publication / March 19, 2024
World Vision Senegal Annual Report 2023
This Report presents the main achievements for the 2023 financial year. Key activities were carried out in the sectors of child protection, education, health and Women Empowerment in rural areas in Senegal.
publication / March 27, 2024
February 2024 Fact Sheet: 1,692,482 people reached
Out of over 1.6 million people reached, at least 33 percent are children.
press release / March 11, 2024
World Vision Lambast International Response as Humanitarian Crisis in Syria Continues to Grow 13 Years On
Syria 13 Press Release- Lost and Alone
publication / January 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 / March 19, 2024
Rapport Annuel 2023 de World Vision Sénégal
Le Rapport 2023 de World Vision Sénégal présente les principales réalisations dans différents secteurs tels que la Protection de l'Enfant, l'Education, la Santé, et l'Autonomisation des femmes en milieu rural.
publication / January 17, 2024
National Response to the Crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh | External SitRep#3
From the very beginning of the crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh and first flow of arrivals of forcibly displaced population, WV Armenia immediately has established Response teams at national and regional levels and the staff is already engaged in relief actions.
publication / March 7, 2024
Actualización de la Respuesta "Esperanza sin Fronteras" a diciembre de 2023
Descubre cómo 'Esperanza sin Fronteras' está teniendo un impacto tangible en medio de la crisis migratoria en Bolivia, Brasil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Panamá, Perú y Venezuela. Conoce cómo nuestro enfoque multipaís y alianzas estratégicas han brindado apoyo integral a más de 2 millones de personas, incluyendo un 43% de niñas, niños y adolescentes migrantes. Únete a nosotros para construir un mundo donde la solidaridad y la compasión no conozcan fronteras.
publication / October 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.