Basically I use this letter to remind myself of who to donate money to at the year end, and I hope that one or two of you will look at the causes & charities I support. If anyone else reads it and maybe takes a look or even donates, that's a bonus. No grumpy commentary thisyear! (Plenty of that in years' past)
Health care stuff (mostly educational): Engage with Grace is a place to start a conversations about what you want at the end of life. MyDirectives is a very useful site to actually set up all the documentation for those wishes. Foundation for Arts & Healing is helping patients with PTSD including soldiers, kids post Sandy & Newtown. Give here. ISIS uses technology to help educate young people about sex and the safe use of technology. You can donate here or attend the great conference they run now called YTHLive. 2 kid related issues. Whiteout is designed to prevent infants eating processed white rice cereal and has made big strides in educating peditricians and parents. TiccTocc is about those virtual 90 seconds after birth when the umbilical cord is routinely clamped and cut. Wait. No good reason to do it and lots not to! And yes all of these are run by people I know and like.
Helping the very poor: Mercy Corps has multiple projects in the very poorest countries in the world mostly aimed at helping girls and women. Heifer International gives animals directly to the very poor in order to get them out of the cycle of poverty. Saigon Children's Charity provides rice (and bikes and books and pens) to the families of school children in Southern Vietnam so they stay in school--I actually get school reports from "my" kids. Softpower Health works to prevent malaria and improve maternal and child health in Uganda. (Some big charities, some small, all helping people way less fortunate than anyone reading this)
Tech solutions for the developing world. The solar powered lightbulb from Nokero I bought last year actually worked, even after I left it outside in the rain for a year! !It replaces kerosene lamps which cause huge numbers of fires. Nokero has a list of NGO partners. I picked ChildFund's Global Light to Learn Challenge. And one we saw a few years back, The sOccket co-founded by Health 2.0 employee Hemali Thakkar is a soccer-ball that really acts as a mini generator for lights and is charged as it gets kicked around, and you can buy one for a poor family for $75! Finally We Care Solar makes a suitcase-sized portable solar powered generator and supplies it to health workers in off-grid clinics across the world--give here.