Philanthropic organizations vary widely in their focus, methods, and consistency. Roy Peires, founder of the IDILIQ Group and the IDILIQ Foundation, has concentrated a significant portion of the Foundation’s work on healthcare and disability services, two areas where practical support can affect the quality and continuity of care available to individuals and families. Based on the Costa del Sol, Spain, this work is grounded in long-term partnerships, infrastructure investment, and targeted material support for organizations that serve vulnerable populations across the region.
Understanding that vision requires examining not only which organizations the Foundation supports, but also why those partnerships were chosen and what they have produced. The record reflects a consistent focus on defined needs, established community organizations, and forms of assistance that can be put to direct use.
A Framework Built on Specific Need
General charitable giving can support important causes, but the IDILIQ Foundation’s approach to healthcare and disability services is notable for its specificity. Each partnership is oriented around a named organization, a defined population, and a practical form of support. Roy Peires has built this model over decades, and the accumulation of those partnerships forms a clear framework rather than a collection of unrelated donations.
The organizations supported by the Foundation include Cudeca, a palliative care charity serving patients with advanced illness and their families across the Málaga region; AECC Málaga, which provides support to cancer patients and those closest to them; and Afesol, which works with individuals experiencing social exclusion. Each organization addresses a distinct area of vulnerability, and each has received sustained engagement from the Foundation rather than isolated support.
This structure reflects a philanthropic framework focused on practical outcomes. Through Roy Peires’ support for healthcare and disability services, the Foundation has directed resources toward organizations with clear missions and communities with identifiable needs.
Roy Peires and the Investment in Disability Infrastructure
Of all the IDILIQ Foundation’s contributions in the healthcare and disability space, the construction of the F. Cruz Dias-ADIMI Care Centre stands as the most significant in terms of physical and lasting impact. Funded by the Foundation in partnership with ADIMI, the Centre provides services to individuals with cognitive and developmental disabilities. This is a population that often requires consistent, specialized support over time.
Building a care facility is different from making a short-term donation. It commits organizational resources to a specific community need for years, creating a setting where services can continue beyond the moment of the initial contribution. A staffed, operational building provides ongoing support to individuals whose needs require continuity.
The decision to fund infrastructure of this kind reflects a clear philosophy: durable charitable contributions create capacity. Roy Peires and the IDILIQ Foundation funded a structure designed to serve individuals with disabilities long after the initial donation was made. That distinction between temporary assistance and investment in permanent community assets defines much of the Foundation’s approach to this sector.
Digital Access as a Healthcare-Adjacent Priority
The IDILIQ Foundation’s support for Fuensocial, an organization that provides services to people with disabilities, included the full equipment of a computer classroom. This contribution addressed a gap that is easy to overlook but consequential in practice. Without access to digital tools, individuals with disabilities may face additional barriers to education, employment, health information, and civic participation.
Digital inclusion has become increasingly relevant to disability services. Telehealth platforms, government support systems, employment portals, and educational resources have all moved further online. When the necessary equipment is unavailable, access to these systems becomes more difficult.
The IDILIQ Foundation’s donation of functional computer equipment to Fuensocial, and to additional organizations including Asociación Cadi, El Faro de la Escucha, and Asociación ALAS, addressed this need directly. The pattern is consistent with the philanthropic work of Roy Peires across other areas of the Foundation’s activity: identify a specific gap, provide a useful resource, and work through an established organization with a defined mandate.
Palliative Care and Support for Families Facing Serious Illness
The Foundation’s partnership with Cudeca reflects an understanding that healthcare philanthropy extends beyond treatment. Palliative care includes comfort, pain management, and emotional support for patients with advanced illness. It also recognizes the needs of families navigating serious medical circumstances.
Families facing serious illness may encounter medical, financial, and emotional pressures at the same time. Support from organizations such as Cudeca and AECC Málaga can help address needs that do not fit neatly into a single category. These services are often centered on dignity, continuity, and care during difficult periods.
By directing support to Cudeca and AECC Málaga, Roy Peires and the IDILIQ Foundation have engaged with parts of healthcare support that affect patients and families in deeply practical ways. These commitments are less about visibility than consistency. Maintaining them over time reflects the Foundation’s focus on organizations that provide direct support to people facing serious challenges.
Community Reach and the Scale of Sustained Giving
Taken individually, each of the IDILIQ Foundation’s partnerships in healthcare and disability services represents meaningful support. Taken together, they show a sustained, multi-organizational investment in the welfare of people with significant and ongoing needs.
Cudeca, ADIMI, AECC Málaga, Afesol, Fuensocial, Asociación Cadi, El Faro de la Escucha, and Asociación ALAS each serve a distinct population. Each has also received documented support from Roy Peires and the IDILIQ Foundation’s community partnerships. The breadth of that network, maintained alongside the Foundation’s other initiatives in international education and family welfare, reflects an organizational capacity for long-term community engagement across more than one cause or service area.
Social impact in healthcare and disability services develops through consistency. It comes from partnerships that continue, infrastructure that remains in use, and resources that address needs identified by organizations already serving their communities. The record built under Roy Peires shows how sustained, specific, and structurally grounded giving can provide practical value to healthcare organizations, disability services, and families across the region.
About Roy Peires
Roy Peires is the founder of the IDILIQ Group and the IDILIQ Foundation, with decades of experience in international hospitality leadership and community investment. Based on the Costa del Sol, Spain, Roy Peires specializes in values-driven hospitality management, charitable infrastructure development, and sustained organizational partnerships supporting healthcare organizations, disability services, and vulnerable families across the region.
Through the IDILIQ Foundation, learn more about Roy Peires and the charitable initiatives connected to healthcare, disability services, hospitality leadership, and long-term community support.
