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? Donate Car
? Car Donations


All classes of RVs and Recreational Vehicles
Motorhomes
Pop-up Trailers
Truck Campers
Trailers

determine the value of your RV donation

Donate your used boat and feel good about giving and contributing to a world changed for the better.

CAN I STILL GET A FULL DEDUCTION FOR MY BOAT?
I understand the Tax laws have changed. ******
Answer: YES .. You can still deduct the full fair market value (below $5,000 value) or the appraised value (above $5,000 value) of your donation IF YOU DONATE BEFORE JANUARY 1, 2005. After that date, the actual selling price will be the deduction allowed.

Donate Boat - Donate Yacht

Get tax savings while helping others!
Receive a tax deduction and change a life!
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It feels good to do something for someone else even if it helps you as well by getting rid of that vehicle you don't know what to do with.

Best of all you can receive a great IRS tax deduction for the full fair market value of the automobile and it is easy to make adjustments to arrive at a truly fair value even if your vehicle needs expensive repairs to the transmission or engine.

Most often it is the donor who receives joy from the very act of giving.

What paperwork do I need to donate my RV or motorhome?
In most cases we need the title to the vehicle.

Is my RV donation tax deductible?
Vehicles donated on this site will benefit Better Vision for Children Foundation, classified with the IRS as a 501(c)(3) charitable organization and are tax deductible.

How do I calculate the value of my donated RV?

Thanks to new tax law, the IRS has taken the guesswork out of determining the value of your RV, motor home, camper trailer or other recreational vehicle. Beginning in January 2005, you may deduct the full price we receive for the sale of your vehicle.

Donate RV, motorhome, trailer or camper to charity: Better Vision for Children Foundation

Donate RV non-profit

What Are Your Benefits of Donating a Vehicle?

Receive your lawful IRS tax deduction for the fair market value.
Avoid confusing Department of Motor Vehicles paperwork or SMOG hassles.
Get free vehicle pickup running or not (some restrictions apply).
Avoid all the headaches of selling a used car... no expensive want ads, no phone calls, no showing of the vehicle, no price haggling.

Amblyopia, also known as "lazy eye

a misalignment of a child's eyes, such as crossed eyes, or a difference in image quality between the two eyes (one eye focusing better than the other.)

early diagnosis and treatment

Glasses are commonly prescribed to improve focusing or misalignment of the eyes.

Surgery may be performed on the eye muscles

Eye exercises may be recommended

Patching or covering one eye may be required for a period

eye drops or ointment—may be used to blur the vision of the good eye in order to force the weaker one to work (???????????????)

two to three percent of the general population suffers from this form of visual impairment

Amblyopia (lazy eye) is poor vision in an eye that did not develop normally during childhood.

The visual system of the child is not fully developed at birth

Unequal refractive error (anisometropia): In this condition, the two eyes have different refractive errors

Squint

Stimulus deprivation: Any form of stimulus derivation to either one or both eyes in early childhood may lead to a severe form of amblyopia.

ptosis, cataract, glaucoma, patching or any other obstacle that blocks the vision in the eye.

If the child has a squint or some other abnormality, the parents may notice that something is wrong. The vision of the child can be tested by the ophthalmologist by special tests.

The treatment involves 'forcing' the brain to use the weaker eye and thus stimulating its visual development

Generally speaking, an amblyopia that is not treated by 10 years of age has a poor chance of recovering the vision.

not treated by 10 years of age, the amblyopic eye may permanently

depth perception (three-dimensional vision) is not present

Amblyopia is not the same as nearsightedness, farsightedness, or astigmatism, which can be corrected with eyeglasses or contact lenses

Lazy eye amblyopia occurs frequently in young children whose eyes do not line up correctly - a condition known as strabismus

To prevent double vision (in which the patient sees two images of everything), the brain suppresses the sight of one eye so that the other eye does all the work.

The brain structures dependent on the eye that is not working may atrophy (waste away) or fail to develop

the eyes may turn either inward or outward, or one eye may be looking up while the other is looking down.

Causes of Lazy Eye (Amblyopia)

Strabismus affects approximately 4 percent of U.S. children under the age of 6. Amblyopia occurs in about 2 percent of the general population. Strabismus can occur as crossed eyes. In others, it may manifest as eyes that turn out, up or down. Its name can be traced to the Greek word strabismos - to look obliquely or with un-straight eyes.

three primary goals: foremost, to obtain the best possible vision in each eye; second, to gain the best possible alignment of each eye alone and as a pair; and, finally, to provide the best possible opportunity for binocular vision.

about 30 percent of patients needing surgery.

Corrective eyeglasses can help children as young as 6 months of age.

What Questions to ask Your Doctor About Lazy Eye (Amblyopia)?

Should a specialist be consulted?
Do any tests need to be done to rule out any other eye problem?

Has any permanent damage already occurred?

What has caused this condition?

What treatment do you recommend?

How successful is it?

How long will the treatment need to be continued?

Will surgery be needed to correct the problem? What is the procedure?

What can be expected after the surgery?

http://www.healthcentral.com/encyclopedia/408/704/Lazy_Eye_Amblyopia.html


eye cancer retinoblastoma

Retinoblastoma is the most common intraocular cancer of childhood and effects approximately 300 children in the United States each year

more than 90% of children can be cured of retinoblastoma by early detection and treatment of the affected eye

eye-cancer specialists try to save a child’s eye and preserve vision

Retinoblastoma was the first cancer to be directly associated with a genetic abnormality (Deletions or mutation of the q14 band of chromosome 13)

75% of children with retinoblastoma are first noted to have a “white-pupil” (which the doctors call leukocoria), or poorly aligned eyes (which the doctors call strabismus), or a red and painful eye (usually due to glaucoma)

congenital cataract, Toxocara canis, Coat’s disease, and persistent hypertrophic primary vitreous (PHPV).

examination under anesthesia, specialized blood tests, CAT scans, and ultrasound evaluations ophthalmic oncologists can diagnose intraocular retinoblastoma in over 95% of cases. In order to be 100% correct all the time, eye-cancer specialists would have to perform a biopsy

avoided in order to prevent cancer cells from spreading outside of the eye.

cooperation of an ophthalmic oncologist, pediatric oncologist, and radiation therapist

treatment has evolved from simple enucleation (removal of the eye),

eye-sparing radiotherapy, and more recently to chemotherapy-based multimodality therapy.

Though retinoblastoma has been cured by external beam irradiation, investigators have suggested that radiation may cause an increase the risk of developing second cancers later in life.
Though retinoblastoma has been cured by external beam irradiation, investigators have suggested that radiation may cause an increase the risk of developing second cancers later in life.

http://www.nci.nih.gov/cancertopics/types/retinoblastoma/

white reflex (leukocoria) behind the pupil

sometimes called the cat's eye reflex

The treatment modality for a given child is decided based on many important factors. These are:
Size of the tumor
Location of the tumor
Whether the tumor has spread
Status of the other eye
Associated complications like retinal detachment, glaucoma
Family history
The wishes and concerns of the parents
Availability of the facilities

Genes are instructions that control the way that we grow and develop. We all have many thousands of genes, each of which does something different. We have two copies of nearly every gene, inheriting one copy from each parent. The genes are copied every time a cell divides; this means that every gene is copied many millions of times during our lifetime. The genes are also copied many times when egg or sperm cells are made. Not surprisingly copying mistakes can occur at any of these stages. We all have about 20 genes that have a misprint in them; the majority of these do not have any effect and so we are not aware of them. Some misprints are inherited, others start in us.

Genes are packed together; the packages are called chromosomes. There are 23 pairs of chromosomes; each chromosome can be seen down a microscope but genes can only be decoded using specialised techniques (DNA analysis or molecular genetics).

How does the retinoblastoma gene cause retinoblastoma?
The Rb gene is found on chromosome 13

We all have 2 copies of it; a retinoblastoma develops when both copies of the gene in a cell are damaged

chromosome 13q deletion syndrome
About 5% of people with Rb have lost the part of chromosome 13 that contains the Rb gene

What are the second tumours?
People who have damaged copy of the Rb gene in all cells of their body have a small chance of developing other tumours, away from the eye, later in life. This includes everyone with bilateral, multifocal or familial Rb, and a small proportion of people with unilateral Rb

lab tests done in retinoblastoma

visible change in chromosome 13
DNA or molecular genetic testing to look for the misprint or damage in the Rb gene in the affected person
about 80% of changes can be found
DNA or molecular genetic testing to compare the Rb genes in the family to find out which is the damaged copy of the gene without actually finding out what the misprint is (linkage analysis).

http://www.rbsociety.org.uk/about_rb/genetics.htm
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