Microgrants create meals, mentors and music

Microgrants create meals, mentors and music

From April through June, smaller Kiwanis clubs made a big impact through the Kiwanis Children’s Fund.

By Erin Chandler

In April, May and June 2024, the Kiwanis Children’s Fund awarded new rounds of microgrants to clubs making a big difference with fewer members — giving away books and personalized shelves to hold them; providing honey, fruits and vegetables to their communities; advocating for mental health, and more. Here are four projects that address kids’ needs in each of the Kiwanis cause areas: health and nutrition, education and literacy, and youth leadership development.  

Health and nutrition

Raintree Children’s Services Oven Repair and New Vision Lunch Project
Sometimes, clubs can make the greatest impact by simply providing for the repair or replacement of essential appliances — and the Children’s Fund is happy to help. The Kiwanis Club of Third District, New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S., and the Kiwanis Club of Spalding-Christiana, Jamaica, each proved that with projects that received microgrants in June. For more than 10 years, members of the Kiwanis Club of Third District have cooked a monthly meal with the adolescent girls at Raintree Children’s group home. They even plan to make a cookbook together. However, they recently discovered that the temperature control in the home’s oven was broken. A Kiwanis Children’s Fund microgrant will help to repair the oven thermostats so that this enriching project can continue.  

Similarly, for four years, Kiwanis Club of Spalding-Christiana has gone all-out annually to prepare a healthy and delicious meal for the kids at New Vision Children’s Home, but the club recently learned that the door on the home’s deep freezer is faulty, requiring weights to keep it closed and maintain the temperature. A Kiwanis Children’s Fund microgrant will allow the club to donate a new freezer to the home so food can be safely stored throughout the year. 

Education and literacy

Musical Instruments for Elementary Schools
The Kiwanis Club of the Desert, Tucson in Arizona, U.S., began donating gently used musical instruments to elementary schools in 2022. Each year, they choose a different school to benefit from the project based on the number of students who participate in the free lunch program. To give kids whose families are struggling financially a fair chance at discovering and nurturing a passion for music, the club has partnered with the Kiwanian-owned Chicago Music Store to create an inventory of instruments that can be loaned out at each school. The store also offers discounts on cleaning kits and supplies. This year, with help from a Kiwanis Children’s Fund microgrant, the students at Butterfield Elementary School will tune up their own musical instrument library. 

Youth leadership development 

Safety Town
Every year, the Kiwanis Club of Springfield, Oregon, U.S., hosts Safety Town, a two-week course that teaches local 5-year-olds how to be safe around strangers, animals, water, railroads, earthquakes, fires — and especially on roads. The club sets up an eight-block town inside a local school gymnasium, complete with buildings, sidewalks and a floor mat depicting streets, crosswalks, traffic lights and signs. A Kiwanis Children’s Fund microgrant will help the club update the “town” with new pedal cars and materials to repair the buildings, as well as snacks and craft supplies. Safety Town’s life lessons are not limited to small children: Teenagers serve as mentors, helping the younger children learn — and some teens return after their first Safety Town experience to continue to help out.  

How you can help
To learn more about Kiwanis Children’s Fund microgrants, visit kiwanis.org/microgrant-program.  

If you want to help the Children’s Fund provide grants like these that reach children around the world, you canmake a giftto The Possibility Project. Your club can alsoapply for a grantto help kids in your community today.

Grants expand medical services for kids

Grants expand medical services for kids

Kiwanis Children’s Fund grants for pediatric medicine will help four clubs help more kids.

By Erin Chandler

This year, the Kiwanis Children’s Fund awarded pediatric medicine support grants to four Kiwanis clubs for projects that will help medical centers expand their services for children. These grants are especially important where access to medical services is limited by families’ financial or geographic constraints. The support they provide allows Kiwanis clubs and medical centers to unite in making sure all kids get the best possible care — whether through a specialized wheelchair, equipment that makes therapy fun, better milk storage or simply a pack of diapers to take home. 

Wheels of Hope: Empowering Kids of Kiwanis Pediatric Trauma Center
Kiwanis Club of Sayville, New York, U.S.
The Kiwanis Club of Sayville and the entire Suffolk East Division of Kiwanis’ New York District are working together to provide specialized wheelchairs to Stony Brook University Hospital Pediatric Trauma Center. Trauma recovery has been shown to be faster — and hospital stays shorter — when patients can move around early in the process, socialize and experience changes of scenery. With help from a pediatric medicine support grant from the Children’s Fund, the division will purchase 12 Convaid Cruiser wheelchairs, which will be sized specifically for pediatric patients. Most importantly, the chairs will be built with the necessary safety measures, including harnesses, to move children with ventilators and other equipment to the playroom, to visit with family members and more. Hospital workers and Kiwanians hope these wheelchairs will help hundreds of children in their recovery from illness or injury.  

University of North Carolina Health Southeastern Pediatric Supply Drive
Kiwanis Club of Robeson-Lumberton Young Professionals, North Carolina, U.S.
A pediatric medicine support grant will help the Kiwanis Club of Robeson-Lumberton Young Professionals donate pediatric supplies to the University of North Carolina (UNC) Health Southeastern Regional Medical Center. UNC Southeastern is the only hospital in Robeson County, where over a quarter of the population struggles with poverty. Club members will work with hospital staff to determine the greatest supply needs for families on the pediatric floor, such as formula, clothing and, most of all, diapers. They will then purchase and drop off the supplies personally. The club hopes the pediatric supply drive will become an annual event, so that thousands of families get the supplies they need to give their children a healthy start in life. 

Children’s & Women’s Hospital Milk Room Expansion
Kiwanis Club of Mobile, Alabama, U.S.
In March 2024, staff from USA Health Children’s & Women’s Hospital approached the Kiwanis Club of Mobile for help in providing a bigger and better milk room — the area where breast milk and formula are prepared and stored — for its growing number of patients. The hospital is highly regarded for its pediatric care and delivers more babies annually than any other hospital on the upper Gulf Coast — and its Pediatric Emergency Department recently doubled in size. A pediatric medicine support grant will help the Kiwanis Club of Mobile and other clubs in its division purchase refrigerators, a freezer, a stainless-steel workstation and a milk warmer for the expanded milk room. The new equipment will allow for more storage and better organization while reducing the risk of infection, contamination and mislabeling. The additional refrigerators and improved milk warmer will also prevent the nutritional value of the milk from degrading. When the milk room opens next year, it will be ready to provide the best care for patients in the hospital’s Newborn, Pediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care units. 

Unity Medical Center Pediatric Sensory Gym
Kiwanis Club of Grafton, North Dakota, U.S.
Unity Medical Center is one of the few places where families in the rural area of Grafton can access occupational and speech therapy for children. Since August 2023, the number of kids in the Center’s therapy programs has more than doubled, and the Kiwanis Club of Grafton is stepping up — helping enlarge the pediatric gym and add a sensory gym to meet the growing demand. A pediatric medicine support grant will help to purchase gym equipment, including wall padding, a balance beam, tunnels, activity mirrors, monkey bars and more. Kids in the program will use the new equipment to develop skills such as motor planning, coordination, body awareness and sensory integration. Kiwanis club members will assist in delivering and setting up the equipment. They will also help with annual screenings to identify area children who would benefit from the therapy program’s services. The club hopes that the new and improved gym will be ready for patients in September 2024. 

How do I apply for a pediatric medicine support grant?
The Pediatric Medicine Support Grant Program offers onetime grants for clubs to fund projects that specifically support local children’s medical centers. Grant money can be used to purchase products or supplies for patients’ hospital stays or to support a capital improvement project. 

You can learn more and apply for a Pediatric Medicine Support Grant on the Kiwanis website. For more information about the Kiwanis Children’s Fund, visit kiwanis.org/childrensfund. 

UNICEF announces MNT elimination in Guinea

UNICEF announces MNT elimination in Guinea

With help from organizations including Kiwanis, Guinea is the latest country to eliminate maternal and neonatal tetanus.

By Erin Chandler

Kiwanis International joins UNICEF and people around the world in celebrating the elimination of maternal and neonatal tetanus (MNT) in Guinea. In May 2024, just one month after UNICEF confirmed MNT elimination in Mali, Guinea became the 49th country to achieve MNT elimination out of the priority countries identified in 1999. 

MNT is a painful and deadly disease that disproportionately affects areas where poverty, lack of education and inadequate health infrastructure make unhygienic birth practices more common. Kiwanis partnered with UNICEF in its global campaign to eliminate MNT in 2010, focusing on countries with more than one case of neonatal tetanus per 1,000 live births. Since then, twenty-nine priority countries have achieved MNT elimination status, significantly dropping the number of newborn deaths from tetanus. Now, MNT poses a significant threat in only 10 remaining priority countries. 

In 2023, the Kiwanis Children’s Fund granted US$275,000 to UNICEF USA to help facilitate mass tetanus vaccination campaigns for women of reproductive age in countries such as Guinea, Pakistan and Yemen. The grant also funded the assessments and surveys that validated the elimination of MNT in Guinea, and it will continue to strengthen the country’s health systems to ensure that MNT does not return in the future. 

Support for UNICEF’S fight against MNT is just one way Kiwanis has furthered the cause of children’s health around the world. Throughout the year, the Kiwanis Children’s Fund awards grants to clubs across the globe — like the Kiwanis Club of Lalbandi, which is working to provide autism screenings and therapies for families in Nepal; the Kiwanis Club of Libertad, which is helping to create a nutrition program at a primary school in Panama; and the Kiwanis Club of Wentzville, which is part of a partnership to build beds for kids who need them in Missouri, U.S. 

You can make a gift to the Children’s Fund today to make a healthier world possible for kids everywhere.