pain foundation – Arizona Pain https://arizonapain.com Pain Clinics in Phoenix, Chandler, Gilbert, Glendale, Tempe, and Scottsdale Mon, 07 Mar 2022 17:02:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://arizonapain.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/cropped-Arizona_Pain_Logo_ONLY_3__tgpct8-scaled-1-32x32.webp pain foundation – Arizona Pain https://arizonapain.com 32 32 Physician Groups Bring Christmas to Refugee Children in Phoenix https://arizonapain.com/local-physician-groups-bring-christmas-hundreds-refugee-children-phoenix/ Sat, 13 Dec 2014 21:30:48 +0000 http://arizonapain.com/?p=17848 Read more]]>

Scottsdale, AZ., December 12th, 2014 –Volunteers from Arizona Pain’s charity organization, the Arizona Pain Foundation, will be hosting their 7th annual Christmas event for over 1,000 refugee children and their families this Saturday, December 13th, at City of Grace Church in downtown Phoenix. The “Christmas Party for Children Around the World” event will take place from 2:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m, and will benefit less fortunate families from other countries who have come to the Phoenix area with very few possessions.

The children come from countries that don’t typically celebrate Christmas, such as the Republic of Congo, Liberia, Iraq, Myanmar, Afghanistan, Nepal, and Somalia. Many of their families fled impoverished and devastating environments and escaped to the U.S. with only the clothes on their backs and whatever they could carry.

“These children are political refugees from all over the world, who have experienced civil wars, displacements, and of course terrorism,” says Dr. Tory McJunkin, co-founder of Arizona Pain (ArizonaPain.com) and the Arizona Pain Foundation. “Now, many of them will get to experience a traditional Christmas celebration for the first time, and we are thrilled to be a part of making that happen for them.”

Christmas Party Children Around the World

Volunteers from the Arizona Pain foundation will serve alongside volunteers from Paindoctor, Inc., Arizona Medical Clinic, AZ Tech Radiology, Integrity Home Health, and City of Grace Church to provide all transportation, Christmas gifts, entertainment, and dinner for the children and their families free of charge.

“Each year we pause to reflect on how fortunate we are to live in this time and place,” says Joe Carlon, CEO of Arizona Pain and Paindoctor, Inc. “We are reminded in this season of giving that service to our community and providing to those less fortunate will largely define the legacy we leave behind. Pain Doctor and Arizona Pain are humbled by the success of this event, bringing Christmas to thousands in Phoenix each year, and we hope that our message and example continues to grow in the years ahead.”

For more information on how you can donate to these children and families, please contact Andy Le at Arizona Medical Clinic, 602-432-6579.

About the Arizona Pain Foundation

The Arizona Pain Foundation, which was started by Arizona Pain’ physicians Dr. Paul Lynch and Dr. Tory McJunkin organizes community service and charitable events each year as a way of giving back to the Phoenix areas. The Arizona Pain Foundation is comprised of Arizona Pain’ employee volunteers and serves as a way for the employees of Arizona Pain to give back to those in need –both locally and abroad. This nonprofit foundation is funded solely by 5% of all proceeds from the Arizona Pain eight Phoenix-based clinics in Scottsdale, Chandler, and Glendale, AZ. Founded in 2009, the Foundation’s mission is to share the love of God by bringing compassion, healing, and resources to those in need. This is accomplished by supporting international missionaries, by supporting local nonprofit community work and by promoting prescription drug abuse resistance to youth in Arizona.

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Giving Back https://arizonapain.com/giving-back/ Tue, 15 Jul 2014 18:00:06 +0000 http://arizonapain.com/?p=15524 Read more]]>
giving back

Find out more about the Arizona Pain Foundation.

By Kevin Whipps

When Drs. Paul Lynch and Tory McJunkin began Arizona Pain in 2009, they wanted to give something back to the community in a philanthropic way. But they didn’t want to just keep things small and focus on their immediate surroundings, they wanted to reach out further both nationally and internationally. It was then, on their very first day of business, that the Arizona Pain Foundation was born.

One of the great features of the Foundation is its ability to be flexible in the projects that it funds. The Arizona Pain Foundation board takes some of the tasks, requests and missions of the people involved and considers all of them equally, which then allows them to make charitable contributions to the areas and organizations that can make the most impact. “We’re trying to help those people in the greatest need,” says Dr. McJunkin. This makes sense, as pain management is such a broad field that encompasses so many other treatments and conditions, a foundation based on that premise should also think just as wide.

Flexibility and the ability to move quickly is key to the success of the Arizona Pain Foundation, something that Arizona Pain CEO, Joe Carlon, recognizes. “We had an employee that made her department aware that she was going to go deliver water to the Phoenix Rescue Mission,” Carlon recalls. “She was taking her time and her money and giving those dollars and that time on Saturday morning to deliver water to the homeless with the Phoenix Rescue Mission. I saw that email, and came through her department and [explained] what a perfect opportunity for the Foundation to support something that is important to one of our employees — and, by the way, recognizing something incredibly generous and compassionate behavior on behalf of one of our employees.” The Arizona Pain Foundation then went on to purchase several boxes of water for the Phoenix Rescue Mission, and made sure they were delivered properly as well. Again, the ability to move quickly and easily is a definite advantage of the Foundation.

phoenix rescue mission

There is a spiritual component of the Arizona Pain Foundation as well. “The goal of the foundation is to share the love of God by bringing compassion, healing and resources to those in need,” says Dr. McJunkin. Both Drs. McJunkin and Lynch feel that giving back to the community is something they should do as Christians, and the Foundation gives them a way to do that effectively and systematically. That commitment is also backed up by their business. “Arizona Pain contributes a piece of their profits every month to the Arizona Pain Foundation,” says Arizona Pain Specialties CEO Joe Carlon. “It’s about the Arizona Pain Foundation, where the success of Arizona Pain and the quality of the services we provide for Arizona Pain will allow the foundation the ability to then support activities in the community locally, activities nationally [and] also organizations all over the world that are trying to do good work.”

There’s another event that the Foundation does regularly, and that directly affects people in the Valley.
As it turns out, there are quite a few people from other countries — often political refugees — that live in the Phoenix area, and often they go through the holidays without any food to eat or reason to celebrate. The Arizona Pain Foundation wanted to change that by hosting an event and providing food and the Christmas story to a huge crowd. “To give Christmas to 1,000 people that otherwise wouldn’t have it is a very fun and gratifying opportunity for us,” Carlon says.

As the company grows, so will the Foundation. Recently, Arizona Pain expanded from the seven locations they hold in the Phoenix-Metro area, and added two more in Nevada: Henderson and Las Vegas. Whether or not the name will adapt to the location is still to be decided, but their commitment to the cause is as strong as ever. “At least right now, the branding will stay the same, but the Arizona Pain Foundation will support cities all over the country,” Carlon says.

What does the future hold for the Arizona Pain Foundation? As it expands from the Southwest out, there are limitless possibilities, which is exactly how the group wants it to stay. Whether it’s a local or national charity, if the Arizona Pain Foundation can help out, it wants to do its part. To find out more about the Foundation or to make a donation, visit Arizonapain.com/about/foundation.

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