article / avril 2, 2024
Transforming lives: Pashupati's dedication and Laxmi's recovery from malnutrition
In the aftermath of the devastating 2023 Nepal earthquake, a young girl named Laxmi fights malnutrition with the help of her dedicated mother and a perceptive community health worker. This story highlights the importance of early detection and treatment of malnutrition in children, especially in vulnerable communities.
publication / avril 24, 2024
World Vision Centrafrique : Rapport Annuel 2023
World Vision Centrafrique vous présente son Rapport Annuel 2023. Découvrez comment nous avons touché la vie de plus de 4 000 000 personnes en RCA, en mettant l'accent sur le bien-être des enfants.
publication / mars 3, 2024
World Vision Afghanistan Country Brief - FY23
World Vision Afghanistan has been responding to the needs of Afghan children and their families for over two decades.
Our operations are focused in three western provinces and one north-western province of Afghanistan providing the most vulnerable children with health and nutrition, water, sanitation and hygiene, food security and livelihoods, protection and education assistance.
Between October 2022 and September 2023, over 2.9 million people, including 1.3 million children, participated in our various interventions.
publication / mars 3, 2024
World Vision Afghanistan Country Brief - FY23
World Vision Afghanistan has been responding to needs of Afghan children and their families for over two decades.
Our operations are focused in three western and one north-western provinces of Afghanistan providing the most vulnerable children with health and nutrition, water, sanitation and hygiene, food security and livelihoods, protection and education assistance.
Between October 2022 and September 2023, over 2.9 million people, including 1.3 million children participated in our different interventions.
article / avril 10, 2024
Ukraine’s elderly struggles for scant medical care and food insecurity amidst ongoing war
It was the seventeenth day of heavy shelling, unceasing terror, severe food shortages, and darkness, when half of Iryna's and Nikolay's house burned to ashes. The ongoing attacks in Popasna, a small city in the Luhansk region of Ukraine, made them leave all their belongings and go west. As they settle in Dnipro, they are navigating the hurdles of displacement and war. World Vision's cash assistance helps them cover only part of their medicine expenses, and food supplies. As pensioners who rely on a meager pension and humanitarian aid, they find it more difficult to deal with the realities of war.
publication / janvier 25, 2024
Women Empowered for Leadership and Development
This document presents a promising practice on integrating Gender Equality and Social Inclusion (GESI) to empower women and advance their socio-economic and political leadership in Sierra Leone.
publication / avril 5, 2024
2023 Global Report on Child Participation in World Vision Decision-Making Processes
This second annual Global Report on Child Participation in World Vision Decision-Making Processes celebrates the different ways girls and boys across the world have been meaningfully involved in the decisions that World Vision makes to improve child well-being around the world. Field Offices have continued to implement stronger and more innovative ways of listening to children, including them in local and national decision-making spaces to ensure that programming and strategy decisions are informed by children’s experiences, priorities, needs, and perspectives.
This report highlights the extraordinary practices of each region and Field Office, celebrating the ways our staff have shared decision-making power with children. World Vision continues to press in our belief that children’s participation is not only a right, but an essential element of our child-focused agenda.
publication / avril 25, 2024
East Africa Region | 2023 Humanitarian and Emergency Affairs Annual Report
A summary of World Vision's response to humanitarian crises in East Africa from October 2022 to September 2023
publication / octobre 20, 2023
Behaviour Change: Evidence Summary for Safe Infant and Child Faeces Disposal
A review of 25 countries conducted in 2016 found that more than 50% of households in low- and middle-income countries practiced unsafe child feces disposal (UCFD), including as many as 84% of households in India. Although this often is connected to whether a household has an improved sanitation facility on the premises, the study found that even in households with latrines, as many as 64% practiced UCFD. Exposure to child faeces presents many of the same health hazards as open defecation, such as diarrhoeal diseases, environmental enteropathy, and impaired growth and development. Infants in low- and middle-income countries are particularly vulnerable to faecal pathogen contamination in the domestic environment due to mouthing behaviors during the exploratory stage of development. This brief summarises approaches and evidence for interventions targeting safe child faeces disposal.