Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health

Improving Postnatal Care for Newborns in Community and in Clinics

Within the community, community care comes through the training and support of Community Health Workers (CHWs). World Vision is supporting more than 200,000 CHWs in 40 countries with a view to integrating newborn and postnatal interventions and care.

Timed and Targeted counseling (TTC) is a community health worker/volunteer approach that offers cost-effective interventions for the mother and family in an effort to provide ideal newborn care.

Maternal and Newborn Health


World Vision is active in Health Systems Strengthening, and seeks to improve health systems through implementing Citizen Voice and Action, which provides a platform for dialogue between the government and the community to advocate for improved services.  

World Vision equips faith communities through its Channel of Hope for MNCH programmes - a powerful methodology that serves to change behaviour and strengthen health systems. It addresses social and religious barriers to improve health-seeking behaviours, reproductive health, and religious beliefs that affect health. 

Our Work

Within the communities, World Vision protects mothers and newborns from deadly diseases through medical treatment and interventions.

In 2012, World Vision partnered with John Hopkins University to began a five year study, Child Health and Nutrition Impact Study(chNIS), designed to measure the impact that MNCH is having on newborns and mothers in Cambodia, Guatemala, Kenya and Zambia. 

World Vision participates in International Conferences, such as Women Deliver and the International Conference on Family Planning.

Mother with newborn child

 

Global Advocacy and Commitments

 

Grants

Born on Time, a public private partnership to prevent preterm birth, collarborates with World Vision, amongst other NGO's, Plan International Canada, Save the Children, and Johnson&Johnson. This is a five year plan, in which health facilities will implement the appropriate resources towards prevention of pre-term births. Michael Messenger, President&CEO of World Vision Canada states, "Born on Time will focus intensely in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and Mali, where preterm birth is a contributing factor in more than a third of newborn deaths." 

In hopes to reduce infant mortality rates by at least 20%, World Vision Ireland has implemented the AIM Health Grant. During the course of the 5 year programme, Aim Health will train over 2,000 community health workers with the skills necessary to aid community members with the resources necessary for good health and nutrition. 

The Australian grant in East Africa hopes to strengthen and improve newborn health by providing access to services that will help in prevention of infant mortality. World Vision Australia has partnered with World Vision Kenya, World Vision Uganda, World Vision Rwanda and World Vision Tanzania to achieve the vision of the organization

USAid's Child Survival and Health Grants Program(CSHGP) works towards ending preventable and child maternal deaths(EPCMD) in hopes that more mothers will survive childbirth and that more children will grow up to live long and healthy lives. A child survival and health grant has been implemented in World Vision South Sudan 

Download World Vision's Strategy Overview page here.