- DTCare in Ukraine | Emergency Response -

 Emergency Relief Assistance in Ukraine

DTCare's Urgent Response and Ongoing Support for War-Torn Communities

War erupted in Ukraine on February 24, 2022, when Russia invaded the country with a missile strike that reached as far as Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine. In the days that followed, Europe’s largest refugee crisis unfolded since World War II, with millions of Ukrainians fleeing the escalating conflict and seeking safety in bordering countries. Refugee and displaced numbers vary, but an estimated 14 million Ukrainians are seeking refuge in neighboring countries, while over 6 million displaced citizens are within Ukraine. Several large cities are caught in the crossfire of Russia’s advance.

Bombs are leveling entire neighborhoods, and shelling is devastating schools and hospitals, forcing families to evacuate—of which many are women and children. Although Russia has successfully overtaken some parts of Ukraine, other large cities are holding their ground despite Russian attempts to take control and demoralize habitants. The effects of war have devastated parts of the country and ripped countless families from their homes–and lives–in Ukraine. DTCare is committed to providing critical relief and long-term support to the citizens of Ukraine in Ukraine and Poland.

Down to the

Numbers

36K+

MREs and food boxes

110K+

feminine hygiene supplies

9000+

plush and STEM toys

20K+

clothing articles and shoes

350+

pallets of medical supplies

Humanitarian Aid Delivery

DTCare Delivers Critical Aid to Ukraine During Russian Invasion

DTCare specializes in international humanitarian relief distribution and medical program implementation. We operate on four continents and provide critical support globally to civilians, veterans, and first responders. DTCare collaborates with DTGruelle, a logistics shipping company, and an extensive network of logistics experts to deliver essential humanitarian aid to remote and conflict-ridden regions. We launched our Ukrainian Crisis Relief Campaign directly after Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022 to establish and reinforce new partnerships and provide emergency assistance. DTCare commonly transports over 20 air and ocean freight shipments internationally annually to assist vulnerable populations with medical supplies, mobility aids, educational supplies and toys, winter clothes and cold weather gear, MREs and food packs, as well as hygiene items and feminine hygiene products. DTCare has delivered extensive humanitarian aid to the citizens of Ukraine through numerous air freight and ocean freight shipments and is committed to making a positive impact over the long term.

International Shipping and Logistics

DTCare Leads the Ethical Delivery of Humanitarian Aid to Ukraine

DTCare specializes in providing critical assistance to conflict and crisis areas worldwide. We arrange, store, and transport goods according to international standards, complying with customs laws in Ukraine. DTCare procures and distributes essential supplies, including medical, MREs, feminine hygiene, and hygiene items. We partner with experienced freight forwarders and international logistics experts to deliver humanitarian aid safely to Ukraine, and our distribution system is designed to ethically deliver aid based on local needs assessment. DTCare actively seeks feedback from the communities we support and adheres to strict reporting standards for accurate and transparent reporting.

International Logistics

DTCare collaborates with the logistics-based shipping company DTGruelle, which specializes in international freight forwarding, and logistics partners enables DTCare to provide critically needed support to some of the most austere and conflict-ridden parts of the world.

Warehousing and Storage

DTCare provides humanitarian logistics services and warehousing in Ukraine. With warehouse facilities in Pittsburgh, Kyiv, and Mykolaiv, DTCare can receive, store, and load cargo. Adherence to reporting standards ensures detailed tracking of supplies entering and leaving our facilities.

Customs Compliance

DTCare is enrolled in the Ukrainian customs portal. We file monthly reports based on data collected through our aid delivery tracking system. We implemented an improved tracking and distribution system in Ukraine to ensure aid is transported to groups based on local needs assessments.

DTCare Takes Trip to Ukraine to Meet Partners and Assist in Local Relief Efforts

During the year, DTCare visits our regional locations worldwide. Recently, DTCare went to Ukraine to oversee current and upcoming projects, meet with partners, distribute supplies from our newly arrived humanitarian shipments, and aid our fellow partners and those affected by the Kakhovka Dam flooding.

The trip commenced in Krakow, Poland, where DTCare presented at the WeAct Forum. The Forum united scouting organizations in over 30 countries and international relief organizations to share their experiences and involvement in humanitarian work. DTCare was honored to present on our art therapy and psychological first aid program in Ukraine alongside other notable organizations at the Forum.

After spending a few days in Poland during the WeAct Forum, DTCare went to Lviv to visit our partner, Care in Action, a Ukrainian nonprofit. Together, we offer free mental health resources for children living in orphanage settings. We witnessed an art therapy session at the Care in Action Creative Hub, where an art therapist worked with six children who attended a preschool program.

On June 14, DTCare met with Veronika Shevchuk, an art therapist who has relocated to Lviv from Nova Kakhovka in the Kherson region. Veronika accepted a full-time position at DTCare to expand art therapy programs with orphaned and at-risk children in Lviv.

That afternoon, Care in Action invited us to visit one of the family-style orphanages they support. At the home, Kateryna raises ten children and has helped to raise five additional youth who have aged out of the program and are attending universities. Family-style orphanages provide children with the benefits of experiencing the concept of family supporting each other and helping to keep sibling pairs together. Five of the children currently living with Kateryna are biological siblings. In eastern Ukraine, family-style orphanages have been set up to support children whose parents still live in occupied territories but want their children to escape. Care in Action manages programs to support foster families helping these children in Dnipro.

Kateryna and her family will participate in a 4-day camp sponsored by Care in Action, where they will experience traditional camping activities such as hiking, cooking outdoors, and family team-building activities. Art and music therapy programs will also be offered daily for children and caregivers by DTCare's therapy partners. The camp is sponsored by donations from PURC (Pittsburgh Ukrainian Relief Coalition) and St. George’s Ukrainian Catholic Church in Pittsburgh. DTCare sponsored a second week of this camp for families this year, doubling the number of children who will have this experience.

After Lviv, DTCare traveled to Odesa to meet with our art therapists before traveling to Mykolaiv to support our partners as they work to help households and animals affected by the Kakhovka Dam flooding.

DTCare, alongside members from the Sunflower Project, arrived in Mykolaiv on Friday, June 16th, to begin planning an aid run. The Sunflower Project had already been working on dam relief and recovery missions since the dam's destruction on June 6th, including water rescues. The team used their database of local towns needing aid, called community leaders, and compared needs against the supplies they had on hand to locate which village to visit. The following day, on June 17th, we joined the Sunflower Project on an aid delivery run to the small town of Antonivka, near the destroyed Antonovskiy Bridge. North of the former bridge, the town currently has approximately 1,200 people.

The village was occupied by Russian troops that were forced back across the river. Yet, they continue to face daily shelling, and the residents have been without running water, electricity, and gas for over seven months. By communicating with other local NGOs, the team was aware that another group had recently delivered water to the town, and by conferring with community leaders, they could customize the delivery to include the items most in need by the community. After hearing that the town desperately needed pet food, the Sunflower Project stopped at a shop on the way to Antonivka and purchased bags of food for dogs and cats. The team delivered 142 family food kits, 150 blankets, and pet food. After the delivery, local NGOs were updated on the supplies delivered to keep track of deliveries and ensure small towns receive aid equitably. The majority of the buildings in the town show signs of war damage and flooding. However, residents still joyfully invited us and our partners to lunch in the town's restaurant and even packed take-home boxes for the Sunflower Project. Even though this trip was the Sunflower Project's first relief mission to Antonivka, the town has already added to their monthly rotation of deliveries.

DTCare is working diligently to find trained art therapists in Mykolaiv and Kherson who can join the Sunflower Project on aid runs in the future. While aid is distributed to towns in the region, mental health professionals can meet with families in the community to provide psychological first-aid and support. With our donors' help, DTCare has transferred over $1,000 of critically needed funds to the Sunflower Project to help with emergency evacuations and aid delivery. The Sunflower Project has shared that these funds have been allocated to purchase supplies and rent additional vehicles, enabling them to deliver more aid and evacuate people in need. DTCare is currently arranging a truck of diapers, MREs, and boots for delivery to the Sunflower Project to further help in this region.

Photos by DTCare & Oro Whitley, 2023.

How far $5,000 takes our boots on the ground in Ukraine

DTCare is proud to share that our contribution of $5,000 to The Sunflower Project has gone towards helping isolated towns and residents in Ukraine. We are dedicated to providing dignity, hope, and aid to those affected by the ongoing conflict, and this donation has been an incredible step in doing just that. With the help of our generous community, DTCare was able to allocate much-needed funds to The Sunflower Project, enabling emergency trips to three towns that had been previously occupied and damaged. This donation provided assistance to those who would have otherwise not been able to receive any help as they work to rebuild their homes.

"Thank you for your $5,000 donation to The Sunflower Project. We used the funds for [several] of our projects, but mainly to support towns and villages in the Mykolaiv and Kherson Oblasts. We have warehouses in three cities in Ukraine: Kyiv, Mykolaiv, and Kherson. [Most] of our supplies come into Kyiv and must be transported to the south for distribution. A large portion of your donation [was] spent on fuel and vehicle maintenance to move supplies closer to our area of operation. The remainder of your donation is being spent on fuel and additional supplies requested by the villages we support. The village of Blahodatne in Mykolaiv Oblast is one of our main recipients. This village was occupied by Russian forces for 8 months after a brutal ground and air assault that left no buildings intact. A small number of residents have returned since the town's liberation and are attempting to rebuild. We continue to supply the residents with building materials, animal feed, petrol and diesel fuel, tools, phones, hygiene kits, and generators, mostly paid for by your donation. We also spent some of your funds on transportation to help a resident who ran over a mine while driving his tractor in the surrounding fields. In addition to Blahodatne, we have purchased supplies, including hygiene products, flea tick and worm treatments for animals, flashlights, and fresh produce for the villages of Zorya, Shevchenkove, and Sofiivka. Your donation allowed us to supplement the supplies coming from other partner organizations (like Greater Good Charities) with goods we could not have sourced otherwise. [The Sunflower Project] and the residents of Mykolaiv and Kherson Oblasts are deeply grateful for your support." - Kevin Raison, Co-director of The Sunflower Project

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Humanitarian Crisis Response

Providing Critical Relief for Displaced Ukrainians and Vulnerable Populations

In working closely with the logistics experts at DTGruelle, our US-based partners, and NGOs that are already on-ground in the affected regions, including the Ukrainian Navy, Polish Guiding & Scouting Association, Darkhorse Benefits, and the Rotary District 6600’s international arm MESA, DTCare is able to send emergency relief shipments of personal- and feminine hygiene products, first-aid supplies, food, and daily essentials to support displaced Ukrainians in Poland and Ukraine. With the help of our partners, donors, and volunteers, we sent 23 humanitarian shipments (18 air freight and 5 ocean freight shipments) to Ukraine and Poland in 2022 and 16 humanitarian shipments (6 air freight and 10 ocean freight shipments) to Ukraine in 2023. In total, DTCare has sent close to a million dollars worth of over 280,000 pounds of humanitarian supplies to assist Ukrainian citizens, including more than 700 emergency first-aid kits, 360 pallets of medical supplies, 110,000 feminine hygiene products, 36,000 ready-to-eat meal packs (MREs), and 9,000 toys since the war began.

IFAKs

Pallets of Medical Supplies

20,000+

9000+

Clothing Articles and Shoes

Toys

360+

700+

36,000+

110,000+

Meal Packs

Period Products

DTCare sent 41 relief shipments of over 280,000 pounds (130,000 kilos) to aid Ukrainians to date

7 March 2022 - Personal care packs & feminine hygiene products to Jaroslaw, Poland - in partnership with the ZHP
20 March 2022 - Personal care packs & feminine hygiene products to Lviv, Ukraine - in partnership with the ZHP
23 March 2022 - Ready-to-eat meal packs (MREs) to Jaroslaw, Poland - in partnership with the ZHP
20 April 2022 - Medical & hygiene supplies to Jaroslaw, Poland - in partnership with the ZHP & Brother’s Brother Foundation
6 April 2022 - MREs & Individual First Aid Kits (IFAKs) to Lublin, Poland - in partnership with the Victor Pinchuk Foundation
11 April 2022 - Medical supplies, personal care packs, & feminine hygiene products to Jaroslaw, Poland - in partnership with the ZHP
22 April 2022 - IFAK’s, MRE, hygiene-, & medical supplies to Lublin, Poland - in partnership with the Victor Pinchuk Foundation
25 April 2022 - MREs, personal care packs, & hospital supplies to Brzeg Dolny, Poland
25 April 2022 - MREs, medical supplies, personal care packs, & clothes to Lublin, Poland - in partnership with the Brother’s Brother Foundation, Concordia Medical Equipment & the Victor Pinchuk Foundation
27 April 2022 - MREs, medical supplies, & personal care packs to Lublin, Poland - in partnership with the Victor Pinchuk Foundation
11 May 2022 - MREs, medical supplies, & personal care packs to Lublin, Poland - in partnership with the Victor Pinchuk Foundation
26 July 2022 - MREs, medical supplies, personal care packs, & feminine hygiene products - in partnership with the ZHP
7 June 2022 - Medical supplies & personal care packs - in partnership with Ukrainian Unity & Brother’s Brother Foundation
8 June 2022 - MREs, personal care packs, & baby diapers to Jaroslaw, Poland - in partnership with the ZHP
1 August 2022 - Medical supplies to Odesa, Ukraine - in partnership with the ZHP
8 August 2022 - Feminine hygiene, baby formula, toys, & first-aid supplies to Jaroslaw, Poland - in partnership with the ZHP
• 10 August 2022 - Baby formula, first-aid, baby diapers, personal hygiene, & toys to Jaroslaw, Poland - in partnership with the ZHP
• 2 November 2022 - Blankets, baby diapers, books, camping gear, hygiene kits, & IFAKs to Jaroslaw, Poland - in partnership with the ZHP
• 15 November 2022 - Wipes, mobility aids, winter’s clothing, blankets, medical supplies, and hygiene supplies to Jaroslaw, Poland - in partnership with the ZHP
• 16 November 2022 - Winter’s clothing, medical supplies, personal care packs, blankets, and art supplies to Jaroslaw, Poland - in partnership with the ZHP
• 30 November 2022 - Holiday children’s gift boxes, winter’s shoes, and winter’s coats to Radom, Poland - in partnership with the ZHP
• 27 December 2022 - Children’s aid and toys Radom, Poland - in partnership with the ZHP
• 29 December 2022 - Winter and thermal clothing and essentials to Warsaw, Poland - in partnership with Atlas Global Aid and the ZHP
• 11 January 2023 - RecPak meal replacement drinks - in partnership with Atlas Global Aid, RecPak, and the ZHP
12 January 2023 - Medical and hospital supplies - in partnership with the ZHP and Rotary District 6600’s international arm MESA
12 January 2023 - Baby and winter supplies - in partnership with the ZHP and Rotary District 6600’s international arm MESA
18 January 2023 - MREs - in partnership with the ZHP and Brother’s Brother
7 February 2023 - Winter supplies, hygiene supplies, and Liquid IV - in partnership with the ZHP
7 February 2023 - Medical supplies, winter supplies, and toys - in partnership with the ZHP
10 February 2023 - RecPak, arts and crafts supplies, and car parts - in partnership with RecPak and the ZHP
17 February 2023 - MREs - in partnership with the NOSU Scouts
9 March 2023 - MREs and children’s aid - in partnership with the Brother’s Brother Foundation, Sunflower Project, and Andreev Family Foundation
18 April 2023 - Medical and children’s aid - in partnership with Medicines for Ukraine
28 April 2023 - Adult diapers - in partnership with the Rotary District 6600’s international arm MESA
28 April 2023 - Medical, first-aid, and mobility aid - in partnership with the Rotary District 6600’s international arm MESA
6 July 2023 - Medical supplies, hospital furniture, children's items, and diapers - in partnership with the Sunflower Project
21 September 2023 - Hospital supplies and rehabilitation supplies - in partnership with the Sunflower Project
10 October 2023 - Hospital supplies, winter items, and over 6,000 plush toys - in partnership with the Sunflower Project and Play It Forward Pittsburgh
5 December 2023 - Children’s holiday shoeboxes for the festive season - in partnership with Play It Forward Pittsburgh
24 December 2023 (arrives February 2024) - Mobility equipment, children’s items, and hospital supplies
7 February 2024 (arrives April 2024) - Mobility equipment, children’s items, medical supplies, and 50,000 feminine hygiene products
1 March 2023 (arrives April 2024) - Mobility equipment, children’s items, hospital supplies, incontinence products, and art therapy supplies

Rapid Rescue Mission to Help Those Affected by the Kakhovka Dam Disaster

In 2023, the Kakhovka Dam in Ukraine collapsed, leading to massive flooding that resulted in devastating consequences for the region. Over 42,000 people were displaced, and homes, businesses, and critical infrastructure like river beds, banks, harbors, docks, and bridges were destroyed. The dam's collapse also caused the contamination of nearby water systems with 150 tons of machine oil, which drained into the Black Sea, posing a significant threat to the population and the environment. The long-term effects of the severe flooding are expected to cause further environmental damage, such as the loss of irrigational channels and underwater farmland. To assist those most affected, the Sunflower Project and DTCare launched a Rapid Rescue Mission campaign that provided emergency assistance, including medical supplies, food, and evacuation support for people and animals.

Ukraine Kakhovka Dam Collapse

The Ukrainian Kakhovka Dam Disaster: 24,000 Acres of Farmland Underwater and Thousands of Families and Animals Displaced

The catastrophic Ukrainian Kakhovka Dam disaster in June 2023 will leave a sinister legacy in its wake for generations to come. The dam wall collapse triggered an enormous flood, devastatingly impacting the region, displacing more than 42,000 people, and demolishing houses, businesses, and other vital infrastructure, such as river beds, banks, harbors, docks, and bridges. The dam's collapse contaminated the water system nearby—a staggering 150 tons of machine oil drained into the Black Sea, posing a severe threat to the population and environment in the area. Although the destruction of people's livelihoods and homes is catastrophic in the short term, the long-term damage caused by the relentless flooding is bound to cause further environmental distress. For example, numerous fields on the cusp of a new harvest will no longer have the necessary irrigational channels, and nearly 25,000 acres of farmland in Kherson are now underwater. The wildlife in the southern region of Ukraine has been decimated, with thousands of animals killed outright and their natural habitats destroyed. Ihor Medunov, a local Ukrainian hunter and fisher who lives a little upstream of the disaster, told Los Angeles Times reporters: "The water is leaving before our eyes. Everything that was in my house, what we worked for all our lives, it's all gone. First, it drowned; then, when the water left, it rotted." (Los Angeles Times, 2023)

To help those affected by the disaster, DTCare and The Sunflower Project have launched a Rapid Rescue Mission campaign. The campaign provides emergency assistance, including medical supplies, food, and evacuation support. To support the Rapid Rescue Mission, you can click here to donate or spread the word about the campaign on social media and in your local community.

Medical Supplies for Ukrainian Hospitals

DTCare and Rotary District 6600's MESA partnership delivers life-saving supplies to those affected by conflict

Through our partnership with the Rotary District 6600’s international arm MESA, DTCare continues to transport and distribute tens of thousands of critical medical supplies to hospitals, first responders, and partner groups in Ukraine to aid injured civilians and veterans.

Most notably, we work with state-run and private hospitals and clinics in the Vinnytsia, Ternopil, Chudniv, Irpin, Kherson, and Zhytomyr regions and emergency response organizations, including the Sunflower Project, Ten Men Project, and Valkyrie Rescue to provide essential and life-saving supplies to hospitals desperate for supplies and populations most affected by the conflict.

To date, DTCare successfully sent and distributed 41 relief cargoes to Ukraine and Poland of over 280,000 pounds of hospital supplies, mobility aids, child and school supplies, and food aid to assist IDPs and other vulnerable communities across Ukraine and refugees in Poland.

Ukraine Children’s Aid

Joining Forces for Ukraine's Children: How DTCare and Partner Organizations are Making a Difference

Before the war, Ukraine had an estimated 91,000 children in institutional orphanages, and authorities are still working to determine how much that number has climbed to date, reported the New York Times. However, what is apparent is that additional support for children, parents, foster homes, orphanages, and hospitals is vital as the conflict continues to displace Ukrainian children. DTCare is working alongside Ukrainian healthcare providers and nonprofit organizations to provide aid and support to children in Ukraine.

By joining forces with the Polish Scouting & Guiding Association, Care in Action, The Sunflower Project, Sal's Shoes, and Andreev Family Foundation DTCare sent over 1,196 pairs of shoes, hundreds of winter essentials, arts and crafts supplies, toys, and first-aid supplies to help children in Ukraine and Poland. We proudly continue to work alongside The Sunflower Project and Care in Action in Ukraine to distribute aid to isolated hard-to-reach towns most impacted by the ongoing conflict and destruction. Critically needed supplies are distributed quickly and effectively through their combined extensive network of orphanages, foster homes, and IDP centers to help Ukrainian children and their caregivers.

Hunger Relief

Hunger Rises As Conflict Ravages Ukraine

As the war devastates towns, damages infrastructure, and disrupts supply chains, families face hunger resulting from a shortage of nutritious food. One in three families in Ukraine is hungry, found the WFP USA. DTCare is helping to curb the hunger crisis in two ways: purchasing fresh food and cooking supplies and shipping thousands of ready-to-eat meals (MREs) for distribution through our extensive partner network to communities in Ukraine. We work with notable partners on the ground that share our commitment to providing support and aid in towns and regions most impacted by the conflict. Since the war broke out, DTCare has successfully shipped and distributed over 31,000 meal packs to communities in need by joining forces with Darkhorse Benefits, Brother's Bother, RecPak, and many more.

Our generous donors also enable us to send financial assistance to our teams in Ukraine to purchase and distribute fresh products in-country to help communities facing hunger while supporting local economies. DTCare works alongside The Sunflower Project to distribute food and medical supplies to dangerous, hard-to-reach towns where Ukrainians are cut off from basic resources and need urgent aid. On January 16, 2023, DTCare donated $1,000 to The Sunflower Project for an emergency food and medical supply trip to a remote town outside Nykoliave, Ukraine. The Sunflower Project purchased food staples and first-aid supplies to aid 57 adults and 13 children who have been stranded without aid since November of 2022, resulting from persistent conflict and severe road damage in the region. Some of the supplies distributed to families included meat and proteins, fresh produce, tea and coffee, canned foods, potatoes, hygiene items, and cold and flu medicine. With the ongoing support of our donors and the logistical and technical expertise of our partners, more than 60 Ukrainians received critically needed food and medical assistance.

Fostering Education and Safety Amongst Youth

Youth Protection: Arming Ukrainian Educators with Lifesaving Wound Training as Russia's Advancement Brings Danger

Youth are the cornerstone of our society. We want to help protect them, their teachers, and the communities that help them grow and thrive. Over 1,000 Ukrainian children have been killed or injured as Russia's advance persists. Russia is targeting centers of urban life, leading to the destruction of schools and hospitals.

To foster education and safety amongst Ukrainian youth, DTCare is committed to providing tactical training on gunshot wound care to educators and community groups in partnership with Darkhorse Benefits. As part of this aim, DTCare trained educators at the International Humanitarian University and NOSU Scouts on the essential measures to help a gunshot victim.

The training ranged from how to apply and use a tourniquet to clotting wounds for bleeding control. The emergency wound care measures were taught with a hardcopy safety guide and realistic demonstrations utilizing training arms (provided to DTCare in kind by Clear Ballistics) that mimic tissue and simulate a gunshot wound to give participants an idea of what to expect in a real-life situation. Participants received a certificate of completion from Darkhorse Benefits at the end of the training.

Knowing how to treat a gunshot wound can save lives. With Russia targeting civilian epicenters, it is critical that teachers and community groups, the custodians of younger generations, know how to protect and help the wounded when an emergency strikes.

Rebuilding Initiatives

Direct Family Assistance and Safe Centers: Rebuilding Homes and Communities in Ukraine Amidst War and Beyond

The ongoing conflict in Ukraine has had a devastating impact on both its people and infrastructure. To support the rebuilding efforts, DTCare's Direct Family Assistance Initiative (DFAI) has allocated funds to aid individuals in the Kyiv region in repairing their homes damaged during the war. This crucial initiative not only provides financial support but also instills a sense of security and stability for families affected by the conflict. Furthermore, in 2023, DTCare received a generous grant to construct a Community Safe Center in Mykolaiv oblast. This center will serve as a shelter for the community and offer vital resources and services to those in need. Through these dedicated efforts, DTCare is actively striving towards rebuilding and revitalizing communities in Ukraine.

Local and Global Partnerships

The outflux of refugees as families fled their homes to escape the Russian advance, called for an emergency response. The war impacted traditional distribution channels in and around Ukraine, complicating how DTCare and organizations worldwide could distribute critically needed supplies to displaced citizens. That is why DTCare’s Ukraine Crisis Relief Campaign began by forming essential alliances with organizations in the United States, Poland, and Ukraine to help us collect and distribute humanitarian aid directly into the hands of Ukrainian citizens in urgent need. DTCare’s partnerships with the ZHP (Polish Scouting & Guiding Organization), Victor Pinchuk Foundation, Darkhorse Benefits, Buffalo Cartridge Company & Project HelpNOW, Concordia Medical Equipment, and the Rotary District 6600’s international arm MESA, enable our efforts to send thousands of supplies from donors in the United States directly to collection points in Poland and Ukraine from where the supplies are distributed to groups and communities in need.

A Special Thank You to DTCare from the Polish Scouting & Guiding Association

When war erupted in Ukraine the biggest challenge DTCare faced was securing reliable passage for urgent aid delivery. The Polish Scouting & Guiding Association (ZHP) has been an essential partner on the ground receiving and distributing supplies directly into the hands of displaced Ukrainians. DTCare would like to thank the ZHP for an incredible partnership that has enabled us to provide multiple shipments of critical support to Ukrainians in need in Poland and Ukraine. In times of crisis, there is often an underlying concern that the donations made to help never reach those most impacted. For the DTCare team, personal thank you’s from the groups we work with serve as a reminder of how our relief effort to aid Ukrainians makes a real impact, and how the community’s generous donations and continued support are appreciated and absolutely essential. With the help of our regional partners, DTCare has sent 16 shipments of hygiene items, ready-to-eat meals, daily essentials, feminine hygiene products, and first-aid and medical supplies to Poland and Ukraine to aid displaced Ukrainians.

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