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Dream House for Medically Fragile Children

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Dream House For Medically Fragile Children
Company typePrivate
Founded2001
FounderLaura Moore
Headquarters
Lilburn, GA Georgia
,
Websitewww.dreamhouseforkids.org

Dream House For Medically Fragile Children is an organization dedicated to dramatically reducing the number of medically fragile children in foster care while improving the quality of life for these children and their families.

Founding

In the fall of 2001, Laura Moore founded The Dream House for Kids, Inc. as a non-profit organization dedicated to establishing the resources needed to get medically fragile children out of institutions. Moore was trained as a pediatric intensive care nurse.[1]

The goal was to save these children from neglectful and abusive situations and give them the home, family and future they so desperately needed to live. As the organization continued to grow and develop, the name was officially changed in December 2002 to Dream House For Medically Fragile Children, Inc. and the focus expanded to the metro Atlanta Area to create the community support and partnerships necessary to develop and organize the needed resources for hundreds more children and families. Plans are currently underway to build a state-wide resource center in Conyers, Georgia to serve children and families from all over Georgia.

Development

The nonprofit benefited from a 2007 fundraiser headlined by Atlanta Braves baseball player Jeff Francouer, involving Delta Airlines' frequent flyer program, SkyMiles, donating the value of 25,000 Skymiles for each homerun hit by Francoeur during the season.[2] Delta Airlines is headquartered in Atlanta.

In 2008, for her work in the nonprofit, founder Moore was named a finalist in the Health-Care Innovation section of the 2008 Health-Care Heroes Awards.[3]

Its required filing for 2012 shows that the organization achieved revenues over one million dollars in 2010-2011, and had assets of $585,000 and net assets of 210,000 as of June 30, 2012. The report also states that the program would in the future change its program goal toward assisting families having their children at home on the weekends, rather than full-time.[4]

The organization was to hold an inaugural Valentine's dinner and dance as a fundraiser in Duluth, Georgia, a suburb of Atlanta, on February 8, 2014.[5]

References

  1. ^ "Dream House model helps kids, saves money". Atlanta Business Chronicle. May 28, 2007.
  2. ^ "Francoeur home runs to help Dream House for Medically Fragile Children". Atlanta Business Chronicle. Jul 13, 2007.
  3. ^ Martin Sinderman (May 12, 2008). "Setting standards of care for medically fragile". Atlanta Business Chronicle.
  4. ^ Template:Cite article
  5. ^ Meghan Kotowski (December 21, 2013). "Dream House to hold inaugural Valentine's dinner, dance". Gwinnett Daily Post.