Health

Promoting newborn, child, and maternal health through the adoption of evidence-based health and nutrition practices, and preventing major causes of disease through partnerships with communities and government health systems

Health

Promoting newborn, child, and maternal health through the adoption of evidence-based health and nutrition practices, and preventing major causes of disease through partnerships with communities and government health systems

Highlights

World Vision and USAID are improving health and nutrition choices for women and children in Bangladesh through integrated services in our Nobo Jatra project.

The Core Group Partnership Project is a multicountry, multi-partner initiative led by World Vision that strengthens host country efforts to eradicate polio and other epidemic-prone infectious diseases through improved vaccine uptake, community-based surveillance, and health system strengthening.

Through the DREAMS program, adolescent girls are empowered to stay in school and prevent HIV infection.

For any child to achieve his or her full potential, the foundational building blocks of good health and nutrition must be established even prior to birth. Undernutrition, infectious diseases, weak or nonexistent health systems, and reduced access to vital health information can have lifelong consequences for children and communities. Investing in a child’s health impacts both their physical and cognitive growth and economic well-being, which can positively affect future educational and productive opportunities.

For this reason, we adopt a whole health systems programming approach in our programming around maternal, newborn, and child health and immunization; reproductive health and family planning; healthy timing and spacing of pregnancies; nutrition; water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH); and infectious diseases, including the prevention and treatment of HIV and AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. We focus on crosscutting issues, including gender equality, social inclusion, and disability, collaborating across our sector programs in all aspects of our health programming.

United Nations Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 2, 5, 8, 10, 12, 13 & 15

We work in partnership with government health systems, populations, and geographies to empower people to identify and prioritize their own health needs, generate solutions, and set their own goals — equipping them to sustain progress long after we have left. Whether we’re working in stable or fragile states, we help provide lifesaving support and durable solutions for the world’s most vulnerable children and their families.

Health Subsectors

Nutrition has a dramatic global effect on the mortality and morbidity of children. Undernutrition is estimated to be the underlying cause of 45% of deaths of children under age 5. It is manifested through low birth weight; underweight, wasting, and stunting of children; and micronutrient deficiencies in mothers and children.

Undernourished individuals have weakened immune systems, which makes them especially vulnerable to major diseases and health complications. Inadequate food and nutrients, whether from food insecurity or inadequate knowledge, leads to undernutrition. In the early stages of life, particularly when kids are under age 2, undernourishment has irreparable effects. Lifelong cognitive and physical development are compromised, and general immunity is decreased. In addition, the child’s potential future economic achievement is negatively impacted.

Nutrition FAQS:

Why is good nutrition fundamental to World Vision’s work?


The nutrition and well-being of children and their families is the target of numerous global goals, including the Sustainable Development Goals, and a key focus of our work. Good nutrition supports literacy targets, as children who are not anemic may have better mental development, concentrate better in school, and are better able to fight infection (and thus miss less school). The link between nutrition and reductions in infection and disease is clear: Well-nourished children are at reduced risk of falling ill. For example, zinc deficiency increases the duration and likelihood of recurrence of diarrhea and deaths due to pneumonia and diarrhea, and vitamin A deficiency impacts the immune system. Proper nutrition during pregnancy reduces the incidence of stillbirth, preterm birth, low birth weight, and small size for gestational age.

Contributions to global efforts are made through effective community-level programming and intentional national and international policy engagement. World Vision contributes to the global attainment of these goals through our geographic reach and strategies directing health programming toward preventive community-based interventions for mothers and children, coupled with other sectoral interventions to address malnutrition. We understand the benefits of nutrition and continue to leverage our investments in agriculture, food security, WASH, education, gender equality, and economic development for nutritional gains.

What is World Vision’s response to addressing undernutrition?


World Vision works to positively affect behavior change and strengthen systems that directly impact the nutritional needs of households and communities. Behaviors stem from social and cultural norms, practices, and knowledge, and are often impacted by relationships of power and trust. But we know positive change is possible.

Our approaches catalyze behavior change among caregivers of children, household members, and communities to encourage practices that positively contribute to improved nutrition. We conduct formative research to identify context-specific enablers and barriers of behavior change, which form the basis of our programming. We work with key influencers and individuals to affect positive behavior change in food security and nutrition.

The households and communities that World Vision serves exist within a range of complex and interconnected systems. In areas experiencing vulnerabilities and nutrition insecurity, such as fragile contexts, systems can be ineffective, serve only a few, or both. To achieve transformational and sustainable change, we must work with communities to address weaknesses and imbalances in the systems so the most vulnerable can more readily gain access and support. For that reason, World Vision works across sectors to support the nutritional needs of vulnerable children and their families. The main nutrition outcomes of World Vision’s programming are measured through reductions in childhood wasting, childhood stunting, childhood anemia, and maternal anemia.

What are some examples of World Vision’s efforts and results?


In Zimbabwe, World Vision’s Enhancing Nutrition, Stepping Up Resilience and Enterprise project (2013-2020), funded by USAID, aimed to sustainably address food insecurity among vulnerable households in the Manicaland and Masvingo provinces. The maternal and child health and nutrition portion of the program provided key health and nutrition information through Care Groups and targeted supplementary food rations to children under 2 and pregnant and lactating women. Stunting decreased from 28.1% to 19.7%, and exclusive breastfeeding among children under 5 months increased from 35.8% to 60.6%.

In Bangladesh, we partner with USAID and the government of Bangladesh on the Nobo Jatra (New Beginnings) project to improve gender equitable food security, nutrition, and resilience for vulnerable populations in southwest Bangladesh. This includes improving the health and nutrition of pregnant and lactating women, children, and adolescents through quality community-based health and nutrition services. The government of Bangladesh initiated a multipurpose health volunteers (MHVs) pilot to supplement primary healthcare services across the country. Nobo Jatra has supported the rollout of the pilot across all four of its working subdistricts, which has resulted in 853 MHVs currently deployed across Nobo Jatra working areas. We will continue to advocate and coordinate with government stakeholders for the scale-up of the MHV pilot and encourage adaptations to the existing model to improve service provision.

Globally, infectious diseases, including pneumonia, diarrhea, malaria, and sepsis remain the leading causes of death for children ages 1 month to 9 years. These illnesses are exacerbated by malnutrition, which can often be life threatening.

In addition to disease-specific infectious interventions like immunization and vector control, World Vision fosters an integrated approach to maternal, newborn, and child health (MNCH), nutrition, and WASH to help children start life with a healthy foundation and flourish in healthy environments. We partner across national and sub-national government health systems, populations, and geographies to facilitate communities in identifying and prioritizing their own health needs, generating solutions, and setting their own goals, and we equip them to sustain the progress they have achieved.

Infectious Disease FAQS:

How is World Vision contributing to the fight against malaria?


The 2021 WHO Malaria Report reported an estimated 241 million cases of malaria worldwide in 2020, an increase from 2019. In addition, after a promising decline for nearly two decades (from 896,000 in 2000 to 558,000 in 2019), deaths from malaria increased (to 627,000) in 2020. A large portion of this increase was estimated to be due to service disruptions stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic. The global burden of malaria is concentrated in the WHO African region, accounting for around 95% of total cases and deaths worldwide (from 2019 to 2020). In fact, just six African countries (Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda, Mozambique, Angola, and Burkina Faso) accounted for over half of the total number of cases worldwide. However, the number of children under 5 dying from malaria worldwide has decreased by 10 percentage points over the last 10 years (from 87% to 77%).

World Vision’s Global Fund programming in malaria began over a decade ago. We support national governments in implementing their malaria programs and strengthening the national health system in several countries, including Angola, Haiti, Malawi, Mozambique, and Central African Republic. Our successful and scalable malaria programs include:

  • Rapid scale-up of universal coverage of insecticide-treated nets through existing community networks and structures. Our programming targets high-risk populations while prioritizing the most vulnerable groups, such as children and pregnant women, to protect them from mosquitoes that transmit malaria.
  • Community and household behavior change messaging to protect pregnant and lactating women and their families from malaria. Pregnant women with malaria are at risk of developing anemia, miscarrying, delivering prematurely, and delivering a baby with a low birth weight. We provide intermittent preventive treatment in pregnancy to prevent malaria in pregnant women.
  • Community health systems strengthening and social accountability for integrated community case management (iCCM) services. We join communities to advocate with governments, the private sector, and civil society to extend the timeliness and effectiveness of diagnosing and treating malaria and other common childhood illnesses among populations with limited access to health facilities.

Read the findings of a comparison study of our Global Fund project in Mozambique, published in the Malaria Journal.

In addition to our Global Fund programming, we are also partnering with The Rotary Foundation, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and private donors on the Partners for a Malaria Free Zambia (PMFZ) program (April 2021–March 2024). PMFZ aims to significantly reduce malaria transmission and mortality in 10 high-burden malaria districts in Zambia’s Central and Muchinga provinces by leveraging simple, sustainable, and evidence-based approaches for malaria control and treatment that can be replicated and scaled nationally. The program’s goals are as follows:

  • Increased access to malaria testing and treatment services at the community level through the deployment of community health workers (CHWs). The project successfully trained and deployed 2,500 CHWs to deliver iCCM+ services to over 1.5 million people, including over 300,000 children under 5 across 10 districts in Central and Muchinga provinces. Nine out of 10 program districts are now fully saturated with CHWs, according to the national policy of one CHW for every 500 people. Nearly 472,000 cases of malaria were detected by CHWs between April 2022 and March 2023, and CHWs treated 99% of cases and referred 1% to nearby facilities.
  • Expanded reporting system so that quality, timely malaria data is reported between community and facility levels. To ensure the project is receiving quality data from the trained CHWs, each health facility and CHW have been given mobile phones for reporting. In addition, 245 health facilities have been supported to monitor and build the capacity of CHWs while improving sustainability and data quality.
  • iCCM+ integration into the routine work of Ministry of Health personnel. Quality iCCM+ training of trainers helps to increase the reach of CHWs.
  • Increased awareness of malaria and demand for malaria-related services at the community level. In support of this goal, the project conducted sensitization meetings using theater for development (drama performances) on malaria prevention, control, and elimination. To further strengthen the demand for malaria services, the project trained faith, civic, and traditional leaders in malaria prevention, control, and elimination.

How is World Vision contributing to the fight against tuberculosis?


TB is the second leading infectious killer after COVID-19, and the 13th leading cause of death worldwide. According to UNICEF, “every day, nearly 700 children die from TB, 80% of those before reaching their fifth birthday. Treatment exists that could prevent nearly all of these deaths, but less than 5% of the children who need it receive access.” World Vision is committed to identifying and treating TB in communities where we work with the goal of TB elimination. This includes introducing innovative approaches for TB prevention and in detecting and treating TB cases, especially for children and other vulnerable groups. Projects focus on supporting national governments with health and community systems strengthening, using an advocacy and social mobilization approach to increase case identification, diagnosis, and directly observed treatment short-course enrollment. World Vision also increasingly supports diagnosis and treatment for multidrug-resistant TB, as well as HIV-TB co-infection.

A long-term ally in the national TB response in many countries, World Vision has empowered communities through leadership, technical and vocational trainings, advocacy with local leaders, organizing community volunteers, linking communities to local health providers, and directly supporting TB patients and their families. World Vision is also partnering with a number of local nongovernmental organizations and faith-based organizations to build and strengthen our capacity to respond to the TB epidemic, in addition to establishing strong community and facility linkages.

In 2021, World Vision expanded its partnership with national governments and the Global Fund to include prevention and treatment of tuberculosis (TB), including as a comorbidity to HIV/AIDS, in Malawi and Haiti. Programming includes supporting the national health system with TB prevention activities and providing testing, treatment, and case management, as well as strengthening the national health data system.

What is World Vision’s response to neglected tropical diseases?


Neglected tropical diseases (NTD) are a set of 20 diseases that together affect more than 1 billion people in 149 countries (or one in five people worldwide). Typically, they are parasitic or bacterial infections that impact poor and marginalized communities without adequate sanitation. Children and women are the most vulnerable to these diseases, which can cause lifelong disfiguration and stigma, impacting children’s health, education, and well-being. World Vision has over 25 years of global experience partnering with governments in the mass distribution of deworming treatments and other medicines, health and sanitation supplies, and food products. We also have a long history of providing clean water and access to sanitation for millions of children and their families — a critical element in the prevention and elimination of NTDs.

Our technical strategies apply a health systems strengthening approach. We also work in alignment with the World Health Organization’s Neglected Tropical Diseases Roadmap 2021–2030, which aims to address the NTD burden by promoting holistic, crosscutting approaches and calling for greater ownership of NTD programming by countries and communities. Our programming focuses on fostering coordination and collaboration with stakeholders across sectors and implementing country-specific approaches, with the goal of achieving long-term, sustainable NTD control and elimination. We build governments’ capacity and resilience to manage integrated health services delivery and strengthen health systems to sustainably implement effective NTD programming.

Some examples of our work include:

  • Supporting the development of country-owned sustainability plans for NTDs
  • Leveraging existing distribution platforms and in-country technical expertise to implement long-term, cost-effective control programs
  • Engaging high-level stakeholders toward the integration of NTD priorities and functions into national health systems
  • Developing and strengthening a framework to control and eliminate NTDs in close coordination with WASH, nutrition, malaria, maternal and child health, and school-based programming to achieve each country’s control and elimination objectives
  • Integrating NTD prevention messages into WASH behavior change communication under the NTD WASH UP! school-based curriculum model
  • Developing policies and guidelines to empower healthcare workers and community volunteers to implement sustainable NTD interventions

World Vision is a technical partner on USAID’s Act to End Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) | West program. We work with NTD programs and ministries of health to strengthen cross-sector collaboration and integrate NTD policies and services with WASH, education, malaria, nutrition, and other health programs and sectors. Read this story to learn about a major achievement in Senegal that highlights our approach.

How has COVID-19 affected the world’s most vulnerable?


COVID-19 has had far-reaching effects on children and families across the globe but has disproportionally affected the world’s most vulnerable, especially those living in fragile contexts, exacerbating already dire situations. The World Bank states that although global poverty is once again on a downward trajectory, between 75 and 95 million more people could be living in extreme poverty in 2022 compared to pre-pandemic projections, due in part to the effects of the pandemic. This is having a devastating impact on families that are struggling to ensure their children are safe and in school, receive proper nutrition, and access quality healthcare.

The pandemic overwhelmed health systems, adversely impacting those already living in areas with limited access to essential services. It amplified existing challenges countries were facing in providing healthcare services, including hiring, deploying, retaining, and protecting well-trained and supported health professionals. These challenges, along with supply-chain disruptions of essential medicines and supplies, lockdowns/reduced mobility, and fear of illness also hindered people from receiving lifesaving treatment and preventive care for other illnesses. For the first time in 10 years, immunization coverage dropped, leading to an increase in deaths from tuberculosis and malaria. For infectious diseases like malaria, successful interventions heavily rely on high population coverage and uptake by communities at risk, and effective case management requires patients to promptly seek care at health facilities at the first sign of illness.

The full extent of COVID-19’s impact on economies, societies, and global health is still unknown and unfolding every day. Developing resilient and sustainable healthcare systems by strengthening crisis response capacity and being prepared for health emergencies is a critical investment that will ensure that children and adolescents are not dying from treatable and preventable conditions.

Over the last two years, World Vision has conducted multiple research studies, surveys, assessments, and desk reviews to better understand the needs and issues facing the communities we serve. These include:

  • Hungry and Unprotected Children: The Forgotten Refugees (June 2022): World Vision looked at the ongoing impacts of the pandemic, as well as the emerging global hunger crisis and what it means for forcibly displaced girls and boys.
  • Calling the Shots: Empowering Communities During COVID-19 (March 2022): This report reflects on the impact of our global COVID-19 response over the last two years, and looks forward as we consider how the indirect impacts of COVID-19 will continue to evolve and affect vulnerable children and their families for years to come.
  • UNMASKING II: Childhood Lost (October 2021): A rapid assessment found that COVID-19 had grossly heightened the vulnerabilities of children in Asia.
  • High Risk, Low Priority: Refugees Excluded from COVID-19 Vaccine Rollout (June 2021): This document presents an argument for inclusive, fair, and equitable access to vaccines, diagnostic equipment, and medicines.
  • The Silent Pandemic (April 2021): The mental health and well-being of children living in conflict-affected countries is dangerously deteriorating as they struggle to cope with the socioeconomic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • COVID-19 Aftershocks: Access Denied (August 2020): Teenage pregnancy threatens to block a million girls across sub-Saharan Africa from returning to school.
  • COVID-19 Aftershocks: Deadly Waves (August 2020): Multiple, potentially deadlier, waves of COVID-19 continue to threaten millions of lives if leaders fail to prioritize vulnerable people everywhere.
  • COVID-19 Aftershocks: Out of Time (July 2020): As families’ incomes plummet, millions more children go hungry and are exposed to harmful and dangerous circumstances, such as begging or child marriage.
  • COVID-19 Aftershocks: A Perfect Storm (May 2020): Millions more children are at risk of violence under lockdown and in the “new normal.”
  • COVID-19 Aftershocks (April 2020): Secondary impacts threaten more children’s lives than disease itself.

How is World Vision responding to the COVID-19 crisis?


World Vision has responded to the devastating impact of COVID-19 in more than 70 countries. Since the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic on March 11, 2020, our response has exceeded our initial goal of reaching 72 million people. As of April 2022, we had reached 81,439,346 people, and we are continuing to implement programs to help the most vulnerable children and their communities.

We have been strengthening health systems to respond to the crisis through training frontline health workers and providing personal protective equipment. We are addressing vaccine hesitancy through dialogue with community and faith leaders and supporting community health workers in vaccine administration.

As our initial response draws to an end, we know that the indirect impacts of COVID-19 will continue to evolve and affect vulnerable children and their families for years to come. A continuing response to both the current and lasting impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic is more essential than ever, which is why we will fold our COVID-19 activities into our long-term programming. To reduce the impact of COVID-19 on vulnerable children and families, we will continue to:

  • Prioritize efforts to support children affected by COVID-19 (e.g., education, child protection, food security, livelihoods)
  • Raise awareness about the indirect impacts of COVID-19 so the most vulnerable groups, particularly children, are not overlooked
  • Support people and health systems as countries face new waves and variants of COVID-19 (e.g., vaccination programming, emergency relief)
  • Strengthen health systems and equip workers so they are better prepared to face future health emergencies and disasters
  • Work with local leaders and health systems to encourage acceptance of COVID-19 vaccines
  • Fortify local economies by equipping individuals and communities to recover, thrive, and be more resilient
  • Provide children and young people opportunities and platforms to speak about issues affecting them, amplifying their voices with governments and partners, and advocating for opportunities for them to shape and participate in recovery efforts

Strong community systems are essential to achieving and sustaining good outcomes in health, nutrition, and WASH. Community systems encompass the structures, processes, and people that support community-level services and initiatives and are inclusive of formal systems (like health services) and informal systems (like social groups).

Support for community system strengthening is at the core of World Vision’s strategies for achieving long-term success in the health sector. For example, World Vision’s Citizen Voice and Action (CVA) model builds advocacy channels that empower communities and their governments to collaborate to ensure the delivery of promised services. Our Nurturing Care Groups model educates households on crucial health information and provides a platform for social mobilization and coordination. We invest in building the capacity of community health workers to support service delivery at the community level and conduct community-based monitoring as a resource to help communities identify progress and opportunities. Core Group Partners Project pioneered an integrated community-based surveillance and cross-border collaboration to reach nomadic and mobile populations, as well as engage community influencers and leaders, all of which were integral to the project’s progress.

Community System Strengthening FAQS:

How is World Vision strengthening the network of community health workers?


Many of World Vision’s investments to build healthy communities rely on community health workers (CHWs). CHWs are knowledgeable about basic healthcare but do not have a professional medical license. World Vision equips CHWs with training, curriculum, and tools to promote healthy practices, treat common illnesses, and help connect the community to health facilities.

While the role of CHWs within the health system varies from country to country, they are a crucial link between the communities they serve and the larger health system. World Vision specifically equips CHWs to deliver the following:

Integrated community case management (iCCM) is a strategy to train, support, and supply CHWs to diagnose and treat multiple illnesses for families with difficult access to case management at health facilities. More than half of under-5 child deaths are due to diseases that are preventable and treatable through simple, affordable interventions. However, delivery of health services is often weakest where the needs are greatest. In most high-mortality countries, facility-based services alone do not provide adequate access to treatment and, most importantly, not within the crucial window of 24 hours after the onset of symptoms. According to the World Health Organization, “malnourished children, particularly those with severe acute malnutrition, have a higher risk of death from common childhood illness such as diarrhea, pneumonia, and malaria. Nutrition-related factors contribute to about 45% of deaths in children under 5 years of age.”

However, the correct and timely treatment of childhood pneumonia, diarrhea, and malaria is one of the most powerful interventions to reduce mortality. We join communities to advocate with governments, the private sector, and civil society for iCCM services to bring curative healthcare to children in communities that are hardest to reach. In partnership with ministries of health, we build the capacity of CHWs and support them to ensure that community-based services are available for those who need them the most.

Timed and targeted counseling is a family-inclusive behavior change communication approach targeting families of young children, especially the most vulnerable and marginalized. Timed and targeted counseling encompasses a wide range of lifesaving health practices through appropriately timed messages delivered using interactive storytelling. The approach uses a dialogue-based counseling methodology, assessing current needs and practices and working toward progressive improvements when gaps are identified. Importantly, timed and targeted counseling seeks to engage both parents and decision makers, embracing a family-inclusive and gender-transformative model of child health and development in which the positive contribution of fathers is emphasized. Timed and targeted counseling can be done by many community members, including officially recognized CHWs, guide mothers, or volunteers.

Community-based management of acute malnutrition (CMAM) is a methodology for treating acute malnutrition in young children using a case-finding and triage approach. It was developed by Valid International and has since been endorsed by the U.N. (UNICEF and WHO) and USAID. The CMAM method enables community volunteers to identify and initiate treatment for children with acute malnutrition before they become seriously ill. Caregivers treat the majority of children with severe acute malnutrition in the home using Ready-to-Use-Therapeutic Foods and routine medical care.

Digital health innovations help CHWs, clinics, and hospitals collect and analyze information and make the best health decisions for program participants, especially in places where access to healthcare is limited.

Learn more about how our CHWs helped reduce malnutrition rates in Zambia.

How do communities use Citizen Voice and Action to promote change?


Since 2005, World Vision’s Citizen Voice and Action (CVA) approach has been used in more than 700 programs in 48 countries, resulting in improvements in several thousand health clinics and schools, as well as improvements in water access, extension services, and child protection. CVA fosters social accountability by educating citizens on the basic service rights their governments have promised them and facilitating the community to develop a scorecard of the availability and adequacy of services in their area. Communities use their scorecard to rate their satisfaction with services, work with decision makers to review data, and develop action plans for improvements. They continue to work with the government and local partners to ensure that agreed commitments are met.

The CVA approach has a solid and proven evidence base of change that has been influenced and informed by many years of use in the health sector. An evaluation of CVA in our Nobo Jatra program in Bangladesh found that CVA led to remarkable achievements and “inspired institutional actors to overcome inertia and find motivation to improve their job performance.” The approach helped local institutional actors to organize and coordinate themselves to improve service delivery in more creative ways, which had a “trickle-up” effect to higher levels of government. One promising finding was that 88% of community health clinics targeted were meeting government standards after the CVA approach was introduced, compared to only 49% before the approach was employed. Read more in this summary of the findings.

How does community-based monitoring strengthen community systems?


Community-based monitoring provides visibility on the performance of community systems, demonstrates how they are working, and indicates where improvements are needed. While the data is often used for understanding highly localized patterns, it can be difficult to translate for use at higher levels to inform policy and governance supporting community systems, because the local data is not generalizable to broader regions.

Within the framework of Citizen Voice and Action (see previous question), World Vision assists communities to aggregate community-level data and identify patterns in the performance of public services at district and regional levels.

In many places where we work, health systems lack the funding, resources, workforce, and policies required to function properly and ensure that families have access to even the most basic of health services. World Vision’s health system strengthening (HSS) interventions are geared toward a broad range of national health outcomes, including maternal, newborn, and child health. In our Global Fund programs, we build capacities, including training staff in data collection and strengthening community-level laboratory and diagnostics and treatment capabilities for malaria. Through our private funding streams, World Vision responded to WHO and UNICEF’s call to provide clean water access, hand hygiene services, and sanitation improvements in healthcare facilities. World Vision responded with a commitment larger than any other NGO: to reach 800 rural healthcare facilities between 2019 and 2021. We surpassed this commitment. Our current goal is to reach 3,000 healthcare facilities by 2030.

Health System Strengthening FAQS:

What are World Vision’s strategic approaches and principles for health system strengthening?


Our principle of working with communities and national governments fosters partnerships and prioritizes capacity building, collaborating, and learning and adapting for strategic approaches to reach scale. We focus on crosscutting issues, including gender equality and social inclusion, in our approach to HSS.

Our strategic approaches to HSS, with particular focuses on district and community levels, are based on the following:

  • Strengthening the performance of priority health system components that are relevant for effective delivery of health programs
  • Fostering synergies among the health programs by promoting integrated approaches to planning, programming, and service delivery
  • Building the capacity of health systems to scale up integrated service delivery platforms and improve quality, equity, efficiency, effectiveness, and sustainability of services, particularly in hard-to-reach areas and those targeting key affected and underserved population groups
  • Improving the managerial capacity of the entire health system at all levels, with an emphasis on district and community levels, through support to procurement and supply chain management, integrated health information systems, human resources training and supervision, and financial management
  • Supporting community and civil society actors, including community health workers, as well as the private sector, to enhance their engagement in the HSS and health programs
  • Working toward addressing gender inequalities and human rights issues through relevant legal, policy, and regulatory frameworks

What is unique about World Vision’s HSS implementation approach?


Our HSS projects intend to build service capacity in target health facilities at all levels (national and subnational), to deliver quality health services to communities. This is normally done by supporting the local Ministry of Health’s National Health Sector Strategic Plan, with the vision of having a functional health system contributing to the six pillars of HSS (leadership/governance; service delivery; health system financing; health workforce; health information systems; and medical products, vaccines, and technologies).

We train healthcare providers in standard health services, supply/inventory management, correct use of medicines and medical equipment, on-the-job mentoring of trained healthcare providers, and development of quality healthcare through supportive supervision, ideally incorporated into district health management teams’ supportive supervision and monitoring strategies. Our approach aims to improve the quality and accessibility of services, focusing on priority interventions to reduce mortality and morbidity. World Vision’s interventions and technical assistance engage communities to advocate for and contribute to the development and implementation of an essential health package centered around community‐based approaches and integrating essential services to reach all members of the community, especially women and other marginalized populations.

World Vision uses existing methodologies for engaging communities to give feedback and improve quality and accessibility of services. These include:

  • Citizen Voice and Action increases citizens’ knowledge of rights to health services and allows for collaboration to secure those rights. This model strengthens the environment for continual feedback and communication between the national government and the local government, and between the local government and communities.
  • Channels of Hope is an interactive process to create a safe space for faith leaders, their spouses, and faith communities to actively engage on health issues through science-based information and insight from religious texts that enable them to respond to some of the most difficult issues affecting their communities.
  • Integrated community case management utilizes trained, supervised community members, linked to facility-based services, to deliver curative interventions in the community. They may perform their duties from their homes, a community-constructed building, or government or private health facility. Integrated community case management is a strategy to train, support, and supply community health workers to diagnose and treat multiple Illnesses, specifically pneumonia, diarrhea, and malaria for sick children of families without easy access to case management at health facilities.
  • Community-based management of acute malnutrition supports communities to identify and treat acute malnutrition and wasting. This includes the creation of an mHealth application to help improve treatment, reporting, and monitoring of acute malnutrition.
  • Community health committees build the capacity of and empower local health committees to coordinate activities that increase community capacity, improve health policy and service environment, and support community health worker programs. Taken together, these improvements lead to strengthened community health systems and positive health outcomes.

World Vision promotes the healthy timing and spacing of pregnancies (HTSP) and creates awareness about the benefits of voluntary family planning. We integrate HTSP messages and family planning services, including promoting voluntary use of modern contraception methods, with our maternal and child health programming in alignment with local government policies and guidelines. We equip community health workers and other health staff to educate and counsel women, adolescent girls, and their partners on voluntary contraception and the health benefits to mothers and babies of preventing early pregnancy and leaving space between pregnancies.

To generate community support and reduce misconceptions and misinformation that can accompany family planning, we equip faith leaders and other community leaders through our Channels of Hope model and other approaches with accurate information about the benefits and value of family planning and modern contraception. Faith leaders, in turn, dialogue with their congregations about maternal and child health services — including immunization, HTSP, methods of contraception, and HIV and AIDS prevention — that will help them meet their fertility intentions for better health outcomes of children, women, and families.

Family Planning and Healthy Timing and Spacing of Pregnancies FAQs:

Why is family planning and healthy timing and spacing of pregnancies important for women and their children?


Our mission to enable children, families, and communities to reach their full potential cannot be realized without addressing the root issues of inadequate pregnancy spacing in many of the communities in which we work, which is often rooted in the lack of accurate knowledge of and/or access to contraception methods. World Vision’s efforts around voluntary family planning are directed at helping women achieve healthy timing and spacing of pregnancies, to give them and their children the best chance of survival. Risk of birth complications that result in maternal and newborn morbidity and mortality are drastically reduced when pregnancies are delayed until after the age of 18, limited after the age of 35, and spaced at intervals of two or more years.

When a woman delays pregnancy until she is at least 18 years old, not only will she be mature enough to give birth to a full-term, healthy baby; she’ll also be more likely to remain in school to pursue education and a career, increasing her ability to contribute to the economic health of her family. For subsequent births, children conceived 24 to 59 months after a previous birth have the lowest risk of dying in infancy. The time between pregnancies can also allow the baby to benefit from being breastfed longer. And when the mother is able to spend more time with each child, this contributes to the child’s physical, mental, and emotional development.

Child marriage (or “early marriage”) often results in early first pregnancy and closely spaced subsequent pregnancies and births, which are among the most frequent causes of infant and maternal mortality and abortion in developing countries. In order for World Vision to fulfill its mission, addressing the family planning needs of the communities in which we work is paramount. Family planning is not only a health issue for mother and child, but has ramifications for gender equality, women’s economic empowerment, education opportunities for children, child protection (as young girls are married off or children sent to work as a coping mechanism), food security for the whole family, and virtually every other aspect of life.

Despite evidence showing family planning’s impact on the health and socioeconomic status of women, girls, and their communities, some 218 million women and girls in low- and middle-income countries who want to avoid pregnancy are not using a modern method of contraception. An estimated 85 million women who become pregnant every year do not want to be pregnant. About half of those pregnancies — 42 million — end with an induced abortion. More than 67,000 women and girls die because of abortion-related injuries — and millions more suffer complications and long-term injuries. Abortion-related injuries account for 13% of maternal deaths worldwide.

HTSP and voluntary use of contraceptive services promotes life, health, and well-being by reducing neonatal, infant, and child deaths; preventing maternal deaths, unintended pregnancies, and abortions; and helping families achieve their desired timing and spacing of pregnancies. Regardless of when pregnancy occurs, World Vision promotes child and maternal survival, supporting women and their families to receive optimal antenatal care, skilled birth attendance, and care of the baby postpartum.

How does World Vision help change social norms about healthy timing and spacing of pregnancies and family planning?


World Vision uses several approaches to impact how communities view family planning that target changing attitudes at community, household, and individual levels. At the community level, World Vision works with faith leaders through Channels of Hope to help them champion family planning in faith communities, engage men and women about the benefits of family planning, and promote HTSP within their theological framework. Faith leaders provide accurate information to reduce misconceptions and misinformation and address social and cultural norms that hinder acceptance of modern contraception. At the household and individual levels, we integrate family planning messages in our maternal, newborn, and child health counseling, Nurturing Care Groups, and timed and targeted counseling to link women and their households with important education and social support to adopt healthy practices, including HTSP and family planning.

What are some examples of World Vision’s efforts and results?


In Ghana and Kenya, we conducted operations research on the Channels of Hope (COH) Methodology to gauge COH effectiveness to move faith leaders to support HTSP. Results among faith leaders in both countries indicated their knowledge on HTSP changed due to the COH workshops. In addition, family planning methods supporting HTSP with the highest knowledge increases between intervention areas and control areas were implants, injectables, and pills, with 18.4, 12.1, and 11.2 percentage point increases, respectively.

Kenya: In West Pokot and Isiolo counties, World Vision partnered with The Pfizer Foundation to implement the Increasing Use of Family Planning and Immunization Services through Program Integration project (2016-2019) to increase the uptake of family planning and immunization through integrated service delivery and community engagement strategies. At the facility level, World Vision trained providers on HTSP and contraceptive services and immunization through same day, co-located services and trained community health volunteers to counsel and record updates of HTSP/family planning and immunization during monthly household visits. At the community level, World Vision catalyzed Christian and Muslim faith leaders as community advocates to improve HTSP, immunization coverage, and male engagement, and we equipped community leaders to advocate for increased resources from the Ministry of Health.

The project:

  • Reached a total of 39,016 women and 34,067 men with family planning counseling or education.
  • Counseled 20,503 women on family planning (through health workers) as they attended routine child immunization services
  • Demonstrated statistically significant increases in immunization coverage in both project areas: from 51.2% to 82.7% in Isiolo and from 32.3% to 61.2% in West Pokot.

This project was featured in a number of journal articles:

Wellness extends through generations, building upon a continuum of reproductive, maternal, newborn, infant, child, and adolescent health. Evidence shows that timely prevention and treatment of complications during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period reduces maternal and newborn morbidity and mortality. Healthy newborns that receive adequate nutrition and preventive care for infectious disease grow into healthy children.

World Vision’s approach to maternal, newborn, and child health (MNCH) focuses on the first 1,000 days of a child’s life — from conception to their second birthday. During this time, high-quality antenatal care and skilled birth attendance protects women and their children by detecting and managing complications early and providing preventive treatments for infectious diseases that can lead to miscarriage or other poor outcomes. Our program models, like Nurturing Care Groups and timed and targeted counseling, provide household-level education on nutrition, hygiene, and other key child health topics to ensure that families are well-equipped to give their children a healthy start in life.

Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health FAQS:

Why is quality maternal, newborn, and child health fundamental to World Vision’s work?


World Vision’s mission is to ensure that every child experiences life to its fullest — therefore, the well-being of children, women, and their families is at the core of our work. For children to attain their fullest potential in life, the mother must receive high-quality antenatal care, optimal care during childbirth (with access to emergency care), and postnatal care. In addition, for children to thrive and survive, mothers and caregivers must have access to health promotion, disease prevention services, and timely treatment of common childhood illnesses.

The World Health Organization estimates that 810 women die each day from complications during pregnancy and childbirth. Ninety-four percent of maternal deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries, which is where most of World Vision’s work takes place. For every woman who dies of pregnancy-related causes, many more suffer from morbidity, disabilities, and long-term ill-health. A woman’s death during pregnancy or childbirth threatens her newborn’s chance of survival, lowers her other children’s chances for survival and education, and threatens her family’s stability.

What are World Vision’s strategies for maternal, newborn, and child health?


World Vision designs and supports whole health systems programming that addresses MNCH through a continuum of care and a life-cycle lens. Our programs are guided by global health principles that are evidence-based, aligned with government policies, people-centered, equity-driven, gender-responsive, accessible by the most vulnerable communities, sustainable, and accountable.

World Vision programs focus on three pillars that support MNCH: social and behavior change to encourage demand for high-quality MNCH; health system strengthening to support person-centered service delivery; and enabling environments created through community-led accountability mechanisms.

What are some examples of World Vision’s efforts and results?


Zambia: The Survive to Thrive maternal and child health program is funded by private individual donors. The project originally focused on one district and aimed to reduce morbidity and mortality for women of child-bearing age and children under 5 in the Luwingu district of Zambia’s Northern province. Luwingu was selected as the focus area due to its child mortality rates, as well as excessive stunting rates (8%–10% higher than the national average of 40%). This project utilizes a two‐pronged approach that focuses on proven preventive care interventions such as social and behavior change and improving access to quality care and treatment, with an emphasis on providing piped water to points of care and making sanitation and hygiene improvements at local health facilities. The programmatic success and partner support enabled the program to increase its aim of providing clean water and healthcare improvements at every healthcare facility where World Vision works.

Key results to date include:

  • 51,704 women and 29,251 children under 5 have been directly reached through project interventions.
  • The proportion of births attended by skilled birth attendants increased from 83% at baseline to 94% at midterm.
  • The proportion of sick children who were taken to an appropriate provider, as defined by national protocols/guidelines, increased from 9.2% at baseline to 66% at midterm.
  • Over 15,000 children under 5 have been screened and treated for malaria, pneumonia, or diarrhea.
  • 19 clinics in Luwingu district (an increase from our original target of nine) now have access to safe water within the facility, handwashing and sanitation infrastructure, supplies, and staff training.
  • Project achievements led to scaling up a national-level plan to provide piped water inside the premise of every healthcare facility within existing World Vision area programs.

Check out these videos for more on the Survive to Thrive project

Niger: The Act 2 Save project aims to reduce the high mortality rates of children under 5 in six communes in the Dosso and Maradi regions. The project is funded by private individual donors and was originally focused on two regions, but is now scaling across World Vision Niger area programs. In alignment with the government’s strategy, the project is helping address the leading contributors to these deaths, mainly preventable infectious diseases such as malaria, diarrhea, and pneumonia. Additionally, about a third of all deaths in children under 5 occur in the perinatal and infancy period, with leading contributing factors including neonatal sepsis, birth asphyxia, and congenital causes (and bearing in mind that only two out of five deliveries occur in health facilities). As such, solutions are implemented in health facilities and communities.

The project trains and equips community health workers (CHWs) to diagnose and treat pneumonia, malaria, and diarrhea with the integrated community case management (iCCM) approach, and invests in health facility improvements with an emphasis on water, sanitation, and hygiene infrastructure, training, and enabling environment.

To date:

  • 400 CHWs are trained and actively providing iCCM services for 67,500 children in 206 villages.
  • A partnership was finalized with the University of North Carolina Water Institute to evaluate operation and maintenance strategies for WASH in healthcare facilities based on existing literature and Niger learnings. Two rounds of data collection are complete.
  • 24 clinics (target: 34 for the life of the project) now have access to safe water within the facilities, handwashing and sanitation infrastructure, supplies, and staff training.
  • 275 healthcare facility staff received continued training in integrated management of childhood illness and infection prevention and control to help improve the quality of care provided.
  • The program success has resulted in an approved expansion plan to bring clean water and healthcare improvements to every healthcare facility everywhere we work in Niger.

Check out this video for more on the Act 2 Save project

Uganda: In partnership with The Pfizer Foundation, the Expanding Access to Immunization and Treatment program aims to reduce mortality among 85,743 children under 5 in Bugiri by addressing childhood illnesses through curative and preventive interventions. The project objectives are to improve demand and uptake of child health services at the community level, strengthen systems and structures supporting child health interventions, and strengthen the child health information and supply system. The program launched in 2020 and, to date, has contributed to the following achievements:

  • Identified 129,436 cases of malaria, diarrhea, and pneumonia among children under 5, and referred them
  • Reached 178,806 people with education on disease prevention and management
  • Supported 52 healthcare facilities with capacity building
  • Trained 1,000 village health team members to actively provide iCCM
  • Trained 144 health facility staff in integrated management of childhood illness and iCCM

Rwanda: The USAID-funded INGOBYI program (July 2018–May 2023) aimed to contribute to the reduction of infant and maternal mortality and the incidence of malaria in Rwanda by improving the availability of reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health and malaria services with resilience and sustainability. Key objectives included improving health-seeking behaviors, strengthening existing savings groups to improve financial access to health services, creating awareness and opportunities for community-based health insurance, and empowering community members through local-level advocacy platforms.

The project covered 20 districts in Rwanda and key results included:

  • 119 savings groups with 2,128 members were coached and mentored.
  • Citizen Voice and Action trainings were held among 26 district referral hospitals.
  • 11,720 participants engaged in local-level advocacy and developing score cards to identify strengths and weaknesses in health service delivery and how to be champions for change.

Adolescence, the phase of life between childhood and adulthood (from ages 10 to 19), is a unique stage of development where the foundations of good health are being laid, helping to lead to a productive adulthood. Adolescent girls and boys establish behaviors during this phase that can either protect or harm their health as they grow. Promoting health and development in adolescence includes a holistic focus on age-appropriate information and services that support adolescents’ physical, emotional, and mental health.

World Vision supports interventions focused on nutrition and immunization; preventing injury, violence, substance use, and harmful practices; educating on sexual and reproductive health and the prevention of HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases; managing communicable and non-communicable diseases; and promoting psychosocial health and coping skills. We also work with parents, schools, and communities to ensure that the environment girls and boys are growing up in is as safe, inclusive, and supportive as possible.

Adolescent Health FAQS:

Why is adolescent health fundamental to World Vision’s work?


World Vision recognizes that adolescents face a variety of challenges that impact their ability to thrive:

However, targeted comprehensive investments and opportunities in adolescent health — including education, socioeconomic development, and the prevention of violence — offer a chance for adolescents to flourish and become productive adults.

To address the physical, social, and mental health of adolescents, World Vision programming co-invests in education and keeping girls in schools, which may translate into reductions in early sexual debut and unintended pregnancies among adolescent girls. We also promote supportive parenting and communities, including activities that engage men and boys in livelihoods, HIV and AIDS prevention, and the prevention of forced child marriages. Additionally, improving WASH in schools leads to girls’ retention by allowing for dignified and safe menstrual hygiene management.

World Vision’s adolescent programming consists of intersectional and crosscutting interventions and approaches described below that seek outcomes in child protection, education, health, gender equality and social inclusion, and economic well-being. Adolescent health requires the intersection of these holistic approaches, which together work to address communities’ needs, and support and promote young people’s health and cognitive, social, emotional, and spiritual development.

Following are some examples of our holistic adolescent programming:

  • Interpersonal Psychotherapy for Groups is an evidence-based mental health and psychosocial support group therapy intervention for 12- to 19-year-olds. It reduces symptoms of depression (and has shown some indications of being beneficial to reducing anxiety and harmful substance use, including alcohol) by improving the quality of the participants’ social and interpersonal functioning.
  • Common Elements Treatment Approach is an evidence-based mental health intervention that is delivered in the community by laypeople and is used to address common mental health problems for adolescents and adults. World Vision, in partnership with Johns Hopkins University, piloted this model in secondary schools in India.
  • Citizen Voice and Action (CVA) strengthens adolescents’ participation in decision-making, improves social accountability and local advocacy, and facilitates dialogue between communities and government to improve services (like education and child protection services) that impact the daily lives of adolescents and their families. As adolescents are often direct users of basic services, they play a powerful role in the CVA community meetings, often raising topics adults will not raise.
  • Menstrual hygiene management includes providing separate latrines for girls in schools, safe disposal and/or water and soap stations for washing menstrual hygiene products, training adolescents to make reusable sanitary pads, and cultivating positive knowledge and behaviors toward menstrual health.
  • Village Savings and Loans facilitate savings and access to small loans and instills hope by enabling adolescents to plan, cope with household emergencies, develop their livelihoods, and invest in their health, education, and economic well-being.
  • Early Warning System tracks performance, attendance, and behavior at school and refers adolescent girls at risk for dropping out to a school-community accountability group that intervenes to keep girls in school.
  • Channels of Hope mobilizes faith leaders and faith communities to meaningfully address (in contextually appropriate ways) gender and gender-based violence in its various forms in local communities.
  • Psychological first aid (PFA) provides immediate support to an individual who is showing signs of psychosocial distress. When trained in PFA, helpers can offer PFA to children and adults following emergency situations, disclosure of abuse (e.g., child abuse, sexual- and gender-based violence), or at any point in time if a person is distressed. A facilitator’s manual and PFA manual are available in multiple languages. All staff working with children or families affected by violence should be trained in PFA skills.
  • Girls Clubs are established at the community level to engage 30 to 50 girls ages 14 to 24 to build resilience and reduce risk of HIV infection and other vulnerabilities. These clubs are located in communities to reach out to schools and schoolgirls in need of adolescent services. Health information, promotion, and skills building are provided at the Girls Club activities.

What are some examples of World Vision’s efforts and results?


The HIV epidemic disproportionately affects adolescent girls and young women (AGYW). Across the globe in 2019, an estimated 1.7 million adolescents were living with HIV and 190,000 were newly infected. Recent U.N. AIDS statistics indicate that in sub-Saharan Africa, AGYW are more than twice as likely to acquire HIV as their male counterparts due to gender-related factors, including harmful gender norms and taboos related to sexuality. However, keeping girls in school is one key way to help prevent child marriage, pregnancy, and gender-based violence — and reduce their risk of HIV infection.

In Uganda, the Strengthening School-Community Accountability for Girls’ Education (SAGE) program was a two-year U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief-funded project implemented by World Vision and managed by John Snow Research and Training, Inc. Through SAGE, a component of the Determined, Resilient, Empowered, AIDS-free and Safe (DREAMS) project, World Vision implemented activities that aimed to reduce school dropouts and HIV infections among 38,750 AGYW in 151 secondary schools across 10 districts with some of the highest levels of dropouts and HIV infections.

The project implemented two adolescent-led, adult-supported innovations: 1) early warning system (EWS) and 2) stay in school committees (SISCs). The project trained school and community stakeholders, established AGYW-led SISCs in schools, and changed student attendance norms by promoting adolescent leadership and community action to reduce dropouts. The SISC uses the EWS to track school attendance, behavior, and performance. SAGE’s innovative combination approach also helped shift social norms and practices around girls’ education, violence against children, reproductive health, and positive discipline.

According to the endline survey findings, the percentage of AGYW who were absent from school for at least a month in a term during the last 12-month period dropped by 2.5 percentage points between baseline (12.7%) and endline (10.2%). Further, SAGE monitoring data reported an increase of girls retained in school at the end of the project (44,351), at 99.7% in 2019 (compared to 88.5% in 2016). For HIV status, the percentage of AGYW ages 15 to 19 who tested for HIV in the last 12 months and know their status increased by 3.8 points in the intervention/treatment areas, from 92.5% at baseline in 2017 to 96.3% at endline in 2018. The findings suggest that the combined EWS and SISC approaches are a potentially effective intervention to identifying girls at risk of dropping out of school, mitigating the causes of dropout, and potentially decreasing risky behaviors and reducing risk of HIV infection.

In India, we work with husbands and fathers through Men Care groups to help them challenge harmful gender norms and support and protect their wives and daughters from gender-based violence and harm, including child trafficking and early marriage. Girl Power groups equip and empower girls with information and resources to help keep themselves and their friends safe from abuse and trafficking.

In Kenya, World Vision dreams of a future without female genital mutilation (FGM) and child marriage. We are working to ensure that all girls and boys are cared for and protected from all forms of violence, while growing up within supportive families and communities. Through evidence-based strategies, our Kenya Big Dream project works to raise the visibility of violence against children and to change attitudes and behaviors. This involves not only educating and training parents, the community, government, and service providers, but also empowering girls and boys themselves. Turning the tide on child marriage and FGM requires a multisector approach to create lasting change. Following INSPIRE — WHO’s evidence-based strategies for best practices in child protection work — Kenya Big Dream changes social norms harmful to children, strengthens household economic conditions to reduce financial incentives for child marriage, promotes education and life skills training for girls, and more.

Access to education and healthcare is vital to girls who have undergone FGM, as well as girls who are likely to undergo the rite. The Kenya Big Dream project advocates at local and national levels to persuade the Kenyan government to fulfill its legal mandate to ensure children have access to high-quality education. Additionally, the project works for the economic empowerment of families, because when parents are financially stable and resilient, they place less pressure on young girls to marry in exchange for a bride price. Given this reality, World Vision is working with farmers to increase family incomes through technical trainings that facilitate access to markets with high-value crops and savings groups that help increase their savings and access to financial services.

Health Stories

World Vision’s work around family planning and healthy timing and spacing of pregnancies transforms the lives of families in Kenya.

A community health worker helps save a child’s life from malaria.

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A partnership between The Pfizer Foundation and World Vision provides women in Kenya with voluntary family planning services while their children are being vaccinated.