publication / Junho 13, 2023
Discover our 2022 Annual Report
Learn about how our work contributed towards improvement in the well-being of children in Sierra Leone throughout our 2022 fiscal year (October 2021 – September 2022).
We owe our achievements to the faithful support of our private and public donors, our hard-working staff, community volunteers and partners, and our agility as an organization.
article / Outubro 8, 2021
Malawi: Fighting malaria in the midst of COVID-19
Among Malawians, Balaka is a storied town on a hill. It is a district that has kept on giving - music that has withstood seasons and inspired generations.
publication / Maio 9, 2024
2023 Global Annual Report, World Vision International
2023 Global Annual Report, World Vision International
video / Março 23, 2022
World Vision wages war on malaria in Malawi
Malaria is an endemic problem in Malawi, claiming children's lives and overburdening hospitals and health workers.
article / Fevereiro 3, 2022
Halima and Anifa thrive in school as malaria cases fall
In 2020 alone, Malawi recorded about seven million malaria cases, which claimed 2,500 lives. Halima and Anifa's experiences with malaria as an endemic problem for education are widely shared by other learners across the country. Malaria has frustrated their ability to thrive in education. Since 2019, World Vision, in partnership with the Ministry of Health, has been running the Indoor Residual Spray (IRS) intervention to kill malaria-causing mosquitos.
article / Dezembro 25, 2023
Sharing joy at Christmas
For Christmas, World Vision International Sierra Leone's Senior Operations Manager visited two hospitals and some youths who have been suffering from drug abuse and are now under rehabilitation.
article / Abril 24, 2021
Empowering communities to eliminate malaria
By Irene Sinoya, World Vision Communications Specialist, Kenya
article / Abril 23, 2021
What is malaria? Facts, symptoms, and what World Vision is doing
Nearly half of the world’s population — more than 3 billion people — is at risk of contracting malaria. Globally, malaria mortality rates have dropped by 60% since 2000, but in 2020, the malaria mortality rate increased for the first time since 2015.The world’s first malaria vaccine — RTS,S — was piloted through routine immunisation services in areas of Ghana, Kenya and Malawi, starting in 2019.