Home News Philanthropic Giving an Element of Many Practices

Philanthropic Giving an Element of Many Practices

Seventy percent of the respondents to a recent Women In Optometry Pop-up Poll said that they designate some of the practice revenue to philanthropic causes.

These amounts vary from year to year, but for about half of the practices, it becomes a team effort, with staff participating in some way.

Donations are not only monetary, but many respondents said that the also donate professional services, with 40 percent of respondents whose offices participate in philanthropic efforts saying that they do so routinely and another 45 percent saying they do so occasionally. Five percent of respondents said that they have not been asked to do so.

How these contributions are determined vary, with the vast majority of respondents (81 percent) saying that the practice donates different amounts as needed, although 10 percent of respondents earmark a specific percentage of practice revenue for philanthropic causes. Seven percent designate a percentage of revenue from a specific event or time period, and three percent said that they budget an amount each month.

While 56 percent of practitioners say that patients have no direct role in contributing or voting for charities to support, 41 percent note that patients are welcome to make contributions to the practice’s charities of choice, and nearly 8 percent said that patients can nominate or request support for specific organizations.

While many practices support more than one cause, contributing to community events or service organizations are at the top of the list with 68 percent of respondents saying that at least some of their money goes there. Local schools were the recipients for about 41 percent of the respondents, and community food banks were listed by 24 percent. These organizations were followed by sight-related missions, such as Lion’s Clubs (32 percent) Optometry Giving Sight (27 percent) and optometry schools (14 percent). Special Olympics was the designee of about 19 percent of the respondents. Nineteen percent of practices also noted that they organize and run community events to drive donations for a local organization.

The majority of practitioners, 54 percent, said that their 2018 giving will be roughly equivalent to their 2017 giving, although 29 percent noted that their giving is likely to be higher this year. Twenty-four percent said it would be somewhat higher (up to 10 percent more) while five percent said it would be even higher than that. About 10 percent said that they expect their 2018 giving to be slightly lower than last year, and seven percent said they don’t know.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.

- Advertisment -

Most Popular

Unveiling Two Decades of Pediatric Scleral Lens Success

A recently published study, Pediatric Scleral Lenses: 21-Year Retrospective Review, found that not only are scleral lenses viable for children, but they can also...

Meet the WO Student Advisory Board: Cate Hoselton, NSUOCO

For Catherine “Cate” Hoselton, the doctor’s office was never a fun place to go. “There is often fear associated with going to the doctor’s—that you...

Awards and Recognitions—January 2025

Women In Optometry regularly recognizes the awards and accomplishments of those in the profession and in their communities in the “Awards and Recognitions” series. Have you...

A New Approach to Goal-Setting

Lauretta Justin, OD, had a busy 2024. The owner of Millennium Eye Center in Orlando, Florida is also the creator and writer of CEO...