publication / Abril 22, 2024
NextGen Aid: Technical Appendix
Technical Appendix for the NextGen Aid project, an economic appraisal to estimate the return on investment (ROI) from child-related Official Development Assistance (ODA).
article / Marzo 27, 2024
DR Congo: Pregnant women living with HIV in Tanganyika receive nutritional support
This article shows World Vision's support for pregnant women living with HIV. This category of people is overlooked, but deaths are recorded and 50% of HIV-positive children die before the age of 2. Its support aims to reduce the number of deaths of children born from parents living with HIV by providing nutritional support to parents.
article / Abril 21, 2024
Yes! We Can End Tuberculosis
A story about how World Vision Malawi through Global Fund program is working with partners to fight TB in Malawi and key achievements in the last few years.
article / Abril 12, 2024
Faith leaders join psychological first aid initiative to help address mental health challenges in Ukraine’s war-torn regions
Twenty-eight church and youth leaders and volunteers participate in the preparation to launch the first Psychological First Aid for Faith Leaders in Ukraine. World Vision, and extensively the humanitarian community, recognizes the crucial role of faith leaders being the preferred go-to actors for emotional support of the internally-displaced and most vulnerable population.
publication / Abril 23, 2024
Putting Children First for Sustainable Development
New research to analyize the economic beneift of Official Development Assistance (ODA) programming that directly or indirectly targets children found that every $1USD of child-related ODA directly or indirectly results in a $10USD return and highlights that investing in children is a way to maximise the benefit that donors see from their ODA programmes.
article / Noviembre 8, 2023
Combating HIV/AIDS Among Young People and Adolescents: A Promising Initiative in Likasi
This article highlights the success of World Vision's project to combat HIV/AIDS among adolescents and young people in the town of Likasi in the south of the DRC. It is an innovative project that aims to raise awareness among young people of the need to protect themselves against this disease, and incorporates effective means of protection such as voluntary testing and the distribution of condoms.