Worldwide Service Project
An enormous challenge faced the Kiwanis family
in 1994 when it embarked on its first Worldwide Service Project, partnering
with the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), World Health Organization
(WHO), (US) Centers for Disease Control (CDC), local governments, and
salt producers, to work toward the elimination of one of the world’s most
prevalent public health problems: iodine deficiency disorders (IDD).
Thanks to the Kiwanis family and other partners,
more than 70 percent of households in the developing world now use iodized
salt. When the World Summit for Children took place in 1990, less than
20 percent of salt in the developing world was iodized. Heads of state
and government from more than 70 countries at the Summit set a number
of ambitious goals for children, including the goal of eliminating iodine
deficiency disorders by 2000.
In 2003, the Kiwanis family renewed its fundraising
efforts in order to protect more children
as well as build on its previous investments.
Raising funds was just a small part of the role the Kiwanis family played
in the partnership to eliminate iodine deficiency. Kiwanis-family members
around the world worked to sustain progress through advocacy, technical
expertise, and education about the benefits of iodized salt. All children
deserve the best possible start in life.
Imagine being one
of these children, a child beset by iodine deficiency disorder.
You might not be able to learn as quickly as others, and this could hinder
your chances of success in life without your even knowing why. Worse still,
you might suffer severe mental and physical retardation. Imagine being
the mother of a child who, without realizing it, is herself iodine deficient,
and thereby deprives her baby of iodine during pregnancy. Much of the
damage caused by iodine deficiency may be done before a child is even
born. If the future of a society lies in the health and talents of its
children, imagine how iodine deficiency hampers the development of entire
nations when, child by child, its young people are unable ever to reach
their full potential.
The Kiwanis family has raised more than $91
million to virtually eliminate iodine deficiency from the face of the
earth and insuring children a smart
start in life.
Today, contributions to the Kiwanis International
Foundation’s endowment for the Sustainability of Universal Salt Iodization
(IDD) help protect the Kiwanis family’s investment to virtually eliminate
iodine deficiency. The Foundation also lends its support of this effort
through its Tablet of Honor
and George F. Hixson Fellowship
contribution programs.
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