On the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Infancia Solidaria Foundation, the company Eboca has launched a collection of commemorative coffee cups. The initiative aims to raise awareness of the Foundation’s work and facilitate the gathering of support and collaborations through a QR code printed on the cups.
The Infancia Solidaria Foundation celebrates two decades of activity focused on facilitating medical operations for children from countries with limited healthcare resources. In this context, Eboca has joined the cause with an awareness action through a limited edition of coffee cups. The collection consists of six designs reflecting different aspects of the Foundation’s work.
The edition comprises 300,000 units that will be distributed in Aragón and Lérida, including centers such as the Miguel Servet Hospital in Zaragoza. Each cup incorporates a QR code that directs to the official website of the Foundation, where users can find information, become members, or register as volunteers.
Ramón Alejandro, an active member of the Foundation, emphasized the importance of this collaboration to raise awareness of their work. In its twenty years of existence, Infancia Solidaria has facilitated medical interventions for 630 children, most of whom are from Africa and Latin America. In the last year alone, the number rose to 125 interventions, highlighting the exponential growth of the project.
The Foundation’s operational model is based on three fundamental pillars: collaboration with Spanish public hospitals that offer annual quotas for surgeries, support from host families who accommodate children and their mothers during the medical process, and funding for international transfers. All activities are carried out by volunteer staff, with no administrative expenses, ensuring that 100% of the funds are allocated to the cause.
In addition to bringing children to Spain, the Foundation organizes surgical expeditions to countries such as Honduras, where volunteer medical teams perform operations in local hospitals and provide training to local healthcare personnel. The latest intervention of this type took place in February when a team of 15 Spanish healthcare professionals operated on 20 children in San Pedro Sula.
During the presentation, the model of child sponsorship was also highlighted, an initiative that promotes solidarity from an early age. Although it is the parents who bear the financial contribution, the children are the ones registered as members, thereby reinforcing the educational value of the project.
The campaign with Eboca seeks to mobilize both citizens and companies to collaborate. From small actions such as accompanying a child to the cinema, to taking on the role of a host family, any form of help contributes to ensuring that more children access vital medical treatments.