1 child cluster
Sub-clusters inside Wish Fulfillment for Critically Ill Children. Each card links to its own detail page; counts are rolled up through the whole subtree of that child.
3 orgs in this cluster's subtree
Every organization with primary activities in Wish Fulfillment for Critically Ill Children or any of its descendants. Click a column header to sort. Filter by name or state above the table.
| # | Organization | State | Revenue | Activities ↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | MAKE-A-WISH FOUNDATION OF AMERICA Make-A-Wish Foundation of America grants wishes to children aged 2.5 to 18 years old who are battling critical illnesses. The organization operates across the … | AZ | $128.6M | 5 |
| 2 | MAKE-A-WISH FOUNDATION INTERNATIONAL Make-A-Wish Foundation International is a global nonprofit organization that grants life-changing wishes to children aged 3 to 17 who are living with critical … | AZ | $6.2M | 2 |
| 3 | MAKE-A-WISH FOUNDATION OF KANSAS INC Grants wishes to children facing critical illnesses in Missouri and Kansas, providing hope and strength during treatment. The organization relies on volunteers… | AZ | $0 | 2 |
strategies used in this cluster
Theories of action extracted from orgs in this subtree. Click any to see the full set of orgs running the same approach.
- Therapeutic Gifting 3 orgsBy providing personalized, tangible gifts to children and individuals in crisis, we improve emotional well-being and foster resilience, because receiving meaningful, thoughtfully chosen items conveys care, dignity, and a sense of being valued during times of trauma, illness, or instability. This strategy centers on the intentional use of physical gifts—not merely as material support—but as vehicles for emotional healing and psychological comfort. What distinguishes therapeutic gifting from general charity is its focus on personalization, symbolism, and the emotional resonance of the item (e.g., stuffed animals, embroidered duffle bags, music, or pajamas), which together affirm identity, reduce stigma, and restore agency. Unlike transactional aid models, this approach treats the act of giving as a therapeutic intervention grounded in empathy and relational care.MAKE-A-WISH FOUNDATION INTERNATIONALMAKE-A-WISH FOUNDATION OF AMERICAMAKE-A-WISH FOUNDATION OF KANSAS INC
- Hope-Centered Healing 1 orgBy cultivating hope, joy, and personal agency through emotionally affirming experiences, organizations improve psychological and physical well-being, because positive emotional states activate resilience, neuroplasticity, and engagement in recovery and care. This strategy centers emotional transformation—not just clinical treatment—as the catalyst for health and recovery. It unites diverse organizations that prioritize subjective well-being (e.g., through wishes, joy models, narrative reframing, or peer hope) by intentionally designing interventions that generate hope, meaning, and anticipation. Unlike symptom-focused or purely medical models, this approach treats emotional experience as a primary driver of change, not a secondary outcome.MAKE-A-WISH FOUNDATION INTERNATIONAL
- Volunteer Empowerment Model 1 orgBy empowering volunteers with autonomy, training, and meaningful roles, organizations increase engagement and program capacity, because individuals contribute more sustainably when they feel ownership, grow personally, and align with the mission. This strategy centers on treating volunteers not just as labor sources but as co-creators of impact, investing in their development and matching them to roles based on passion, skill, or lived experience. Unlike transactional volunteer management, this approach builds long-term commitment through reciprocal growth—where the organization gains capacity and volunteers gain purpose, skills, and community belonging. It appears across diverse contexts, from equine therapy to thrift stores, unified by the belief that empowered volunteers amplify both social impact and organizational resilience.MAKE-A-WISH FOUNDATION OF KANSAS INC