$318K in expenses
Mother-to-mother is a 4-phase, incentive-based, mentoring program whose mission is to reduce the occurrence of child abuse and neglect. Parenting or expecting stoddard county moms who are 24 years old or younger may enroll in the program. Mother-to-mother program services are designed on a strengthening families approach. Each staff member has completed the strenthening families' protective factors online training. Mother-to-mother services help families build their protective factors, which are parental resilience, knowledge of parenting and child development, social connections, concrete support in times of need, and social and emotional competence of children. Each participant is paired with a volunteer or staff mentor who models and encourages positive parenting behavior and acts as a confidant and advisor. The nurse educator provides education on pre/post natal health, breast feeding/nutrition, shaken baby syndrome, safe sleep, and immunizations, to parents, grandparents and other caregivers. Program staff and volunteers provide linkage to other services and monitor for early signs of family distress. Group meetings provide opportunities to participate in fun activities, learn from guest speakers about parenting topics, improve career soft skills, speak with area employers, and form social connections. Mother-to-mother moms complete monthly incentive forms with which they earn points by working, attending school, reading to their child, attending activities, and other positive behaviors. The points are used to purchase children's clothing, diapers, hygeine products, laundry detergent, toys, books and other items from the baby boutique. Participants may take food from the food pantry and adult clothing from the boutique weekly. Another component of the mother-to-mother program is education and career development. Moms who are in high school are encouraged to stay in school. Program staff members help participants who do not have their high school diploma study and register to take the high school equivalency exam. The foundation pays for the exam. Participants set education and career goals. Area employers work with the program to provide job listings and participate in career fairs. Phase i focuses on the pregnancy and preparing for the birth of the child. Phase ii begins with the birth of the baby. The focus shifts to post-partum health, caring for the baby, continuing school and/or developing a career. Phase iii begins with the child turns one. Participants agree to focus on education and/or career development activities. Phase IV addresses the needs of young parents who have completed their education and are employed but continue to need the emotional and/or social support of the program. Phase IV prepares the parents to exit the program. During 2024, a total of 40 families, including 40 moms, 26 dads, and 60 children participated in the mother-to-mother program. The mother-to- mother program is primarily funded by grants and donor contributions.
$94K in expenses
Prescription drug assistance program - this program helps the uninsured and low-income to secure prescription medications available through various pharmaceutical company indigent programs. During 2024 the volunteers and staff assisted 113 individuals in securing 803 prescriptions at a wholesale value of 2,068,665.
$3K in expenses
Healthcare related grants - to further its healthcare mission, the foundation provides grant funding to other healthcare related exempt organizations. Funds were provided to exempt organizations to assist in fire safety education and to meet other health related needs.
$6K in expenses
Scholarships - the foundation provides scholarships to encourage residents to pursue healthcare related careers. Scholarships totaling 370 were funded in 2024. Generic medications and special needs - the foundation assists some members of the community who meet 150% of the federal poverty guidelines with generic medications and special medical supplies such as incontinence supplies and nutritional supplements. During 2024 the foundation provided 4 individuals with generic medications valued at 1,145 and special needs assistance valued at 2,240 to 8 individuals.