Monday 21 May 2012

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We support people living through the challenges of life-changing illness. We support people in our residential and day centres, day clinics, in the community or at home. We help people affected by cancer, multiple sclerosis, Huntington's disease, Parkinson's disease, motor neurone disease, stroke, brain injury and life changing illnesses.


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Sue Ryder's international work provides health and social care to vulnerable communities in Europe and Africa.

Village in Malawi

Trusts & Foundations -

Grants from charitable trusts and foundations are essential to us, and the people we work with. Through their invaluable support, charitable trusts and foundations have enabled us to provide essential healthcare to those who would not otherwise receive it.

If you would like to find out more about how a charitable trust or foundation could help support Sue Ryder's international work, please contact Rachel Bennett, Fundraising Manager on 0207 554 5962 or rachel.bennett@sueryder.org

What your donation can do

£15 would enable a person with epilepsy in Malawi to receive medication for the year
£30 would cover the cost of providing pain relief medication to a person living with cancer in Albania
£10 would support a community volunteer in Malawi for a year
£100 would provide arts therapy activities for people living with dementia in Czech Republic
£275 would cover the cost of a mobile rural clinic in Malawi, providing essential asthma and epilepsy medication 

Donate to our international work (and tick the international box)

If you would like to support our efforts to provide care to people where it is needed most, email international@sueryder.org or telephone our international team on 0207 554 5962.

 

Latest News


New research shows people relying on charity shops to get through the recession, as charities join forces in major national campaign to get more donations through the door


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People in Britain could risk missing out on having their end of life wishes met and leaving a mess for those close to them, according to a new study commissioned by the Dying Matters Coalition (of which Sue Ryder is a member of).


read more