Rating reports
Key data
| Income | £1.4m |
| Programme ratio | 81% |
| Admin. expenses ratio | 9% |
| Fundraising efficiency | 9p |
Output
>22,000 direct beneficiaries provided with aids and services; >88,000 indirect beneficiaries
Reports
- Afghan Connection
- Africa Educational Trust
- Africa Now
- African Initiatives
- AfriKids
- Andrew Lees Trust
- BasicNeeds
- Blue Dragon
- Book Aid International
- Build Africa
- Cambodia Trust
- Excellent Development
- Health Unlimited
- Homeless International
- IMPACT Foundation
- International Childcare Trust
- MicroLoan Foundation
- Motivation Charitable Trust
- MSAVLC
- MyC4
- Nepal Leprosy Trust
- Pestalozzi Overseas Childrens Trust
- Prospect Burma
- Pump Aid
- Refugees United
- Riders For Health
- ShelterBoxTrust
- SolarAid
- Survivors Fund
- Target Tubercolosis
- Tools for Self-Reliance
- Tree Aid
- VETAID
- Vision Aid Overseas
- Women and Children First
• The Cambodia Trust addresses the poverty and exclusion caused by disability in low-income South East Asian countries.
• In Cambodia, there are an estimated 43,000 victims of landmines and over 50,000 affected by polio, leprosy, cerebral palsy, clubfoot, and other disabling injuries.
• The Trust supports practical projects to fit aids, treat with physiotherapy, and rehabilitate and train disabled people. It trains students in the fitting of artifical limbs and braces to ensure the long-term local availability of services.
• The Cambodia Trust promotes equal opportunities to education and employment so that disabled people can earn and learn, and break the cycle of poverty.
• The Trust has established training centres in Cambodia and in Sri Lanka to train regional students to fit prosthetic limbs and orthotic braces. A new centre is being set up in Indonesia. Capacity building work takes place in Timor L’este.
• 3 rehabilitation centres in Cambodia and 1 in Timor L’este provide prosthetic & orthotic devices, wheelchairs and physiotherapy. They rehabilitate disabled people into productive activity. The Cambodian centres are staffed by Cambodians.
• Community-based rehabilitation identifies barriers such as the need for ramps in schools. Training & small grants help disabled people start businesses.
• In 2008, over 22,000 people were provided with mobility devices and services to increase their mobility and opportunities. 86 students are currently being trained.
Previous page: Home
Next page: Ratings criteria