Northbrook-based Astellas Global Health Foundation provides $1.85M to help improve access to health and COVID-19 recovery in low-income communities
The Astellas Global Health Foundation, with headquarters in Northbrook, Ill., announced today it will provide $1.85 million in combined new grants to five charitable organizations for urgent projects helping improve access to health and build community resilience - including COVID-19 vaccine education and support - for vulnerable and hard-to-reach populations within Nepal, Honduras, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Uganda and Venezuela.
Half the world lacks access to essential health services, with 100 million global citizens pushed into extreme poverty, according to World Bank and World Health Organization reporting.
The new Foundation grants are the latest contribution to address this disparity with funding intended to help more than four million people in highest need lead healthier lives. These efforts are part of the Foundation's continuing focus to help to improve health access, build resilient communities and provide disaster support for high-need populations within low- and middle-income countries where Astellas does not have a business presence.
The Foundation looks forward to supporting the following organizations' efforts with the new funding:
CARE: Helping nearly 800,000 people in remote, underserved districts and communities in Nepal and Honduras with comprehensive COVID-19 prevention measures and vaccination campaigns. This is the second grant CARE is receiving from the Foundation.
The END Fund: Directly reaching nearly three million people at risk of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) by working with the Ministry of Health. This grant helps the END Fund to reach their goal of delivering more than 47 million preventive chemotherapy treatments to over 28 million people and training more than 188,000 health workers to distribute NTD treatment in the DRC. This is the second grant The END Fund is receiving from the Foundation.
Evidence Action: Supporting efforts to reduce child morbidity and mortality from diarrheal disease and reach 250,000 people in rural, hard-to-reach communities in Uganda through the provision of chlorine dispensers that enable free and reliable access to safe water. This is the first grant Evidence Action is receiving from the Foundation.
International Medical Corps: Working to improve vector-borne and tropical disease prevention and control in health centers benefitting more than 125,000 lives in Venezuela's Bolivar state through training, distribution of supplies, deworming campaigns, and community mobilization. This is the second grant International Medical Corps is receiving from the Foundation.
World Vision: Reaching ~140,000 vulnerable people, including children, in hard-to-reach communities in Nepal by strengthening its COVID-19 education and vaccine support activities. This is the second grant World Vision is receiving from the Foundation.
"The new support from the Astellas Global Health Foundation is energizing. It will enable World Vision to help build community resilience against COVID-19 for Nepali residents in urgent need with improved information-sharing, hygiene, immunizations and access to care," said Abby van Horne-Brett, senior director, Corporations & Foundations, World Vision. "As part of the funded work, we also will collaborate with government agencies on education, training and vaccination planning and roll-out to address health access inequities and gaps and help ensure the impact continues well beyond the immediate pandemic crisis."
Programs that receive Foundation funding are designed and implemented by non-profit organizations in alignment with the Foundation's Social Contribution Policy and corporate sustainability focus on improving access to health. Success is defined by each program's ability to make a meaningful impact and actively contribute to the achievement of the UN Sustainable Development Goals, particularly Goal 3: Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages.1
"The Foundation's latest funding choices underscore our commitment to working with global organizations to help create a sustainable future for vulnerable global communities in need,"said Shingo Iino, president of the Astellas Global Health Foundation. "By supporting programs that address such basic needs as access to healthy drinking water, tropical disease prevention and treatment, and COVID-19 vaccines, we hope the Foundation makes a lasting impact on improving healthcare for those who need it most."
The Astellas Global Health Foundation is a tax-exempt, non-profit corporation that awards grants to support charitable purposes with a focus on improving access to health in underserved global communities, building resilient communities and providing disaster support in order to make a sustainable impact on the health of people around the world, working toward "One World, A Healthier Tomorrow."
To learn more about the Astellas Global Health Foundation please visit www.astellasglobalhealthfoundation.org.