MiracleFeet 2025 Annual Report_12.2

Page 1


Every

Step Tells a Story: 15 Years of

Transforming Lives

Simeon, age 5, walks with his father to their family’s fishing spot near their home. Since receiving clubfoot treatment at a MiracleFeet-supported clinic, he can now join in everyday childhood experiences like playing soccer with his friends and fishing with his dad.

Clubfoot Treatment: A Journey We Walk Together

Every child we support represents more than a statistic—they are a unique individual with a story, a family, dreams, and the hope for a healthy, happy life.

For 15 years, MiracleFeet has expanded access to quality clubfoot care worldwide. Finding treatment is a vital start in the journey toward walking, running, and living free from disability. However, beginning treatment is only the first step; completing it is equally essential. We celebrate both.

Simeon (pictured with his father) faced many challenges before finally receiving treatment for his clubfoot. His family first tried costly traditional remedies, but these have never been successful in treating clubfoot and Simeon’s experience was no different. Everything changed when his family learned about a new MiracleFeet-supported clinic 45 kilometers from their home. There, Simeon began Ponseti treatment, and before long, his life was completely transformed. Today, he’s an active, playful child with strong, healthy feet and a bright future.

Just as each child’s journey unfolds step by step, MiracleFeet’s mission has grown and strengthened over time. Fifteen years since we first began, we’ve refined our approach, built resilient systems, and deepened our impact. Like the children we serve, we’ve faced obstacles—from pandemics to today’s shifting global health landscape—but we continue forward with resolve and purpose. Simeon’s story reflects not only healthy feet, but also the fortitude, determination, and progress that have defined our 15-year journey.

One foot in front of the other, we walk together toward brighter futures filled with hope.

Celebrating 15 Years of Progress and the Future We’re Building Together

It’s hard to believe how far we’ve come in 15 years, from our first partnership in São Paulo, Brazil, to supporting treatment in 37 countries and 515 clinics today. This year marked our most impactful yet: 17,846 children began treatment, bringing our all-time total to 116,795.

Behind every one of these numbers is a story of transformation—children gaining strength, confidence, and mobility. To ensure these outcomes endure, this year we introduced Good Feet at Four, a powerful new metric tracking children through the end of bracing to ensure lasting, functional feet and a lifetime of mobility and independence.

While we are incredibly proud of what we’ve achieved together, we also recognize the difficult moment facing global health. Major cuts to development funding are creating ripple effects across healthcare systems worldwide. At a time when progress feels fragile, our mission offers something rare: proof that sustained, local investment can still create lasting change. Through pandemics, natural disasters, and political unrest, we have remained steadfast in our belief that every child deserves the chance to walk. Our work—eliminating a preventable disability by strengthening national health systems and building local capacity—matters more than ever as international aid contracts.

Clubfoot remains one of the most solvable challenges in global health. With your continued trust and generosity, we can ensure all children born with this condition can walk, run, and live a full, active life.

None of this is possible without you, our supporters. Your belief in our mission proves that highquality, cost-effective clubfoot treatment can, and will, be scaled globally.

Thank you for fueling this journey, and for your continued compassion and commitment to a world where no child lives with untreated clubfoot.

Sincerely,

Year at a Glance

17,846 new patients enrolled in treatment

1,400+ providers trained

60 new clinics opened

49 global partners across 37 countries

$10.2M cash raised plus $4M in future year pledges

1 new country program

8 new country partners

6 countries reached at least 70% of newborns with clubfoot

Côte d’Ivoire Zoumanssa, held by her mother, in the clubfoot clinic at Don Orione Centre in Bonoua.

Countries with MiracleFeet-supported clinics

Countries where MiracleFeet is reaching more than 50% of newborns with clubfoot

86% of newborns with clubfoot in Sri Lanka started treatment

139 Ponseti

trainings across 27 countries

a new record in clinical training

Paraguay drafted national clinical guidelines for clubfoot

a significant step in health system integration

Expanding Our World of Impact

MiracleFeet’s partners are reaching more than 50% of children born with clubfoot in Bangladesh, Nepal, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe and more than 70% in Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Morocco, Paraguay, Sierra Leone, and Sri Lanka.

Tanzania, Nigeria, and Bangladesh

each enrolled 2,000+ patients

All-Time Patients Enrolled

From 50 to 116,795 in 15 years

Early Detection: Bella’s First Steps

Every Step Matters: from Early Detection to Lasting Impact

At MiracleFeet, we’re driven by a simple belief: every child born with clubfoot should be able to walk, play, learn, and chase their dreams free from disability. Achieving this requires early detection, quality care, and consistent follow-up and support through the entire process.

After

treatment

I can truly live my dreams.”
—Stephen

Teah, 21

The best outcomes are achieved if clubfoot treatment begins right after birth when a child’s feet are the most flexible. Bella, born in the Philippines, started her clubfoot journey at only a few weeks old, making her MiracleFeet’s 100,000th child to enroll in treatment. Her feet were fully corrected before her first birthday and today she wears her brace at night and returns to the clinic regularly for checkups. Because she began treatment as a newborn, Bella has no memory of clubfoot—and no limits on what her feet can do or where they can take her.

Consistent, Quality Care: Raes’ Journey

Beginning treatment is just the first step— successful care requires follow-up through age four. Raes, MiracleFeet’s 50,000th patient, began treatment at just three weeks old in 2020, at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. He received care at a MiracleFeet-supported clinic in Uganda. This year he had his final appointment marking the end of treatment. His journey embodies the goal of our new quality indicator—Good Feet at Four—ensuring children complete treatment and achieve lasting mobility.

Long-Term Outcome: Stephen’s Future

For Stephen (pictured left), the impact of clubfoot treatment reaches far beyond walking and running. Treated as a child in Liberia, he’s now a talented soccer player, teaches elementary school, and is pursuing a degree in administration. His dream is to return to his home village and open a school, giving more children the opportunities he once longed for. Stephen’s story shows that clubfoot treatment is about more than correcting feet—it’s about unlocking potential.

Together, these three patients capture our vision of comprehensive, high-quality clubfoot care: detected early, treated completely, and resulting in lifelong mobility and opportunity. Every child deserves to take their first steps unhindered and walk confidently into a future free from limitations.

Training Providers, Expanding Access

Training providers is at the heart of ensuring clubfoot care is accessible and sustainable. This year we facilitated more clinical trainings than ever before, developing skills for 1,407 Ponseti clinicians at 139 trainings across 27 partner countries. An additional 131 clinicians participated in training through ACT Online, our online platform designed for learning Ponseti skills in low-resource settings.

Country-Level Clinical Trainings

Further, we organized regional Supportive Supervision trainings in Indonesia, Côte d’Ivoire, and Ecuador and a Train-the-Trainer course in Morocco to onboard partners with skills and expectations regarding clinical mentorship. Alongside peers from Mauritania, Senegal, Republic of the Congo, and Guinea, this Francophone Train-the-Trainer course equipped Côte d’Ivoire and Chad with their first ever Ponseti training faculty a major step forward in the sustainable expansion of clubfoot care in these countries.

To support enrolling children within their first year, partners held 212 Early Detection and Referral (EDR) trainings and an additional 34 Community Awareness sessions. In addition, the Pan American Health Organization’s (PAHO) online EDR training, launched in 2023, has now been completed by nearly 10,000 health workers, mostly in Latin America.

As trainers, we hope each participant returns to their respective country with new knowledge and experience to enrich their practice.”

—Dr. Irene Randriamampianina at the Francophone Supportive Supervision Training

TRAINING TYPE
Côte d’Ivoire
Dr. Wilson Koffi and Dr. Monsia Orange prepare materials before treating clubfoot patients in the village of Montezo.

Philippines

Yelena, held by her mother, was just a few days old when she received her first casts. Because clubfoot screening is being integrated into newborn care in the Philippines, her condition was identified at birth and she was referred to a clinic where she began care at no cost to her family.

Sustainable Care Means Integrated Care

Our work is designed to ensure lasting access to clubfoot treatment.

At the global level MiracleFeet raises the profile of clubfoot to influence international health policies and mobilize support. This year, we joined with several founding partners to launch the Global Action for Congenital Conditions (GACC)—a coalition advocating on behalf of the 8 million children born with congenital conditions annually to ensure they receive the care they need to survive and thrive.

At the country level we work with partners and governments to strengthen responsibility for clubfoot care. Together, we create clear, practical roadmaps that are already leading to major integration successes in several countries.

Philippines

Groundbreaking newborn screening pilots are now running across 94 clinics in three regions, ensuring more clubfoot cases are detected at birth and treated soon after. Additionally, national insurer PhilHealth expanded coverage to include weekly casting appointments which removes a financial barrier for families and indicates the government’s willingness to take on a larger share of clubfoot treatment costs.

Pakistan

The Punjab Health Department committed to provide 50% of treatment supplies for all clubfoot patients enrolled at program-supported clinics, and the neighboring Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province health department committed to covering 10%. The government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province also issued a directive requiring all public hospitals to screen and refer clubfoot cases to partner-supported clinics.

Uganda

The Ministry of Health is finalizing a national plan to improve care for children born with congenital conditions like clubfoot. This plan will make treatment part of the primary healthcare system, ensuring long-term, government-led care with clear treatment pathways, trained providers, and stronger data tracking.

Sri Lanka

The Ministry of Health is improving early detection by training midwives to identify and refer babies with clubfoot and help prevent treatment dropouts. Sri Lanka also released national guidelines establishing the Ponseti Method as the gold standard of clubfoot treatment.

Raising the Bar: Improving Quality

Successful clubfoot treatment depends on strong partnerships between clinicians and families—and on consistency, precision, and sustained commitment.

With a clear focus on these outcomes, we rigorously monitor treatment quality through key performance indicators (KPIs) tracked at the clinic, country, and global levels. This year, we continued to strengthen treatment standards across our global network of more than 500 clinics.

In addition to prioritizing strategies to ensure children complete treatment, we sharpened our focus on early detection and referral pathways to reach more infants since early treatment leads to faster and less complex correction. Prioritizing clubfoot awareness among healthcare providers who routinely see newborns and babies, rather than the general population, has proven highly effective: a large majority of our partner countries now meet or exceed our KPI for enrolling children in their first year of life.

Global Averages for Treatment Quality Indicators

Evaluations:

Voices from Parents and Providers

According to parents of MiracleFeet patients surveyed in 12 countries:

86% say their child can walk with little or no difficulty

97% say their child is enrolled in school

According to healthcare providers (affiliated with MiracleFeet clinics) surveyed in 28 countries:

99% say collaborating with MiracleFeet has improved their ability to treat clubfoot

98% say they are likely to recommend collaboration with MiracleFeet

Our Salesforce dashboards show treatment quality indicators for clinics and countries in real time.

From Passion to Impact: Supporters Step Up in Creative Ways

This year, MiracleFeet supporters found bold and creative ways to fuel our mission through peer-to-peer fundraising. From publishing a book about magical casts, to running across Scandinavia, to campaigns inspired by personal connection, these efforts are transforming compassion into lasting change for children with clubfoot.

The creativity and dedication of donors remind us that our mission belongs to everyone who believes in mobility for all. Every fundraiser, every community event, and every advocacy opportunity brings us closer to a world where all children born with clubfoot receives the treatment they deserve.

Born with clubfoot, Shaan knows firsthand the power of treatment. A visit to a MiracleFeet-supported clinic in Guatemala inspired him to start a fundraiser in support of MiracleFeet’s mission. At 16 years old, he’s raised over $50,000.

These kids might never walk without MiracleFeet. That could have been me. Let’s make sure every child born with clubfoot has a chance to take their first steps toward a better life.”

Svante, 20 years old and currently serving in the Swedish military, knows the vital importance of mobility. To support children born with clubfoot, he ran across Scandinavia—raising enough funds to treat 104 children. Every kilometer he ran increased clubfoot awareness and brought more children the chance to walk, run, and thrive.

Having seen MiracleFeet’s work in East Africa, I had more than enough motivation to keep moving forward every day.” — Svante

a portion of book sales to MiracleFeet to help ensure children around the world have access to the same treatment as

This journey has taught me even the tiniest feet can take the biggest steps toward something beautiful. I hope that children everywhere have the same chance to walk, run, and chase their dreams.” — Maria-Larisa

Inspired by her son Luca (pictured left), who was born with clubfoot, MariaLarisa Harris wrote The Magical Casts and Boots: A Tale of Little Feet and Big Adventures, a children’s book celebrating the journey through clubfoot treatment. Maria donates
Luca.

Our Partners

East Africa

Somalia

(SRCS)

OVCI la Nostra Famiglia

Tanzania

and Development for Health (MDH)

Uganda World Alliance for Lung and Intensive Care Medicine in Uganda (WALIMU)

Zimbabwe

Alexia

West & Central Africa

d’Ivoire Santé Espoir Vie – Côte d’Ivoire (SEV-CI), Initiative Développement Environnement Afrique Libre

de Médecine Physique et de Réadaptation de Madagascar (AMPR MADA)

Maliennes des Acteurs de la Readaptation Physique (AMARP)

Nigeria

The Straight Child Foundation (TSCF), Health and Development Support Programme (HANDS), Positive Care and Development Foundation (PCDF), PLAN Health Advocacy and Development Foundation, Women and Children Health Empowerment Foundation (WACHEF)

Republic of the Congo Association pour le Développement de la Réadaptation et du Bien Étre (ADRBE)

Lepra- und Tuberkulosehilfe

Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone National Clubfoot Program (SLNCP)

Togo

Programme des Incapacités Traumatisme et Réadaptation/ Centre National D’appareillage Orthopedique et de Reeducation Fonctionnelle (PITR/CNAO)

Middle East & North Africa

Chad

Maison Notre Dame de la Paix (MNDP), Secours Catholique et Developpement (SECADEV)

Mauritania

Association Mauritanienne pour la Santé de la Mère et de l’Enfant (AMSME)

Morocco

Association Premier Pas

South Asia

Pakistan

East Asia & the Pacific

Indonesia Yayasan Dokter Peduli (doctorSHARE), Pusat Rehabilitasi YAKKUM, Majelis Pembinaan Kesehatan Umum Muhammadiyah (MPKU)

Philippines

Philippine NGO Council on Population, Health, and Welfare, Inc. (PNGOC), Philippine Band of Mercy (PBM)

Fathers hold their children in the waiting room at Paraplegic Center Peshawar.

in the

Latin America

Hermano Miguel

Guatemala

Asociación de Padres y Amigos de Personas con Discapacidad (ADISA), Fundación Guatemalteca para Niños con Sordoceguera Alex (FUNDAL)

Asociación de Programas Integrales de Educación comunitaria Astrid Delleman (ASOPIECAD)

Centro de Empoderamiento de Personas con Discapacidad (CEMPDIS)

By ensuring children with clubfoot can walk, run, and fully participate in society, MiracleFeet is not only changing individual futures, but strengthening communities. It’s an extraordinary value proposition and a mission I am proud to support.”

—Katja Markus, donor and newest MiracleFeet Board member

Ecuador Fausto, age 9, rides his bike on a path near his home. He was treated by MiracleFeet’s partner, Fundación Hermano Miguel.

Trusted Stewardship

We remain deeply committed to transparency and the responsible stewardship of donor contributions—an approach that has earned us top ratings from leading nonprofit evaluators including GuideStar, Great Nonprofits, Charity Navigator, and CharityWatch.

This year, 80% of our total spending directly supported programs, while 11% was allocated to fundraising and 9% to administration. We are committed to helping more children by expanding our community of supporters and using our resources efficiently to maximize impact.

Panha was born with clubfoot and treated at a MiracleFeetsupported clinic as an infant.

AUDITED FINANCIALS

Funding the Mission

Our impact is made possible by the generosity of many. This year we raised $10.2M in cash and $4M in future pledges. Much of this year’s funding came from donors inspired by our 100,000th enrollment milestone and our commitment to reaching the next 100,000 children within five years. Another motivating factor is our impressive return on philanthropic investment, with the average cost to fully treat a child remaining low at $458.

Our strong record communicated through extensive data, comprehensive reporting, and compelling case studies helped build our fundraising base. As in past years, we received the majority of our funding from foundations and individual donors reflecting a strong and growing network of support built on transparency, efficiency, and trust.

Funds Raised by Year

Our Supporters

This report recognizes the generosity of donors in fiscal year 2025 (July 1, 2024 - June 30, 2025).

Harold and Debra Kuehler

$500,000+

Anonymous

Åro Eide and Georg Madersbacher*

GiveWell

Oak Foundation

Open Philanthropy

Schott Family Foundation*

Travis and Maryse Knight

$250,000-$499,999

Cartier Philanthropy

Henrik and Beate Fastrich*

Passport Foundation

Scott Sandell

$100,000-$249,999

Anonymous

Barzilai Foundation

The Fledgling Fund

Gordon and Llura Gund 1993

Foundation

Jennifer Ayer Sandell

Katja and Dirk Markus*

Martin and Alexandra Vorderwülbecke~

MiracleFeet Schweiz*

UBS Optimus Foundation

$50,000-$99,999

Burkhard and Gabi Wittek~

Clarks Shoes

The Cayton-Goldrich Family Foundation

CRI Foundation

Doneer Effectief

Elkins Davis Foundation Charitable Trust

John and Marsha Shields

The Komar Family

Pascucci Family Foundation

Pranav Gokhale and Erin Rieger

Shoe Zone

State Street Foundation

Tawingo Fund

The Zoffer Family Fund

$20,000-$49,999

Andrea and David Kennedy

Brian and Beth Tierney

Eileen Tunick

Ferroni Foundation, Inc.*

Jackie and Andrew Klaber

James and Veronica Baker

Kris and Craig Bahner

Lyle and Sarah Mullican

Mite

One Perfect Conundrum

Pragmatic Play

Richard and Shirley Wilt

Suzanne and Norman Sorensen

$10,000-$19,999

Albert and Judy Anderson

Anonymous

Bob Strawbridge

The Campbell Family Foundation

Carlson Family Foundation

Carmen Caneda and Richard Gilfillan

Cathy and Andrew Moley

Chesca and Rudi Colloredo-Mansfeld

Christopher and Elizabeth Lynch

David Riley

Diana and Steve Goldberg

Don Schoellerman

Gabrielle Layton

Hyman Family Charitable Foundation

Janet and Deonne Kahler

John and Lisa Jewett

Julia and David Popowitz

Lawton W. Fitt and James McLaren

Louis J. & June E. Kay Foundation

Mark and Jennifer Pavao

Michael and Laura Boutross

Michelle and Ross Cooper

Nicholas Pianim

Nicklaus Children’s Health Care Foundation

Paul Kostenuik

Phillip and Lindsey Albanese

Richard Bridgford

Shoshana and Doug Himmel

Wendy and Brett Fisher

$5,000-$9,999

Ann Geddes

C&P Levinsohn Foundation

Clifford L. Knight Foundation

Cromwell Harbor Foundation

Cure Ventures

CVS Health

Daniel and Jeannine Iott

David Jon Boehlke

Edwin Taylor and Carla Kirmani-Taylor

Franz and Anne Colloredo-Mansfeld

Hope Through L.I.F.E. Foundation

The James Family Foundation

John Vermylen

Jose Luis and Vera Regina Sorensen

Julie McDonald

Kathryn Clancy

Latha and Karthik Rammohan

Lewis Greenwood Foundation

Neel Bhatia

Oliver Karlin and Hemmendy Nelson

Pamela Murphy

Paula Oppenheim

Peter Leonhardt Stiftung~

Robert and Jodi Calton

The Robinson Foundation

Sandra Atlas Bass & Edythe & Sol G.

Atlas Fund, Inc.

Sara and Nash Murph

Steven Tollefsrud

Sylvie Mutschler*

Tobias Fuhrmann~

Troy and Michelle Wilkerson

Will and Genie Thorndike

$1,000-$4,999

Adam and Jake Cohen

The Alces Trust

Alexandra Hourani

Allison Leking

Amanda Gebhard

Amelia Reed

Amgen Foundation

Andrew and Emily Bary

Andrew Svatek

Ann D. Livingston

Anna and Chris Turner

Anthony and Jean Diekema

Apur Lathiya

Armin und Annekatrin Martin~ Austin Ziskie

Autokühler GmbH & Co. KG~

Beatrice Hallac

Becky Kleiner

Beth Whitney-Teeple and Bob Whitney

The Boeing Company

Bret and Stephanie Linford

Broadcom

Bruce Robinson

CADRAGE GmbH~

The Capital Group

Catherine and Edward Kouri

Catherine M. Key

Cathy Polinsky

Cboe Global Markets

Center for Audit Quality

Chris Latham

Christian Binder~

Christian and Pia Berner~

Cigna

Clifford Wong

Concept III

Cora Bronstein

Courtney Sullivan

Dale M. Pollock

Dan Diekema and Janet Andrews

Daniel and Jessica Baldwin

Danielle Simon

Daphne Sorensen and Mansir Petrie

David and Stacey Vermylen

David Dunagan

David Powell

David Spiegel

Dawn Diaz

Deloitte & Touche LLP

Dennis and Beth Goldstein

Diana Carrillo

Duke University

Duncan Berry

Edith Douglas and Thomas Savage

Edward and Janis Cherry

Elinor Hess and John Mozart

Elizabeth Jones

The Evangelical Luthern Church of The Resurrection

Fasnacht Family Foundation

Fergus Jordan

First United Methodist Church of Ft. Pierce Florida

Fontis Family Office GmbH~

Francine Bernard

Gans Orthopädie & Schuhtechnik~

Georg Schneider~

Greg Barr and Elizabeth Trippe

Hans and Ruth Dekker

Hector Perea

Heidi Fischer

Hugh Vergara

Ivy Pepper

James Kerr

James Martin

Jana Jensen

Janet Bridgford

Janice Capps

Jean England

Jennifer and Ralph Rossini

Joanne Cleary

Jodie and Andrew Baker

John and Margaret Witten

John Fox and Susan Brodsky

John Lisk

Joseph Kumar

Julia and Thomas Healy

Julie and Will Obering

Katherine Marques

Ken and Robbie Gerding

Kendra Elwood

Kenneth and Ying Tye

Kevin Starr and Pascale de la

Frégonnière

Kim and Joel Nitz

Kimco

Kirk and Abigail Feely

Köhler Ingeneurbüro TGA~

Krischan von Moeller~

Kristen Cohon

Kristina Arenz

Lauren and Paul Levitan

Lenore de Csepel

Leo McGrath

Lesley Meyer

Libeth Creek Fund

Linda Esler

Linda Lugo Gonzalez

Lisa and Thomas Corbett

Lisette Lyngaas Berg~

Little Blessings Foundation

Lois and Don Porter

Lydia Miller

Margaret Balitsaris

Margaret Nakamura

Mark Holtzer

Martha Angove

Mary E. Hall

Mary Kraus and David Uhlir

Mary Pruiett

Matt and Erica Posthuma

Michael and Diane Fournel

Michael Leonesio and Sharmila

Choudhury

Michael Maher and Jeanne Doornbos

Michael Nesbitt

Monette De Botton

Nancy Hury

Nick and Barbara Goettsch

Nicole Godino

Nicole Teuteberg

Nora Xu and Kyle Bjordahl

Norbert Lempert

Phyllis and Lawrence Sager

Pilar and Thomas Hartmann

Rahul Pathak

Richard and Kathleen Holmes

Robert and Linda Wilson

Robert and Maryline Cucchiaro

Robert McDonald

Robert Rutherford

Ron and Laureen Cooper

Ronald and Judy Carter

Sara and Domenic Presutti

Scott and Audry Rimland

Scott Keeter

Scott Schell

Shalini Mitha

Sheila Bonini

Simon and Wendy Parmett

Sissel Waage

Stadt Immenhausen~

Stephanie and Thomas Poletti

Steven and Karen Wing

Stryker

Suki and Ted Eyre

Sumanth Gargi

Surbhi Parikh

Susan Alesina

Susan Cates and Ed Warren

Susan Schell

Susan Toth

Susan Woodward

Thomas and Mabel Jurewicz

Thomas Davis

Thomas P. Konikowski

Tim Winslow

Timothy Glinski

Tom McLoughlin

United Way of South Central Michigan

Walker Poole

Williamsen Family Foundation

Wise Inc DDS

Zachary Kent

$500-$999

Aarati Martino

AbbVie

Abhishek Gupta

Adam Weiskal

Adam Zaffos

Alan Reid

Alan Young

Allan De Oliveira

Alysn and Jason Steinmeyer

Amanda Nguyen

Andreas Runemark

Angela Fitch

Ann Shrum

Anna Åhlgren

Anne and Byron Vandenberg

Anni Ahlstedt

Anonymous

Anton Hanebrink

Archarios Foundation

Ariane Cartwright

Arla Stark

Avery Swartz

Barbara Tittle

Beth Ellen Cohen

Betsy Hinshaw

Bhuvana Husain

Bloomberg L.P.

Brad and Addie Martin

Bryan Puskar

Byron and Deb Rosenstein

C. Jerome Lombardo Family Foundation

Carl Curtiss

Carol Choate

Charles and Betty Caravati

Charles Park

Charlotte Österberg

Chris Hamby

Christi Reeves

Christophe Glass

Christy Thomas

Cindy Hoisington

Constance Kossoff

Curtis Bowen

Cynthia and Donald Mangum

Cynthia Denison

Daniel Chapman

Daniel McNamara

Daniel Nowlan

Côte d’Ivoire

Sidonie and her son, Haniel, at their home in Abidjan. Haniel is currently in the bracing phase of treatment.

David Burd

David Naranjo

David Noonan

David Savage

David Stuntz

Deborah Belliveau

Debra and William Ball

Demetrios Kydonieus

Don and Mary Kay Hanson

Dora and Nevil Dean

Eileen Isaacs

Eleanor Dubinsky

Elizabeth Gregg

Elizabeth Rogers

Eric and Shanda St. Pierre

Ernest and Shirley Ferguson

Frank Baudino

Frank Ohrt

G. Barnes and Diane K. Stevenson

Gary Fender

Gladys B. Sullivan

Good Today

Greg Schmale

Harriet Stollman

Heather Russell

Henry Nieder

Howard Pitts

Jacob and Angela Kirkman

Jake Ebers

James and Nancy Kelleher

James B. Graham

Jamie Archambault

Jane Alley

Jane and Andrew Evancho

Janet Pressel

Janette Loeb

Janis Moffat

Javier San Martin

Jaydeep Patel

Jean Jacques Lesueur

Jeff and Betsy Newton

Jeffrey Cohen

Jeffrey Smith

Jennifer Borislow

Jeremy and Erica Kelly

Jeremy Moroff

Joan Kelly

Joan M. Roguski

Joe and Cathy Hatchett

Joe Santarella

John and Karen Lopez

John and Katherine Stoecker

John and Tammy Shields

John Fricke

John Santamour

John Steinberg

Jon Katze and Kathryn Deshpande

Jonathan and Joyce Smidt

Jordan Quinn

Joseph Padgett

Julie Magos

K.M. Wagner

Karen and Abhinandan Jain

Katherine McClurg

Katherine Mitchell

Kathleen and Peter Donofrio

Kayla and Kenny McWay

Kerry Michaels

Kim Nowell

Kimberly Drager

Kris Rodriguez

Krishna Kirpalani

Kristen Estocsin

Kurt Anstreicher and Jane Van Voorhis

Lakshmi Narasimhan Seshan

Leah Pellegrino

Lelia Toader

Lewis Milliner Jr

Linda Clarkson and Lisa Farrar

Linda Senat

Lucas Miller

Lucy C. Davis

Maggie Van Maanen

Manjari and Rajat Chanda

Margaret McGown

Maria and Leonard Connolly

Maria Mejia

Mark and Tonya Nelson

Mark Bulthaup

Mark Edick

Marshall Ransom

Mary Kelm

Matthew and Megan Burgardt

Merck Foundation

Merissa Rosenella

Michael and Danielle Lederman

Michael and Jenny Closter

Michael Ayers

Michael Mesler

Michael Vanic and Louise Berck

Michele and Richard Koster

Mindy Cohen

Molly Crombie

Monika Calef

Nancy and Fredric Fagelman

Nancy Bartram

Nancy Mansbach

Natalie MacConnell

Neha Joshi

Nisha Shajahan and Ravinda Weerasinghe

Orla O’Connor

Patricia Farrell

Patricia Jensen

Patricia Sampson

Patrick and Ainsley Lenihan

Paula Uttaro

Peggy Dasilva

Peter and Nora Sykes

Peter and Sherry Trezise

Pledgeling Foundation

Pooja Kamath

Rajendra Nagubadi

Rajinder Walia

Rajkumari Yabaji

Rakesh Patel

Ramneek Walia

Ramon Paez

Rex Ferry

Rickard Strömgren

Robert Lunn

Ryan Herman

Sally Segerstrom

Shane Giese

Sheila and Michael Mohr

Sheral and Chris Jensen

Shivani Sutaria

Srinath Desilva

Stephanie Ariane Brede~

Stephanie Dauer

Stephen and Kathie Jenkins

Stephen and Vivienne Sargeant

Stephen Davis

Stephen Gorman

Stephen Nichols

Stephenie Fahy

Stu Webb

Stuart Popowitz

Suhani and Krutarth Arora

Susan and Roger Samuel

Susan and William Reinsch

Susan Callow

Susan Meyers

Tammie Giles

Thijs Jan Noomen

Thomas and Joan Kaul

Thomas Clark

Thomas Kenney

Thomas Landy

Thomas Schubbe

Thrivent

Timothy E. Mason

Tina Bhatnagar

Tony Ling

Virginia Purcell

Will and Kristina H. Ferguson

Xiomara Ospina

Yvonne Halton

Zulfikar Ramzan

Fundraising Champions

Christopher Mosley (Mutant Metals)

Felix and Rafi B’nai Mitzvah Fundraiser

Isha Chauhan

Josef’s Birthday Fundraiser

Lauren Loeb

Mac Chase

Maya Lubell

Riaan Gorajia

Samuel Kuruvilla

Shaan Bhatia

Svante Österberg (Svante Runs for MiracleFeet)

Gifts-in-Kind

Apparo

Baker McKenzie

Google

Smith & Woldesenbet Law Group

Suncast Corp.

Donor Key

Contributions made through UBS*

Contributions made through MiracleFeet

Germany~

Our Leadership

Leadership Team

Daphne de Souza Lima Sorensen Chief Executive Officer

Anna Cuthel

Technical Director

Meredith Driscoll Director of Finance and Operations

Emmanuel Otoo Director of Programs

Susan Romanski Head of Strategic Partnerships

Katie Allison

Associate Director of Development

Dana Corbett

Associate Director of Development

Fernanda de Carvalho Geiger

Associate Director of Program Operations

Catherine Elkins

Associate Director of MEAL

Clifford Hakimi-Khiaban

Associate Director of Digital Systems

Justin McCarthy

Senior Advisor for Philanthropy and Partnerships

Nola Paterni

Associate Director of Marketing and Communications

Caroline Perkinson

Associate Director of Finance

Board of Directors

Åro Eide | Chair Managing Director, Emilia GmbH

Kris Bahner | Secretary

Senior Vice President, Chief Global Corporate Affairs Officer, Kellanova

Mark Pavao | Treasurer Managing Partner, Biotech Value Advisors

Joshua Hyman, MD | Medical Advisor

St. Giles Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, Columbia University

Chesca Colloredo-Mansfeld

Co-Founder and Former CEO, MiracleFeet

Michelle Cooper Speech/Language Pathologist

Hans Dekker* President, Community Foundation of New Jersey *stepped down in June 2025

Susan Eitel Physical Therapist

Carol Karutu Vice President, Programs, The End Fund

Jackie Klaber

Managing Director, Rockefeller Management

Katja Markus

Greg Schott Former CEO, MuleSoft

Daphne de Souza Lima Sorensen Chief Executive Officer, MiracleFeet

Medical Advisory Board

Joshua Hyman, MD | Medical Advisor

St. Giles Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, Columbia University

Bibek Banskota, MBBS, MRCS, MS (Ortho)

Executive Director, Hospital for Rehabilitation and Disabled Children (HRDC), Nepal

Robert Cady, MD

Emeritus Professor of Orthopedics and Pediatrics, Upstate Medical University

Matthew B. Dobbs, MD

Orthopedic Surgeon and Director of the Dobbs Clubfoot Center at The Paley Orthopedic & Spine Institute, Medical Director, Palm Beach International Surgery Center

Jennifer Eimers Everhart

Physical Therapist, Head of Scale Up, Global Clubfoot Initiative

Steven L. Frick, MD

Professor, Orthopedic Surgery, Associate Dean, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Charlotte Director, American Board of Orthopedic Surgery

Chris Lavy, MD

Professor of Orthopedics and Tropical Surgery, University of Oxford

Norgrove Penny, MD

Clinical Professor, Orthopedic Surgery Branch for Global Surgical Care, University of British Columbia

Coleen S. Sabatini, MD, MPH

Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, University of California San Francisco

Greg Schmale, MD

Associate Professor, Department of Orthopedics and Sports Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine

Rick Schwend, MD, PhD

Clinical Professor of Orthopedics, University of Missouri – Kansas City School of Medicine

David Spiegel, MD

Pediatric Orthopedic Surgeon, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, University of Pennsylvania

Anna D. Vergun, MD

Division Chief of Pediatric Orthopedics, Associate Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Lewis E. Zionts, M.D.

Health Science Clinical Professor Emeritus of Orthopaedics, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles

Daphne de Souza Lima Sorensen Trustee and Chair of MiracleFeet UK

Sarah Bowe

Compliance and Risk Officer, Gravis

Lucy Collis

Trustee, Youth Options and Bramston Foundation

Alex Gilbert

Former Managing Consultant, Team Consulting

Tom Godfrey

Co-Founder, Earth Change

107 Conner Drive, Suite 230 Chapel Hill, NC 27514

www.miraclefeet.org

Front:

Rizni, age 5, began clubfoot treatment at ten days old at a MiracleFeet-supported clinic in Sri Lanka. Today, he’s an active kid who walks to school each day.

Back: Miracle, age 5, and her mother outside their home in Liberia, where she received clubfoot treatment at a nearby MiracleFeetsupported clinic.

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