WorkflowOne Helps Raise Awareness for Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy
Dayton, Ohio-based WorkflowOne will help raise awareness for Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy (PPMD) and Duchenne muscular dystrophy by providing branded armbands to be worn by more than 10,000 college football coaches on Sept. 24 for Coach to Cure MD. WorkflowOne has produced the branded armbands for PPMD since 2008.
“We are honored to once again been given the opportunity to support PPMD and the Coach to Cure MD program,” said Thomas Rizzi, chief sales officer at WorkflowOne. “PPMD is the largest nonprofit organization in the United States focused entirely on Duchenne muscular dystrophy and their work and funding improves the treatment, quality of life and long-term outlook for individuals affect[ed] by Duchenne.”
Coach To Cure MD is a partnership between the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), a professional organization for more than 10,000 college football coaches and staff and Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy (PPMD), the largest national charity devoted exclusively to Duchenne muscular dystrophy. In 2008, the AFCA adopted PPMD’s Coach To Cure MD program as one of its charity efforts. The goals of Coach To Cure MD are to raise national awareness of the disorder and raise money to fund research for a cure. One football Saturday of each season (this year it will be on Sept. 24, 2011) AFCA coaches nationwide agree to promote Coach To Cure MD by wearing armbands, mentioning Coach To Cure MD during on and off-field interviews, and in some instances doing even more extensive media relations around the date.
“We are once again grateful for WorkflowOne’s support of our program,” said Pat Furlong, founding president and CEO of PPMD. “It’s companies like WorkflowOne that allow us to continue our work and fight against a disease that affects approximately one out of every 3,500 boys and 20,000 babies born worldwide each year.”
For more information about WorkflowOne, visit www.workflowone.com.
For more information about Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy (PPMD), visit www.parentprojectmd.org.