Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Tips Tuesday – Go Corporate!

Get your company involved in the Liver Life Walk! Creating a Corporate Liver Life Walk Team is a great way to build team spirit around the office, promote healthy living and to show the company’s community involvement at the same time. Hang posters around the office, pass out brochures and hold a registration drive in the cafeteria. Put together FUNdraising events to raise money for the team, such as a Coin War or sell a Jeans Day for a $1.


You can also request a Matching Gift form from your employer. The impact of your gift to the American Liver Foundation may be doubled or possibly tripled! According to a recent survey of nonprofit organizations by Robert L. Weiner Consulting, "29% of respondents reported raising over $250,000 in matching gift income in 2008. 63% raised over $50,000." Matching GIfts can account for a large part of fundraising - all you need to do is ask! Ezine Articles Matching Gift Information

Friday, June 26, 2009

Fundraiser Friday - Coin War

This week's Friday Fundraiser is a Coin War or Penny War. A Coin War is a fun and easy fundraising event with minimal costs and is great for an office, school or church - all you’ll need are a handful of buckets or jars to make this a very successful fundraiser! Everyone has change laying around, now they have a way to put it to good use. Bostson AIDS Africa quotes Elizabeth Goldberg, 9. "I like that we get to take extra change and give it to a good cause." Coin Wars also pull on people’s competitive drives by creating friendly competition. Recently a staff person from the NRC Picker office in Lincoln NE raised more than $700 for the American Liver Foundation through a Coin War by creating competition among each floor in the office. Everyone wanted to be part of the winning team, and it showed when the floor totals came in!


Instructions on conducting a coin war:

Success Stories:


According to The UMKULO Zone “One of the most interesting revelations of doing the coin war is how the students react. Most who stop and ask what we’re doing have a very positive reaction...The problem is just getting them to stop and ask.” To combat this issue, be sure to promote the Coin War to everyone around the office before it begins so they will be prepared to participate right from the start. Send emails out to the team, post flyers in the break rooms, set the buckets out upside down the day before to remind people to bring in coins the following day when the competition opens and be sure to send out updates on top teams so each team will continue to stay engaged.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Weekly Wellness - Biliarty Atresia

One in every ten thousand babies are affected with biliary atresia, which according to the American Liver Foundation is “a disease of the bile ducts that affects only infants. Bile is a digestive liquid that is made in the liver. It travels through the bile ducts to the small intestine, where it helps digest fats. In biliary atresia, the bile ducts become inflamed and blocked soon after birth. This causes bile to remain in the liver, where it starts to destroy liver cells rapidly and cause cirrhosis, or scarring of the liver.”

The cause of this disease is still unknown and until researches can determine the cause, they cannot find a cure. The Children’s Hospital notes that there is a surgical procedure that can be done as a course of treatment called the Kasai procedure where “blocked bile ducts outside the liver are replaced with a length of the baby’s own intestine, which acts as a new duct.” If the Kasai surgery is not successful, the only other option is liver transplantation.

To learn more about patients who have been affected by biliary atresia, visit Zander's, Gavin's or Matt's story. This children are facing a very serious disease and it is for people like them that we are raising funds every day.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Tips Tuesday-Online Fundraising Webpages

Each Tuesday, you'll find a new tip, technique or tool to use to help boost your Liver Life Walk fundraising success! Today, we'll focus on the use of personalized online fundraising webpages.

Each person that registers online for the Liver Life Walk will automatically receive an online fundraising webpage, making it simple for others to make a donation. Personalizing this webpage will educate others about why this cause is important to you and encourage them to get involved and make a donation. It's easy to add your personal story and a photo. For a great example of a Liver Life Walk team fundraising webpage - check out Logan's League!

Keep it simple and use the tools you have – online fundraising webpages make it easy! Online fundraising is on the rise. The eNonprofit Benchmark Study recently found that “the total amount of money raised online increased by 26 percent from 2007 to 2008.” What does this mean for you? Individuals are becoming more engaged in and more comfortable with online fundraising. If you make it easy for your donors to find your website, this growing trend will work in your favor!

Of course you will still have individuals who prefer to send a check. That's great too! However, it is probably most effective to offer both and offline and online option, while really focusing your efforts on the online fundraising. According to Fundraising Success, “Participants using online tools tend to raise six times more than those who don’t.”

Stay tuned tomorrow for Wellness Wednesday and a discussion about Biliary Atresia.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Weekly Wellness - Hepatitis A, B and C

Since it seems there are a lot of questions out there about the various liver diseases, I will include current events, updates and facts about different liver diseases. If you or someone you know has symptoms of liver disease, you should contact your physician immediately. As requested – here is some information regarding Hepatitis A, B and C. There are other forms of hepatitis, however they are much less common in the US.

The following information about Hepatitis comes from the American Liver Foundation. Information on Hepatitis can also be found on the Center for Disease Control website too.


What causes hepatitis A? Most cases of hepatitis A are caused by consuming food or water contaminated with fecal matter that contains the virus. Common causes of transmission include: Poor personal hygiene among people involved in food or meal preparation; Eating raw or undercooked shellfish that came from waters polluted by sewage; Failure to wash hands after changing a diaper or after using the bathroom.


What causes hepatitis B? The hepatitis B virus passes from one person to another through body fluids, such as blood, semen and vaginal secretions. The hepatitis B virus can be spread from a mother to her child during birth. Other common causes of transmission include: Sexual contact; Sharing needles among intravenous drug users; Sharing razors, toothbrushes or nail clippers; Being exposed to wounds, blood, or secretions from infected persons.


What causes hepatitis C? You can get hepatitis C if your blood comes into contact with blood from someone who already has the virus. The most common cause of transmission is the sharing of needles and other equipment used to inject illegal drugs. Less common causes of transmission include: Sharing a razor, toothbrush or nail clipper with an infected person; Accidental exposure to infected blood among health care or public safety workers; Exposure to unclean tattooing or body-piercing instruments; Unprotected anal sex or exposure to multiple sex partners; In rare cases, hepatitis C can be spread from an infected mother to her child at birth. It cannot be spread by breast-feeding. Before 1992 there was a risk of getting hepatitis C from blood transfusions. Now all donated blood is tested for HCV so there is almost no risk of getting the disease from blood transfusions.

Why walk?

History has shown that Walk events tend to be very successful fundraising events for nonprofit organizations for many reasons. Love To Know notes the top athletic fundraising events and some reasons why they are so successful.


Having been involved in planning some of these events before myself, I have seen the success stem from things like no barrier to entry – anyone can participate in this type of event; the use of online fundraising tools which allows for quick and easy solicitation of support; and the idea that people give to people, which I will explore a bit further today.


The reason that individuals can be successful at raising money on behalf of an organization is discussed on The Fundraising Coach website and Humane Fundraising with the idea that personal touch goes a long way. Humane Fundraising says to "Remember, people are giving to your group initially because you’ve pulled on a heart string and truly presented the idea with passion. That’s what gets them to bring out the checkbook." Think about it. You probably get dozens of generic direct mail and email pieces asking you to get involved, volunteer, or donate right? Which ones do you actually respond to? Most likely, it is the ones that are personal or the ones that came from someone you actually know.


This information can be an important starting point in raising funds for the Liver Life Walk. Personalize your requests and see how your audience responds. You can see an example of how I have personalized my own misfritz fundraising webpage and use that as a tool to invite others to donate and register to walk with us on event day.


Friday, June 12, 2009

Let's deLIVER results!

About ten years ago, I received a phone call with news that my brother had been diagnosed with hepatitis C. Although I knew this was not good news, I had no concept of what that really meant. He seemed healthy and strong. I never knew he was sick. It was this mindset that would continue for years to come for all of us.

Fast forward 7 or so years when my brother actually began feeling sick. He underwent a series of liver function tests and biopsies and uncertainty and had to face the possibility of transplantation. Eventually the doctors decided to begin a round of treatment. After 10 months of grueling side effects, he completed treatment only to discover that the virus was still persistent. Today, like many of the other 4 million Americans infected with hepatitis C, we hope for a new treatment option and another chance at a cure.

As a part of the American Liver Foundation (ALF) Liver Life Walk team, we have the opportunity to work toward achieving such a goal every day. As a part of this effort, I would like to use this forum to share tips, tools, resources, ideas and support with other Liver Life Walk participants.

Creating awareness of this important health issue is an important piece of this process, so I will also share information and resources as well. According to the American Liver Foundation, currently there are vaccinations for hepatitis A and hepatitis B, but none for hepatitis C. 8,000 - 10,000 people die of hepatitis C each year. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate within the next 20 years, the hepatitis C epidemic will cause more deaths annually in the U.S. than AIDS.


Additional statistics on the prevalence of liver disease from the American Liver Foundation
  • The liver is a vital organ no one can survive without it, but it is a silent organ, because unlike your heart that has a beat, your liver does not move or have any sound. Many people live with liver disease for a long time without ever knowing it because they have no symptoms of pain or sickness- until the later stages. The liver is the body’s largest internal organ and does hundreds of functions every day. The liver removes harmful substances from the body, makes bile to help digest fat, and stores energy.
  • There are an estimated 30 million people in the United States with liver disease…30 million is more than the entire population of people living in the 15 largest cities in the U.S. combined.
  • There are currently over 100 known liver diseases and liver disease does not discriminate it affects men, women and children of every age and nationality and from every social and economic background.
  • Liver disease is the ninth leading disease related cause of death in Colorado and across the entire United States with more than 42,000 people dying each year.
  • Approximately 15,000 children are hospitalized every year with pediatric liver disease or disorders.
  • Nationally there are nearly 17,000 people on the waiting list for liver transplants.
  • Biliary Atresia occurs in 1 out of every 10,000 live births. 90% of babies born with Biliary Atresia that receive both treatments and a liver transplant within the first 60 days of life survive! Early detection is key. Liver
As noted above, liver disease does not discriminate. Infants are born every day with diseases of the liver and have to fight to survive. Read Savannah’s story about her battle with Biliary Atresia:

It is hard to imagine what obstacles a liver transplant recipient goes through. Everyone's experience is different. Read one person's experience.