globemed at duke annual report 2013-2014

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GlobeMed at Duke 2013 – 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

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Page 1: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

GlobeMed at Duke 2013 – 2014 ANNUAL REPORT  

Page 2: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

Pastoral de La Salud | San Salvador, El Salvador ICOD Action Network | Lyantonde, Uganda!Rural Economic Development Association | Svay Rieng, Cambodia CORD| Tamil Nadu, India Ungano Tena | Nairobi, Kenya WOPLAH | Western Kenya GWED-G | Gulu, Uganda AMMID | San Marcos, Guatemala ChangeALife Uganda | Migyera, Uganda Himalayan Health Care | Jawalakhel, Nepal Courage Is Change | Denver, Colorado Kachin Women’s Association Thailand | Chiang Mai, Thailand Salud Sin Límites | Siuna, Nicaragua MAP Foundation | Chiang Mai, Thailand Escuela de La Calle (EDELAC) | Quetzaltenango, Guatemala Rwanda Village Concept Project | Butare, Rwanda Community of Hope| Washington, D.C. Primeros Pasos | Quetzaltenango, Guatemala NECOFA | Moro, Kenya CEMOPLAF Cajabamba | Cajabamba, Ecuador Health Development Initiative | Kigali, Rwanda Jambi Huasi | Otovalo, Ecuador Hope Through Health | Kara, Togo Gardens for Health International | Gasabo, Rwanda Knowledge for Children | Kumbo, Cameroon Kitovu Mobile AIDS Organization | Masaka, Uganda Adonai Child Development Center| Namugoga, Uganda Center for Community Health Promotion | Hanoi, Vietnam ACUDESBAL | Bajo Lempa, El Salvador Medical AIDS Outreach | Montgomery, Alabama A Ministry of Sharing Health and Hope | Managua, Nicaragua CSSD | Phnom Penh, Cambodia Light for Children | Kumasi, Ghana Burmese Women’s Union | Mae Sot, Thailand Maison de Naissance | Torbeck, Haiti Nyaya Health | Achham, Nepal ASPAT | Lima, Peru Social Action for Women | Mae Sot, Thailand Mpoma Community HIV/AIDS Initiative| Mukono, Uganda BSDA | Kampong Cham, Cambodia Perkin Educational Opportunities Foundation (PEOF) | Morazán, El Salvador Joy-Southfield Community Development Corp.| Detroit, Michigan Kyetume Community Based Health Care (KCBHCP)| Mukono, Uganda Raising the Village | Kampala, Uganda PEDA | Vientiane, Laos Lwala Community Alliance | Lwala, Kenya Kallpa Iquitos | Iquitos, Peru Alternative for Rural Movement | Odisha, India CareNet Ghana | Hohoe, Ghana Clinica Ana Manganaro | Guarjila, El Salvador Build Your Future Today Center | Siem Reap, Cambodia Women’s Development Association | Phnom Penh, Cambodia COWS | Kampong Thom, Cambodia Dios es Amor | Lima, Peru Uganda Development and Health Associates | Iganga, Uganda Kigezi Healthcare Foundation| Kabale, Uganda Burma Humanitarian Mission (BHM) | Eastern Burma FORUDEF | Buea, Cameroon

GlobeMed Network AMHERST COLLEGE

ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY BETHEL UNIVERSITY

BOSTON COLLEGE BROWN UNIVERSITY

COLORADO COLLEGE COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY CORNELL UNIVERSITY

CSU-SB CU-BOULDER

DARTMOUTH COLLEGE

DUKE UNIVERSITY EMORY UNIVERSITY

FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY

HOWARD UNIVERSITY INDIANA UNIVERSITY

LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY LOYOLA UNIVERSITY CHICAGO

MASSACHUSETTS INST. OF TECHNOLOGY MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE

MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY

OBERLIN COLLEGE PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRINCETON UNIVERSITY

RHODES COLLEGE RUTGERS UNIVERSITY

SPELMAN COLLEGE ST. EDWARD’S UNIVERSITY

TRUMAN STATE UNIVERSITY TUFTS UNIVERSITY

UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI

UCLA UNIVERSITY OF DENVER

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-KANSAS CITY UNC-CHAPEL HILL

UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN

UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY

WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY

WHITMAN COLLEGE XULA

Page 3: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

Mission 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.

Vision We envision a world in which health – the ability to not

only survive but thrive – is possible for all people, regardless of where they call home.

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.

About GlobeMed

Page 4: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

Message from the Co-Presidents

Since our founding in September 2010, our chapter has grown

from 10 members to 40.

Dear Friends of GlobeMed, After years of collaborating and fundraising, the shelter for victims of domestic violence in Siuna, Nicaragua has finally become a reality. The Psychosocial Center for Victims of Violence-- El Centro De Atención Psicosocial para Victimas de Violencia (CAP)-- opened its doors to women and children in March, 2014. With the support of over 18 local, community-based organizations, Salud sin Limites and GlobeMed are proud to bring CAP to the community and provide services such as support groups and legal counseling. The accomplishment could not have been achieved without the hard work and dedication of the team of students in GlobeMed at Duke’s chapter. Over forty students planned fundraising events that would bring in over $10,000 this academic year; learned about and discussed global health issues in GlobeMed’s signature education component, globalhealthU; and hosted an art exchange project between students of Siuna, Nicaragua and the John Avery Boys & Girls Club in Durham, NC. Five dedicated students worked on the ground in Siuna this summer on the Grassroots On-site Work (GROW) internship, writing and hosting health education radio programs, continuing the art exchange project, and launching a photo program called “Nuevas Perspectivas” for students to document and discuss conditions they wanted to improve in their own community. Despite these wonderful achievements, our work is far from finished. We are in the process of installing electricity in the shelter to increase comfort and safety for residents, as well as fixing unfinished areas of the building’s roof. We also look forward to expanding our health projects and impact in the coming years with new projects in Siuna as we continue on our mission to bring health to all. In solidarity, Emily Du & Dan Moore Co-presidents, GlobeMed at Duke

Page 5: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

GlobeMed at Duke was founded in 2010 and has since grown from 10 founding E-Board members to over 40 active members. We have had three Grassroots On-site Work (GROW) internships in Siuna, Nicaragua. As a 2010 and 2013 recipient of the Kenan-Biddle Partnership grant, our chapter has developed a strong relationship with our sister chapter, GlobeMed at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and have jointly hosted a number of public events on both of our campuses. Since 2010, our chapter has raised nearly $30,000 for Salud sin Límites.

About Us GlobeMed at Duke

Page 6: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

Siuna, Nicaragua Population: 100,770 Siuna and La RAAN (The North Atlantic Autonomous Region) in general have the highest rates of domestic violence in Nicaragua. Recently, the national government passed Law 779, which severely punishes all forms of domestic violence. Unfortunately, the law is not always enforced in many parts of Nicaragua including in Siuna. El Centro de Atencion Psicosocial is crucial in ensuring the enforcement of the law and has threatened legal action against law enforcement who refuse to uphold 779.

Our Partnership Salud Sin Limítes

Founded in 1984 Salud Sin Limites / Health Poverty Action is a British international organization that has been working in Nicaragua since 1993. The Siuna chapter is entirely operated by people from the Siuna community. Their mission is to provide access to healthcare and health education to historically marginalized indigenous communities, especially women, adolescents and children. They accomplish this through capacitation and construction projects in connection with other organizations, educational programs with adolescents, and radio programming. GlobeMed at Duke joined Salud sin Limites in the fall of 2010.

60% of women in Nicaragua have

experienced some form of domestic

violence.

Page 7: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

El Centro de Atencion Psicosocial is run by the Commission for Women, Children, Adolescents, and Disabled Individuals. GlobeMed at Duke has been funding the construction, renovation, and upkeep of the shelter for the past 2 years, and will continue to do so until all renovations are complete. Since its inauguration in March, 2014, the shelter has helped more than 20 women resolve their cases, allowing them to return to their children and their homes.

Our Project We are funding and supporting El Centro de Atencion

Psicosocial (CAP), which is a shelter for victims of intrafamiliar violence in Siuna, Nicaragua.

BY THE NUMBERS: Over 100 women and children have passed through the shelter

since its inauguration in March, 2014.

What we directly

funded: The money has

funded beds, cement, fencing, sinks, toilets,

and a roof for the shelter, as well as

other materials for the renovation.

Page 8: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

Event Title Event Description Revenue Chipotle for Change

Every week, GlobeMed at Duke sold Chipotle burritos to students on campus.

$880

Cozy for a Cause An annual fall event featuring student performance groups and selling refreshments

$455

Kaplan Course Auction

Thanks to the generosity of Kaplan Test Prep, we auctioned a Kaplan course to the highest bidder in which all proceeds benefited GlobeMed at Duke.

$1675

Individual Giving GlobeMed members sent letters to friends and family requesting donations on behalf of GlobeMed.

$4071

Marathon for Siuna GlobeMed member Amee Tan studied abroad in the spring and ran the Paris Marathon to raise money and awareness of GlobeMed's work.

$1608

Other Events Balloongrams, selling GlobeMed tanks, research studies, restaurant fundraiser

$531

Campaigns are on-campus events and initiatives that raise funds for GlobeMed partner organizations' grassroots projects abroad.

Total funds raised in 2013-2014:

$9,220 Since 2010, GlobeMed at

Duke has raised over $31,000 to support Salud Sin Limites's initiatives to promote health and well-being in their community, particularly for women,

youth, and children.

Campaigns

Page 9: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

Cozy for a Cause Campaign date: November 7, 2013 Students enjoyed student performances while sipping autumn-themed beverages and enjoying gourmet cupcakes from Sugarland Bakery of Chapel Hill. GlobeMed raised money through the sale of the drinks, cupcakes, knit hats, handmade GlobeMed t-shirts and a raffle of giftcards to local restaurants.

Balloongrams Campaign date: February 10 - 14, 2014 GlobeMed staff members sold balloons during the week of Valentine's Day. Duke students wrote a note to their sweetheart or friends and chose what kind of balloon they wanted to send. On Valentine's Day, GlobeMed staff delivered the balloons and love notes to their designated dorm room. Over 300 balloons were sold to Dukie lovebirds!

Page 10: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

Total number of chapter members in 2013 – 2014: 40 Number of community-building events: 6 Number of hours volunteered in the community: 35 Community Building at Duke has moved forward with bright new ideas in community partnerships and has ignited new social flares. We bonded with the John Avery Boys and Girls Club of Durham throughout the fall and fed our relationship into a global art communication program we call Paint-Pals. Like pen-pals, the program provides lower-income students of Durham and students of Siuna, Nicaragua with the opportunity to communicate through their artistic depiction of the word "community." Simultaneously, we have begun to build a relationship with the Durham Crisis Response Center (DCRC), a provider of comprehensive shelter and support services to survivors of domestic and sexual violence. Our hope is not only to professionally serve DCRC in meaningful projects, but also to give our chapter members an international comparative experience on domestic violence.

Community Building

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.

Page 11: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

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.

globalhealthU

This year, our globalhealthU sessions touched on important topics in global health, such as mental health and female genital mutilation. GlobeMed members gave presentations and led insightful discussions, making globalhealthU one of the biggest draws for students interested in GlobeMed. Most importantly, globalhealthU was an opportunity to better understand our own community, our partner community, and the health issues we both face, helping us as students better serve the people of these communities.

Page 12: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

Duke FACE AIDS's Condom Couture

Event date: April 22, 2014 GlobeMed at Duke participated in the Condom Couture event, organized by a fellow student organization, Duke FACE AIDS, to reduce the stigma against HIV/AIDS and encourage safe sex practices. Students made garments out of condoms and modeled them in a fashion show.

Duke Global Health Week

Event date: April 1-7, 2014 Organized by the Duke Partnership for Service, Global Health Week brings together student organizations focusing on service. GlobeMed at Duke contributed an interactive, educational display on the incidences of domestic violence and cervical cancer in women around the world.

Page 13: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

# of responses: 40 Our question asked students to dig deep and contemplate what human rights and beliefs they believed in most strongly. For what rights would you make a sacrifice to keep?

World Day of Social Justice February 20, 2014

What do you fight for?

Page 14: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

World Day of Social Justice February 20, 2014

Page 15: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

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.

2014 Summit “Breaking Barriers, Building Connections:

The Future of Global Health”

"Summit was a fantastic opportunity to work with students from all over the US united by their passion to make an impact on the world around them. Over the course of the weekend, we were continually inspired and challenged to understand why and how we are making a difference.”

-Aarti Thakkar, 2015

2014 Summit Delegates:

Tahvi Frank, Liz Colavita, Phil Reinhart, Aarti Thakkar, Ellen Liu,

Manish Nair

Page 16: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

GROW Internship Grassroots Onsite Work

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.

# OF GROW INTERNS: [5] LENGTH OF STAY: [8 weeks] DATES OF TRAVEL: [May 14th- July 9th]

“As I leave GROW I feel confident in the future of our relationship with CAP Siuna,

immense respect for the incredible dedications that our partners have for their cause, and excited for future years of

working and growing together."– Christina Schmidt,

2017

This summer, we implemented four main projects in Siuna, Nicaragua: a radio program promoting HIV and domestic violence awareness, a painting exchange program with children here and in Durham, a photo program - Nuevas Perspectivas, and a documentary illustrating the causes of domestic violence in Siuna and what work can be done to prevent it.

Page 17: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

Dear Friends, GlobeMed at Duke truly took off this year. We were powered by a dynamic executive board and the largest and most dedicated staff we’ve ever had. We emerged as one of the best global health student groups on campus and look forward to carrying on that momentum in the year to come. We will continue supporting the domestic violence shelter in Siuna to ensure that the remaining renovations are completed and to provide seed money to launch a small business to help make the shelter become economically self-sustainable. This summer our GROW team worked on strengthening our relationship with our partner in Siuna and we are looking forward to even better communication and collaboration this coming year. We are also looking forward to developing a relationship with the Durham Crisis Response Center- a center for victims of domestic violence right here in our own community. Our members will have the opportunity to get more involved in the Durham and serve in a variety of ways. On campus, we are looking forward to increasing our chapter membership capacity and diversity. A bigger chapter means bigger impact. We hope to broaden the focus of campaigns to include more advocacy-based activities and to collaborate more with other student groups on campus. Finally, we

Our Future GlobeMed at Duke University

Through my work with GlobeMed, I found my voice as a leader and realized that I want to

spend my life working for the health and human rights of marginalized

women around the world. –Eliza Gentzler, 2014

are eager to put together an advisory board consisting of Duke faculty and staff. We are excited to make the most of the expertise we have on Duke’s campus and to collaborate with them to better our work. We are so grateful for the support from our donors and we hope that you see your dollars making a difference. Please support us at www.razoo.com/story/Globemed-At-Duke. Sincerely, GlobeMed at Duke

Page 18: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

Revenue Events (Campaigns) $8,035

Individuals $4,071

University 0

Corporations 0

Foundations 0

Internal Chapter Revenue 0

National Office Launch Grant NO

TOTAL REVENUE $12,106

Expenses Campaigns $2,886

Operations $0

TOTAL EXPENSES $2,886

Sent to Partner

Total funds raised in the 2013-2014 academic year $9,220

TOTAL SENT TO PARTNER AS OF JUNE 2014 $6,100

In 2013-2014, GlobeMed at Duke raised $9,220 for Salud Sin Límites to support projects in Siuna, Nicaragua.

Finances

Page 19: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

Find our chapter on http://www.razoo.com/story/Globemed-At-Duke and make a donation to support our partner and project today.

Check out our photos on http://globemed.smugmug.com/GlobeMed-at-Duke

“Like” us on Facebook to find out about upcoming events. https://www.facebook.com/GlobeMedatDuke

Follow our blog and join in on the discussion. http://sites.duke.edu/globemedgrow2014/

Follow us on twitter at @globemedduke

Read more about our partner and project, and the GlobeMed network: www.globemed.org/impact/duke/

Email us at [email protected] to find out how you can get involved!

Stay Connected GlobeMed at Duke

Page 20: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

A sincere thanks to the following advocates, mentors, donors, and colleagues for making our 2013 – 2014 year a great success:

Supporters

ORGANIZATIONS Duke University Center for Activities &

Events, Student Organization Financing Committee, Duke

Partnership for Service, John Avery Boys & Girls Club, Duke Global Health

Institute, The William R. Kenan Charitable Trust and The Mary Duke

Biddle Foundation, Mellow Mushroom, Sugarland Bakery, Kaplan Test Prep, Joe Van Gogh, Duke Stores, Tijuana

Flats - Durham, Panda Express.

INDIVIDUALS Jason Cross, Nimmi Ramanujam, Jennifer Smith, Kearsley Stewart,

Lysa McKeen, Carol Colavita, Cary Neeper, Gerald Seixas, Dinah Du,

Jean Beckham, Allison Kratka, April Harrison, Baljit Birk, Indra Frank,

Elizabeth Bradford, Emma Beckham, Cindy Broderius, and

Sharma Hatcher.

Daniel Moore

Emily Du

Kelsey Sumner

Erica Morales

Amee Tan

Elizabeth Colavita

Tahvi Frank

Aarti Thakkar

Phillip Reinhart

Karishma Popli

Alexandra Huttler

External Co-President

Internal Co-President

GROW Coordinator

globalhealthU Coordinator

Campaign Coordinator

Campaign Coordinator

Campaign Coordinator

Director of Communications

Director of Community Building

Director of Finances

Director of Finances

Executive Board GlobeMed at Duke

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Page 21: GlobeMed at Duke Annual Report 2013-2014

GlobeMed National Office 620 Library Place

Evanston, IL 60201

847-467-2143 www.globemed.org

Copyright 2014 © GlobeMed. All rights reserved.