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Lions Clubs International Foundation

A Look Inside a Key Partnership

A Look Inside a Key Partnership: The Lions Clubs International Foundation

For over 25 years, the Lions Clubs International Foundation (LCIF) has worked in tandem with Carterto bring an end to preventable causes of blindness on a global scale, creating one of the most impactful partnerships in the Center’s history.

“I have a feeling of gratitude for what Lions do throughout the world. Lions have changed my life. But I think even more gratifying to me is to go into a village in Africa or Latin America and see people who have suffered all their lives and know that they will never again go blind.”– Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter

Beginning with an initial donation to the Carter Center’s river blindness work in Nigeria in 1996, the Lions Clubs International Foundation has become one of the Center’s most significant partners.

LCIF's mission is to support the efforts of Lions Clubs and partners in serving communities locally and globally, giving hope and impacting lives through humanitarian service projects and grants. These allow Lions to do large-scale service projects that would not be possible without financial assistance.

A Key Partnership By the Numbers

The Lions Clubs International Foundation is a longstanding partner of Carterin the fight to prevent disease and build hope in impoverished communities.

67million
dollars in total support from LCIF to date
191+million
trachoma treatments provided from 1999-2019
257+million
river blindness treatments provided from 1996-2019

In 1990, the Lions Clubs International Foundation established the SightFirst Program, an aggressive global blindness prevention initiative. From 1994 to present, the Foundation has supported Carterin its fight against blinding trachoma and debilitating river blindness in 14 countries across Africa and Latin America. programs are among the world’s most ambitious and successful sight initiatives and have led to significant impact in the lives of millions of people.

Lions In the Field

The Lions Clubs of Ethiopia are active participants in River Blindness and Trachoma work, participating in mass drug administration, surgery and advocacy work. Lions Clubs members are critical advocates for political support of the Center’s initiatives locally, and many Carter Center and Ministry of Health staff are proud members of their local Lions Clubs. In 2016, International President Joe Preston and Lion Hon. Dr. Tebebe Berhan participated in a campaign to distribute Zithromax® in the Amhara Region of Ethiopia.

In each country, local Lions Clubs work in close coordination with Carter Center staff to mobilize communities to participate in mass drug distribution, sight-saving surgery campaigns, and latrine construction. Lions provide ongoing technical support, monitor progress, and meet with influential leaders in their countries to advocate for continued attention to river blindness and trachoma.

As a result of this partnership, the World Health Organization has verified four countries in the Americas as free of river blindness (Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, and Guatemala). Further, transmission has been interrupted and mass drug administration halted for river blindness in many parts of Sudan, Uganda, Nigeria, and Ethiopia.

Jungle Airstrips Bring Medicine and Education to Fight River Blindness

Helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft deliver health teams deep in the Amazon rainforest to bring essential treatments to the Yanomami in the fight to eliminate river blindness.

In Mali, Niger and the Amhara region of Ethiopia, the local Lions Clubs are deeply involved in all aspects of the Trachoma Control Program – making these some of the most successful in the world! More than 820,000 people have received sight-saving surgery to treat trachomatous trichiasis (TT), the final stage of the blinding disease; and in Amhara, Ethiopia, which is the most known trachoma endemic region in the world, over 5 million people, 25% of the area population, no longer require mass drug administration to prevent the disease.

To date, the partnership has led to the distribution of over 257 million treatments for river blindness and over 191 million treatments for trachoma.

Sight-saving Surgery

Learn how thousands of free surgeries in the Amhara region of Ethiopia are helping people with advanced trachoma, known as trichiasis, which can lead to blindness if left untreated.

LCIF and Cartershare a belief in the power of partnership and collaborative impact. Millions are free from these diseases thanks to this partnership and Lions support. These accomplishments would not have occurred without the Foundation’s early investments and the constant support and advocacy of Lions Clubs in each country. Carteris immensely grateful for its unwavering partnership with the Lions Clubs International Foundation. This partnership embodies the incredible impact that shared passion and true commitment can have on a global scale.

The Partnership in Action

  • Group photo of President Carter with the Lions delegation.

    A Lions delegation visits with President Carter during their annual visit to the Center in fall 2019. (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó/C. Joe)

  • Photo of President Carter sitting at the head of a boardroom table with board members.

    Former U.S. President Carter and his grandson Jason Carter, Carter Center Board Chair, are both proud Lions Clubs members. (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó)

  • Headshot of Nafissa Mahamane Bouba.

    Nafissa Mahamane Bouba, age 13 and a native of Niger, photographed just three months after TT surgery on both eyes. “Before, I couldn't see," she said. "Now I see very well. I will tell everyone I meet how much this surgery has helped me." (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó)

  • Collage of four photos demonstrating the S.A.F.E. strategy.

    With generous and committed support from LCIF since 2001, Carterhas been a proponent of the WHO-endorsed SAFE strategy in hopes of eliminating the spread of trachoma and ultimately preventing blindness. (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó)

  • Group photo of children smiling and waving.

    The Lions-Carter Center SightFirst Initiative, in strong partnership with the Amhara Regional Health Bureau, works to prevent the leading cause of preventable blindness. (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó)

  • Close-up photo of a hand holding three small white pills.

    Mass drug administration to treat river blindness occurs four times per year in Gondar region, Ethiopia. (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó/R. Youngblood)

  • Photo of a woman in an Ethiopian village taking Mectizan with a cup of water in hand while onlookers watch in the background.

    Community health worker Tesema Desalegn distributes Mectizan, donated by Merck & Co., Inc., in Gambella, Ethiopia. (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó/R. Youngblood)

  • Photo of two women sitting on a wooden bench outside. One his holding a pen and paper calendar in her hand, the other is holding a young child.

    Community health worker Juliana Onwumere explains river blindness to Nigerian native Onyekaozuru Ibezim, who has leopard skin on her legs due to the disease’s lasting effects. (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó/R. McDowall)

  • Photo of a child washing his face at an outdoor water pump as other children and adults look on.

    On Jan. 31, 2016, the Lions-Carter Center SightFirst Initiative celebrated its 15th mass drug administration campaign in Bahir Dar Town, Ethiopia. The team dispensed nearly 10 million doses of the trachoma-fighting antibiotic Zithromax®, donated by Pfizer. (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó/R. Slaven)

  • Photo of a woman kneeling as she receives help rinsing her face with water outdoors in her village.

    Trachoma patient rinses her face following treatment in Riwoto village, Republic of South Sudan. (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó/C. Marin)

  • Photo of a young girls reflection in a green hand mirror that hangs on a wall.

    An Ethiopian girl looks at her eye in the mirror. Volunteers, national and regional health workers, Carter Center staff, and Lions Clubs members distribute Zithromax®, the drug used to treat trachoma. (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó/A. Mosher)

  • Close-up photo of a young child rinsing their face with water.

    The World Health Organization-endorsed SAFE strategy represents a series of interventions to control trachoma: Surgery, Antibiotics, Facial cleanliness, and Environmental improvement. ²Ø¾«¸ó, LCIF, and ministries of health work together to implement the SAFE strategy in order to eliminate trachoma from at-risk communities. (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó/L. Rotondo)

  • Group photo of Ugandan Lions Club members.

    Ugandan Lions Clubs members celebrate the opening of a new Carter Center-Ministry of Health office in 2018. (Photo: ²Ø¾«¸ó)

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