Aaron S. Luoma Fund for Global Equity

Aaron S. Luoma Fund for Global Equity

Aaron S. Luoma Fund for Global Equity Mission

The Aaron S. Luoma Fund aims to advance global health, reduce global disparities, and promote global equity.

This fund is intended to support the application of CBS principles by individuals or organizations operating in or residing in low and low-middle income countries.


Possible uses of this fund include (amongst others):

  • scholarships for individuals to obtain CBS-related training (such through attending the ACBS annual conference)
  • support of scientific research projects or research capacity building by investigators residing in low and low-middle income countries
  • support for organizations or individuals located in low and low-middle income countries to enable public health projects informed by CBS principles

 

About Aaron

Just because a person has died, their story doesn’t need to end. Aaron was one of the many people who walk this world as quiet revolutionaries, building bridges of love and compassion. He called himself a “citizen of the world” and identified with a global community above his identity as part of a particular nation, place, or group. Throughout his life, he worked to transcend geography, political borders, ethnicity, race, and other aspects of group identity. This fund is intended to continue that legacy.

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2023 ACBS Foundation Grant - Aaron S. Luoma Fund for Global Equity

2023 ACBS Foundation Grant - Aaron S. Luoma Fund for Global Equity

2023 Grant Recipient

Dr. Alice Morgan, Coordinator of Clinical Psychology at the Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia, and research team Rachel Lassman (Baby Ubuntu) and Michael Gumisiriza (Cohere) are proud to be the recipients of the 2023 ACBS Foundation Grant - Aaron S. Luoma Fund for Global Equity to complete a research project: Helping caregivers create Mighty Children: A Caregiver Support program for Children living with disability in a refugee camp.

The Mighty Children program is a 9 week peer support and education program for caregivers of children living with disability. Based off the Getting to Know Cerebral Palsy program, and with the addition of ACT techniques targeting caregiver wellbeing and resilience through mindfulness, gratitude and acceptance, Mighty Children has previously been found feasible and acceptable in a humanitarian setting in Afghanistan. This Foundation Grant will allow us to train expert-parents and community workers in a Refugee-led Organsiation to run the intervention in their community. We will then trial the feasibility and acceptability of the intervention for a refugee setting in Uganda for caretakers of children living with a disability aged 2-10 years old. It is hoped that with further investment this program may be rolled out in larger trials in across the refugee camps in Uganda and potentially other countries. 

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