Thank you for taking the time to visit our fundraising page on iDonate.ie
We are taking part in the annual Galley Head Swim.
We are fundraising for 3 very important and valuable charities as part of this event and your assistance with this will be greatly appreciated. The charities are Marymount...
Thank you for taking the time to visit our fundraising page on iDonate.ie
We are taking part in the annual Galley Head Swim.
We are fundraising for 3 very important and valuable charities as part of this event and your assistance with this will be greatly appreciated. The charities are Marymount University Hospital and Hospice, CoAction West Cork and Cancer Connect . All funds raised here will go directly to this great cause.
I hope you can help me and the Cats Can Swim team, by donating whatever you can.
Simply click the Donate button above. All donations are processed securely.
You can also share our page using Share options below. This is a great way to show your support.
Galley Head Swim For Marymount University Hospital and Hospice, CoAction West Cork, Cancer Connect
Words of support
Well done guys!
Well done Joe and team. Great cause, worth supporting
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Donation summary
Total raised:
€3,210
Offline donations
€0
Online donations
€3,210
About the Cause
Marymount University Hospital and Hospice
At Marymount University Hospital & Hospice we offer you three distinct services:
Our Hospital offers respite, intermediate palliative and residential care services for the older person.
Our Hospice offers specialist palliative care services, at both inpatient and community level.
Our Education Centre offers University and other courses, placement and conference facilities.
CoAction provides a full range of services to support children and adults with an intellectual disability and/or autism. Our vision is to support people to be 'connected with' and included in the lives of those who are most important to them so that they can live full and meaningful lives. Person-centredness challenges us to move away from providing services in segregated and centralised locations, because inevitably they may limit people's opportunities and 'disconnect