Friends Without A Border

Charity Footprints Partner - Friends Without A Border

101 Avenue of the Americas, #943, New York, NY 10013 | Program Focus: Health

ABOUT THE ORGANIZATION

No parent should have to watch their child die because they can’t afford to save their life.

Friends Without A Border (Friends) was founded in 1996 after photographer Kenro Izu was in Siem Reap, Cambodia to photograph the Angkor Wat temples and wandered into a local hospital. While there, he witnessed the preventable death of a 7-year-old girl whose father did not have the $2 necessary to purchase life-saving medicine. Witnessing this changed his life and he, through FWAB, founded Angkor Hospital for Children, a free teaching hospital which has now treated over 1.5 million children, and changed all of their lives. In 2015, after turning over Angkor Hospital for Children to locals, Friends opened a new hospital in Luang Prabang, Laos. Laos has the highest child mortality rate in the region and a very high poverty level. Lao Friends Hospital for Children is also a free teaching hospital and treats over 30,000 children per year. We have homecare, a development clinic for disabled children, a neonatal department, a surgical suite and a thalassemia clinic to treat children suffering from this debilitating form of anemia, an ER, an outpatient ward as well as inpatient services and a critical care unit. We treat over 30,000 cases annually. We adhere to the "give a person a fish versus teach a person to fish" philosophy as well. We are training local clinicians both inside the hospital and in other districts with the goal of improving the quality of healthcare throughput the country, particularly in the north. Our goal is to reduce child mortality rates in the country and to teach a new generation of pediatricians.

Our Mission

We believe every child has the right to a healthy and loving life. Friends Without A Border strives to accomplish its mission by providing free, compassionate medical care to the children of Southeast Asia, by creating community health education programs , training local healthcare professionals, and by prevention programs to keep children healthy.