This is yet another way to contribute to the cause of children’s health, supporting the right to life of boys and girls across Brazil
Brazilians are recognized as a supportive people. According to the Donation Brazil 2022 survey, carried out by the Institute for the Development of Social Investment (IDIS, in Portuguese), 84% of Brazilians made a donation that year. This percentage includes cash contributions, allocation of goods and food, and volunteer work. Thirty-six percent of people who participated in the survey directed their donations to non-governmental organizations, such as Pequeno Príncipe Hospital, which continually needs society’s support to guarantee excellent and humanized care for boys and girls across Brazil.
To enable an increasing number of people to engage with its cause, the Hospital is constantly improving its support mechanisms. And one of the new developments in this sense is the Testamento pela Vida (Will for Life), an initiative that allows the donation of assets to the institution, through a will. In Brazil, this modality is still not very widespread, but in countries such as the United States, Germany and Spain it is already consolidated.
Through the Will for Life, Pequeno Príncipe is open to receiving donations of properties, cars, valuable items, money, financial investments, investments, and life insurance, for example.
To make this type of donation, the donor simply needs to choose the asset that wish to allocate to the Hospital and include this donation in the will, which needs to be registered with a notary.
As a form of gratitude, the Hospital immortalizes the donation by planting a native tree in the Árvores da Vida Alley, a space located on the land where Pequeno Príncipe North is being built.
Click here for more information on how to support Pequeno Príncipe through this modality (content only in Portuguese), or contact us by phone +55 (41) 2108-3890 or by email at dafini.boldrini@hpp.org.br.
Important! US-based donors can contribute with Pequeno Príncipe using tax benefits through our fiscal sponsorship fund by clicking here.
In the last two decades, from 2003 to 2023, more than 9,000 boys and girls were treated; sexual violence predominates among healthcare service
Survey shows that, for every US$ 20 spent on caring for these patients in 2023, the institution received US$ 11.38