publication / February 29, 2024
Price Shocks: Economic gains masking a growing hunger and malnutrition crisis
World Vision's annual price survey analyses global food prices over the past three years. This Price Shocks report is a continuation of our 2021 and 2022 studies with findings showing a slight dip in the highest costs of living for some while others remain at previously marked crisis levels. This year's findings continue to underscore the uneven recovery from the socioeconomic shocks from COVID-19, inflation, and extreme weather and indicates a disparity of food prices, both in the current cost of the basket of 10 common food items and in the year-on-year comparisons. We provide insight into the year-on-year changes and share recommendations on mitigation for various audiences.
publication / June 16, 2022
The Caregiver Homeschooling Instruction Program: Mitigating the effects of COVID-19 on literacy in Malawi
Between the mid-2000’s and early 2020, Malawi greatly improved access to education, reaching a net primary school enrolment rate of over 90%. The dropout rate for primary education has also improved significantly from 11.7% in 2009 to 3.2% in 2018
article / March 20, 2024
Spraying away malaria: How Indoor spraying changed Lives in Nkhatabay
World Vision on the fight against malaria infection in Malawi
article / March 20, 2024
Indoor spraying brings relief to malaria-stricken district
IRS reduces Mangochi Malaria incident rate by 50 percent
article / March 20, 2024
Balaka cuts malaria Rate by half with Indoor Residue Spraying (IRS)
Ending malaria through Indoor Residual Spray (IRS) intervention
article / January 16, 2024
World Vision Digital Accessible Books Project Wins 2024 Zero Project Award
World Vision Malawi awarded a 2025 Zero Project award in its commitment to disability inclusion and a world with zero barriers
publication / October 12, 2023
Not Enough: Global Perceptions on Child Hunger and Malnutrition
Our world has enough of everything to provide a life of plenty for every child, yet every day more children go hungry.
The findings of this survey highlight the stark reality for families around the world. Almost all people believe that having enough food to eat is a basic human right – 91%, but 21% of children are going to bed hungry and 30% of parents does not knowwhere their next meal will come from.
article / March 21, 2024
From Premature Orphan to Thriving Toddler
Tackling the real causes of malnutrition through Timely Targeted Counselling (TTC) intervention
article / February 22, 2023
Malawi and Eswatini’s Child Protection and Advocacy teams learn from each other
World Vision Eswatini (WVE) had the opportunity to host World Vision Malawi (WVM) for a learning visit on Child Protection from February 6-10, 2023.