CaringBridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
CaringBridge Inc.
Type Non-profit Social Network and Health Crisis Information Portal
Founded 1997
Structure 16 Board Members

66 Paid Staff as of 2012[1]

Leadership Sona Mehring, Founder

Tia Newcomer, Chief Executive Officer

Governance Bill McKinney, Chair of the Board
Field Health Crisis Support
Scope Provide communication portals to families and friends during significant health crises
Website www.caringbridge.org

CaringBridge Inc. is a charitable 501(c)(3) non-profit organization[2] established in 1997[3] which allows people facing various medical conditions and their family and friends to communicate. CaringBridge is the first non-profit social network with global reach whose mission is to connect loved ones during a health journey through personal, private websites. CaringBridge prioritizes privacy with no advertisements or selling of user data. People who are provided with an individual's personal website address (URL) and password can read updates on the individual's condition or post messages to the family as needed. CaringBridge is headquartered in Eagan, Minnesota. All CaringBridge sites are free and CaringBridge is funded by donor support. Since its inception, over 740,000 CaringBridge sites have been created by people all over the world.

Purpose[]

CaringBridge allows patients, caregivers, families, and friends to exchange information about a patient's medical condition on an ongoing basis.[4] The websites are designed to become conduits between patients, their families, friends, neighbors, and colleagues.[5] When visiting an individual’s website, visitors can post messages of support, donate to GoFund Me accounts, or send donations.

History[]

CaringBridge was created in 1997 by Sona Mehring when her close friend gave premature birth to a daughter.[6][3] The site was intended to keep family and friends informed about the child.

  • 1997: Sona Mehring creates the original CaringBridge website
  • 1998: More than 50 sites established on the platform
  • 2000: Donor support begins
  • 2001: Board of directors established
  • 2002: Nonprofit status granted
  • 2005: Donations reach $1 million
  • 2006: More than 5,000 sites established
  • 2007: First national media coverage
  • 2009: Spanish-language support added
  • 2012: 132,000 donors; 110 volunteers
  • 2021: Tia Newcomer replaces Liwanag Ojala as Chief Executive Officer[7]

Affiliations[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Prather, Shannon (June 25, 2012). "CaringBridge connects hearts". StarTribune. Minneapolis, MN.
  2. ^ "Exempt Organizations Select Check". IRS. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  3. ^ a b "About Us". CaringBridge. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
  4. ^ Burger, Kevyn (8 May 2020). "CaringBridge gives voice to patients, families: 'I am telling my story and I own it'". Star Tribune.
  5. ^ Jonathan Alter (8 April 2007). "Jonathan Alter: Living With Cancer in America". Newsweek.com. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
  6. ^ Mehring, Sona (2013). Hope Conquers All: Inspiring Stories of Love and Healing from CaringBridge. Center Street. ISBN 1455523070.
  7. ^ Smith, Kelly (10 June 2021). "Tia Newcomer named CEO of Eagan-based CaringBridge". Star Tribune.
  8. ^ National Health Council membership: NationalHealthCouncil.org website.
  9. ^ "Charity Report - CaringBridge - give.org". Give.org. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
  10. ^ "Community Health Charities". Community Health Charities. Retrieved 24 June 2019.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""