health organization based in Leawood, Kansas. In 2004, the foundation established a birthing center in Larnage, Haiti called Maison de Naissance, meaning "house of birth" in French. Haiti is home to the highest infant and maternal mortality rates in the Western Hemisphere. By offering the services of a modern maternity center, impoverished women and children in rural southwestern Haiti now have access to the care they need through a culturally appropriate and friendly birthing home. Maison de Naissance has managed to drop the neonatal mortality rate in the area by possibly 75%, without the loss of a single mother, and currently employs over thirty Haitian staff members. GlobeMed at Truman State initiated a strong partnership with Maison de Naissance in Fall 2006.
WORKS IN LARNAGE, HAITI
POPULATION: 10,000
Haiti has been continually plagued by imperialism, civil war, government corruption, economic turmoil and natural disasters for much of its history. Maison de Naissance, located in rural Southwestern Haiti, serves the rural and uneducated poor who do not have access to sufficient medical care. Maison de Naissance strives to correct poor maternal health practices like giving birth at home and unattended. In recent years, Haiti has been afflicted by food shortages, hurricanes and a devastating earthquake. Maison de Naissance has faithfully served the Haitian people so adversely affected by these disasters.
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KEY FACT: One in 12 babies will die before their first birthday.
&OUR PROJECT GlobeMed at Truman State University
Why capacity building?
Haiti suffers from a shortage of infrastructure, but thrives on a surplus of sunshine. Our project focuses on meeting the energy needs of the clinic by providing MN with the tools to harness and store the sun's energy in order to power the clinic through the night and through Haiti's countless natural disasters. Our project will enable MN to deliver healthy babies all night long.
Purchase and shipment of 48 battery packs to power MN at night.
"This year we raised funds to buy, ship, and install 48 new
batteries to store electrical energy collected from the solar panels at the clinic. The current batteries only store enough energy to run the clinic for a few hours in the dark, meaning
that the staff uses either a diesel-powered generator or kerosene lamps at night.
These 48 newly updated batteries will enable the clinic to
run 24/7, and will even be able to last through a day without sunlight in the event of a major storm. These
batteries will allow the clinic to run independently of Haiti's shaky infrastructure, ensuring MN's doors stay open all day and night to receive the thousands of women who come to
MN for prenatal visits, well woman screenings and to deliver their babies.
1,000 WOMEN WILL BE
POSITIVELY IMPACTED EACH
YEAR. $10,000 TO PURCHASE, SHIP,
AND INSTALL 48 BATTERIES TO POWER
1 CLINIC.
Maison de Naissance
CAMPAIGNS EVENT TITLE
EVENT DESCRIPTION
MONEY RAISED
Fall Harvest for Haiti Our chapter held a Fall themed party on our quad serving chili and hot drinks while listening to a student bluegrass band.
$466
Individual Giving Chapter members reached out to family and friends asking for donations to MN for the holidays in our first ever individual giving campaign.
$4,315
Fourth Annual Benefit Dinner: A Haitian Holiday
Professors, family, and friends joined us in celebrating Haiti and the successes of our partnership. Dr. Betsy Wickstrom from MN spoke . We held a silent auction.
$2,058
RAVE2SAVE Our new members continued the tradition of hosting a late-night, end-of-the-year party with DJs, dancing, and neon lights.
$1,652
Brain Power to Solar Power Trivia Night
Our spring semester's new members pulled together an outstanding Typical Truman Student-themed trivia night.
$463
Power and Light Night
Five bands in Kirksville rocked the night away at local bar, The Dukum Up, bringing in students, professors, and community members to dance and support MN.
$672
RAVE2SAVE2 We brought in our biggest RAVE crowd (and profits) yet at our 3rd annual Reading Day Eve bash with 8 DJs and 2 stages.
$1,805
Small Business We sold grilled cheese sandwiches at events throughout the Kirksville community and sold coffee to Truman students and faculty throughout the year.
$58
Campaigns are on-campus events and initiatives that raise funds for GlobeMed partner organizations' grassroots projects abroad.
Since 2006, GlobeMed at Truman State has raised over $37,000 for Maison de Naissance to support their work providing reliable, sustainable
and quality healthcare to the rural poor in Haiti.
$12,474 Total funds raised for Maison de Naissance in 2011-2012:
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CAMPAIGNS A Haitian Holiday December 3, 2011 For our fourth annual benefit dinner we invited family, friends, Truman professors, and Kirksville community to celebrate a Haitian themed Christmas with us. We had a catered dinner, keynote speaker, and silent auction. Holiday oriented decorations gave attendees an idea of Christmas in Haiti. Betsy Wickstrom, one of the founders of MN, spoke and painted a picture for about MN services, the community they serve, and their passionate staff, telling stories of it’s origin and operations. Guests dined, enjoyed a piano interlude by one of our general members and bid on auction baskets.
RAVE2SAVE2 May 1, 2012
For our third annual Rave we brought in eight DJs on two stages for our biggest end of the year party yet. Held on reading day eve, campus came out for a fantastic light show, music, and dancing. Reaching out to other student social justice groups, Greek life, and others we brought over 600 people to the Aquadome, a local entertainment space. We raised money for Haitian mothers and babies until after 3 am.
HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE YEAR
“The dinner was a great way to bring our supporters together and get people excited about MN's mission and our partnership. ”
“We had over 400 students join us in this epic celebration, dancing until after 3 A.M!”
This past year, the Truman State GlobeMed chapter took a new approach to our globalhealthU curriculum by incorporating the globalhealthU track program. This yearlong curriculum focused on the relationship between poverty and health. Our globalhealthU curriculum was broken down into several tracks: an introductory track which helped us bridge the gap between our chapter and our partner, a poverty track consisting of case studies from all over the world including Truman faculty presentations, an economics track focusing on conflicting ideas in economic development and an independent study track focused on maternal health in the U.S. Through the year’s engaging globalhealthU discussions, an open platform was created for our members to learn from one another by listening and sharing their ideas, opinions, and experiences.
globalhealthU globalhealthU is GlobeMed’s signature
year-long global health curriculum. This student-designed and driven program equips students with the
critical thinking skills that will inform a life of leadership for global health.
2011-2012 CURRICULUM
ORIENTATION Chapter members were
equipped with a thorough understanding of the
values of GlobeMed and explored their personal
values. POVERTY AND HEALTH Chapters conceptualized
poverty and sought to explore the connections between
global health and poverty.
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORKS
We considered the views of six developmental economists
to explored the root causes and paths out of poverty.
INDEPENDENT INVESTIGATION
Chapters conducted an in-depth investigation on a topic
of interest.
STUDENTS’ ROLE Following a critical discussion
of our role in perpetuating poverty, we sought to
understand how we can be effective advocates.
REFLECTION Chapters reflected on the year
behind them both as individuals and in the context
of their chapter.
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Global Health Action Week March 26-30, 2012 TSU’s Global Health Action Week brought together our campus community to learn about international health issues, to advocate for global health equity, and to meet our monetary year goal for MN. Highlights of the week include the international health care roundtable, Clinic on the Quad, “Typical Truman Student” Trivia Night, and Haitian Celebration. We partnered with AMSA, the Social Justice Counsel, the Nursing Students Association, and the Dukum Up to engage around 400 campus members.
Haitian Celebration GHAW Final Event
The finale to our Global Health Week of Action and one of our most-anticipated events of the year, Haitian Celebration was hugely successful in providing a Haitian beans and rice picnic on campus with Creole music.
“Global Health Action Week is a chance for our GlobeMed chapter to really get the word out about what it is we do. This year, more than ever we incorporated events that attracted and involved the entire campus.”
-Abby Walker, junior
globalhealthU ON-CAMPUS EVENTS
TOTAL # OF CHAPTER MEMBERS: # OF COMMUNITY BUILDING EVENTS: # OF HOURS VOLUNTEERED WITH [GREEN THUMB GARDEN PROJECT]: Early in the fall, staff got together for a progressive dinner, traveling to different houses for appetizers, dinner, and dessert. This was a great bonding opportunity for old and new members. Later in the semester, we launched our new members’ mentor program with a coffee house. We also hosted a staff retreat at Thousand Hills State Park and a bonfire in place of a general meeting. In the spring, we had a hipster-themed progressive dinner and a 70’s roller skating night. Spring ended with volunteering on Earth Day for the Green Thumb Garden Project’s groundbreaking ceremony.
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Through service and team-building events, community and camaraderie is fostered around global health and social justice within GlobeMed chapters, the
GlobeMed network and surrounding communities.
COMMUNITY BUILDING
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GROW
Through Grassroots On-site Work (GROW)
internships, students build capacity of their partner organization, engage in
mutual learning, and ensure long-term stability
of their partnership.
[GRASSROOTS ON-SITE WORK]
MA
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2012
# OF GROW INTERNS: LENGTH OF STAY: WORK DESCRIPTION: This year, we sent six GlobeMed members to Maison de Naissance for our first ever GROW trip! A major purpose of the trip was to strengthen our partnership with MN. We were able to tour the birthing home and meet several staff members. In addition, we assisted MN with the implementation of a census survey in their immediate zone of service. Our project included assisting with the formation of census questions, reviewing the census tool with local community health workers, training the CHWs to administer the census, and working with translators to randomly select the houses that would be included in the census. We selected every tenth house in MN’s zone, for a total of 192 homes. We are now working on recording, coding, and analyzing the data that has been collected, with the hopes that MN can use it to better understand and serve its community.
“The experience I had in Haiti was not like anything I anticipated. In discovering the differences between the US and Haitian
views on life and work I had to take a step back. I was fortunate to engage in a
completely new style of team work. I am so blessed to have been part of such a
passionate and diverse team devoted to keeping moms and babies safe and
healthy.” --Maxine Brenner, c/o 2012
INTERNSHIP
05 2 weeks
“Visiting and working at Maison de Naissance was one
of the most influential experiences of my
undergraduate career. Being able to see how our GlobeMed chapter partners with MN to produce grassroots maternal
health interventions that change their rural Haitian
community for the better was very empowering. The GROW trip helped me to experience
the world through an expanded international
framework, showing our group the possibilities of
pragmatic partnered solidarity and how to be better members
of a world that values global health equity.”
-- Emily Davis, c/o 2012
GLOBEMED AT TRUMAN STATE UNIVERSITY joined 45 other GlobeMed chapters across the nation in a network-wide commemoration of the 4th Annual World Day of Social Justice during the week of February 20, 2012, by asking professors to dedicate five minutes of class time to a discussion on how poverty and social justice relates to their field of study. GLOBEMED TEACH-IN HIGHLIGHTS: Topics addressed included the connection between poverty and ecological conservation efforts, the importance of establishing sustainable healthcare practices, efforts to preserve indigenous music, and why overprescribing antibiotics is bad for everyone. “Become inspired by problems and become passionate about them and fix them.” - Dr. George Schulte, Biology Department MORE WDSJ ACTION ----------------------------------- What is the first step to achieving social justice?: To get our campus thinking about social injustices in an optimistically pragmatic way, we asked people to isolate an important first step in eliminating these injustices and promoting social equity.
“INJUSTICE anywhere is a THREAT to JUSTICE everywhere.”
MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.
The United Nations General Assembly proclaimed February 20th as World Day of Social Justice in 2007. Observation of WDSJ supports efforts of the
international community in poverty eradication, the promotion of full employment and decent work, gender equity and access to social well-
being and justice for all.
Number of professors who participated in the WDSJ Teach-In:
06
Participating Departments:
Biology
Business
Music
Philosophy
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WORLD DAY OF SOCIAL JUSTICE
GlobeMed at Truman State University asked students and professors to answer the question,
View more photos and quotes at www.globemedwdsj.tumblr.com
WORLD DAY OF SOCIAL JUSTICE More WDSJ Action
“Activism” “Sustainable Food Sources”
“Healthy Mamas & Healthy Babies!”
“Public Education” “Compassion”
What is the first step to achieving social justice?
“As always, the Summit was an amazing way to meet the faces of other GlobeMedders from across the network. This year was especially momentous because of the presence of some of our partners from around the world. While the planned sessions were superb as always, my personal highlights of the Summit were casual conversations with fellow undergrads, alumni, and partners. I am continuously amazed at the authentic passion exhibited by everyone associated with the network. Looking forward to many more Summits as an alumnus!”
-- Betsy Koehne, c/o 2012
2012 DELEGATES: Emily Davis, Ellen Herrmann, Summer Jensen, Betsy Koehne, Kyle LaVelle, Sam Spencer, Ben Weger, Amy Wiley
The annual GlobeMed Global Health Summit brings together university students from across the nation for three days of intensive lectures and
workshops with representatives from grassroots global health organizations and a range of experts.
2012 GLOBAL HEALTH SUMMIT AN
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OUR FUTURE
We have big dreams. And as we reflect on this incredible year of strength and of partnership we realize the extent to which we have expanded our capacities to effect change on our campus and in Haiti and in our world. We enthusiastically rise to meet the new challenges of a new year. We look forward to reconvening once again on campus with our amazing coalition of student change makers whose strength and determination give hope to the future of our work with MN in Haiti. It is our dream to see the individuals in our chapter question the unquestionable with conviction and humility. We cannot wait to foster this growth and shepherd this incredible passion into intentional and practical action. It is our burning desire to continuously engage our campus in a global discourse around social injustices through the power of human connections. We commit to sharing Maison de Naissance with our campus through our GROW trip experiences this summer in order to pragmatically facilitate new commitments to MN's success in bringing about sustainable changes to healthcare in Haiti. We are so excited to propel this movement forward in the coming year and celebrating in our small yet powerful successes as a chapter and as a network of partners. Partner with us and join in our movement to promote health equity for mothers and babies in Haiti. Donate now at http://www.razoo.com/story/Globe-Med-At-Truman-State-University
“Global health is such an intangible, unwieldy beast that addressing its
issues can be overwhelming; finding a place to start seems impossible.
GlobeMed provides the education to speak up on some of the most
complex issues, the community to share your passion, and the tools to
make a difference.” – Nicholas Presley, c/o 2012
CAMPAIGN DONATIONS! OPERATIONS! TOTAL REVENUE!
Revenue!
Events ! $8,159! $8,159!
Individual Giving! $4,115! $4,115!
GlobeMed National Office! $250! $250!
Corporations! $200! $200!
Member Dues! $1,505! $1,505!
SUBTOTAL! $12,474! $1,755! $14,229!
CAMPAIGN DONATIONS!
OPERATIONS & GRANTS! TOTAL!
Current Finances!
Cash Reserves! $300! $300!
EXISTING BALANCE! $300! $300!
In 2011 – 2012, GlobeMed at Truman State University raised $12,474 for Maison de
Naissance to support projects in Larnage, Haiti.
FINANCES AN
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KEEP IN TOUCH
WANT TO REACH US IN 2012-2013?
.CONTACT: Ellen Herrmann, Summer Jensen, Kyle LaVelle E-MAIL: [email protected]
Find our chapter on www.razoo.com/Globe-Med-At-Truman-State-University and make a donation to support our partner and project today.
Check out our photos on globemed.smugmug.com/GlobeMed-at-Truman-State.
“Like” us on Facebook to find out about upcoming events. www.facebook.com/GlobeMedatTrumanStateUniversity
Follow our blog and chime in on the discussion. trumanglobemed.wordpress.com
Follow us on twitter at twitter.com/tsuglobemed
Read more about our partner and project, and the GlobeMed network. globemed.org/trumanstate
EXECUTIVE BOARD
A sincere thanks to the following advocates, mentors, donors, and colleagues for making our 2011 – 2012 year a great success:
CO-PRESIDENT Betsy Koehne
globalhealthU COORDINATOR Emily John
DIR. OF COMMUNITY BUILDING Sarah Brown
DIRECTOR OF COMMUNICATIONS Maxine Brenner
GROW COORDINATOR Margaret Loehnig
SECRETARY Abby Walker
CO-PRESIDENT Summer Jensen
CAMPAIGN COORDINATOR Emily Davis
DIR. OF COMMUNITY BUILDING Amy Wiley
DIRECTOR OF COMMUNICATIONS Justin Baraboo
DIRECTOR OF FINANCES Kyle LaVelle
SUPPORTERS
THANK YOU
ORGANIZATIONS Maison de Naissance
Foundation Acorn Logistics Management
Inc. Sankey & Jensen, Inc.
Costa Rican Cafe Company Hy-Vee Catering
Dukum Inn The Aquadome
Baptist Student Union Sodexo
Nursing Student Association American Medical Student
Association Delta Zeta
Alpha Phi Omega
Pam Weimer, Beverly Schepers, Ron Dunn, Ron Vossen, Sr. Jean Dietrich, D. Aur, Vic Cadice, Mary Flowers, Paulette Lock, Lauren Palazzolo, Rose Palazzolo, Tina and Angelo Palazzolo, Dede Spangler, Patti Selm, Susie and Dan Moore, Neil and Mary Kiesel, Fran and Steve Hanlon, John and Janis LaVelle, Jim & Shiela LaVelle, Chris and Dianne Brock, Mike and Nancy LaVelle, Linda and Sean McTaggart, Becky Dale, Mark and Teri Brenner, Rita and Ken Holt, Margeurite Wendell, Robert Tivnan, Torin Brenner, James Scheer, Carol Jakucki, John and Joyce Connolly, Dave & Agnes Brown, Dr. Lynn Rose, Garrett Miller, Linda and Bill Miller, Lisa Brown, Kevin Brown, Michelle Brown, Maureen Jennings, Rich Ruh, Mary and Dave Brown, Dana Bruxvoort, Sue Ellen Busby, Diane Bonnstetter, Katie Andreasen, Drenda Neptune, Nancy Monroe, Julie Reese, Lori Bredehoft, Donna Switzer, Angele Elson, Denise Carlson, Jim Hart, Mary and Mark Walker, Jena Huyck, and Josey Corritore
INDIVIDUALS Dr. Lin Twining, Professor Melissa Holcomb, Dr. Michael Kelrick, Professor Jennifer Eldridge Houser, John Dallman, Kyra Abbott, Jim Grant, Dr. Betsy Wickstrom, Katherine Collet, Patrick Sweeney, Mark and Patti Loehnig, Barry and Lucy Jensen, Derek Franklin, Rachel Vaught, Dr. Julie Flowerday, Dr. Rubana Mahjabeen, Dr. Marc Becker, Charles Gerdes, Emily Gerdes, Dr. Patrick Lecaque, Chris Gripple, John Holcomb, Dr. Betsy Delmonico, Dr. Amber Johnson, Drs. Robert and Susan Guffey, Dr. Wolfgang Hoeschele, Carol Kmucha, Jeremy Davis, Nancy Davis, Keith Davis, Dr. Cynthia Cooper and Dr. Ian Lindevald, Dr. Robert Nothdur>, Profesor Jeanne Mitchell, Jennifer LaVelle, Kaitlyn McGraw, Ken and Carolyn Exline, Melissa Bales, Mark Brenner, Ellen Schaumberg, Blaise Hart-‐Schmidt, Grace Schneider, BreM Wiley, Ellen Sciuto, Maria Albuja, Antonella Albuja, Iracema Zermeno, Emmy Rice, Nancy Koehne, Mariah Schultz, Sarah Luecke, Cheryl Leucke, Meda Long, Irma Filer, Charles Kmucha, Debbie Filer, Sarah Linhart, Kayla Carter,
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GlobeMed National Office 620 Library Place
Evanston, IL 60201 847-467-2143
www.globemed.org
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