Reverend Ahouantchede Cesar of Espoir de la Famille in Benin describes a program to provide income generating activities for women affected by poverty and HIV/AIDS to strengthen their economic power.
UNICEF is committed to protecting children's rights and improving their health globally. It was created in 1946 to provide emergency aid to children devastated by World War II. Since then, UNICEF has made progress in child healthcare initiatives like immunization and oral rehydration. UNICEF works with governments and organizations worldwide to address threats to children's health from preventable diseases. Its goal is ensuring all children can survive and develop to their full potential.
UNICEF is committed to improving children's health globally. It was created in 1946 to provide emergency aid to children devastated by WWII. Since then, UNICEF has significantly reduced child deaths from diseases like diarrhea and measles through initiatives like immunization, oral rehydration, and promoting breastfeeding. UNICEF has extensive partnerships and works daily with communities to bring practical health solutions to women and children most at risk from the leading causes of child death: respiratory infections, diarrhea, malaria, and malnutrition.
UNICEF's roles in Nepal include providing education, immunizations, and child protection. Its mission is to help children worldwide realize their rights and rescue those in need. UNICEF works as advocates for children and provides emergency supplies like medicine, vaccines, and education in rural areas. It also focuses on health education for mothers and HIV/AIDS programs. Funding is spent in several countries including Nepal, India, and China to support these initiatives.
This document discusses UNFPA's work to provide care, dignity, and lifesaving services to women and girls affected by conflict in South Sudan. It highlights several programs including providing dignity kits to women who deliver at health centers, family planning education, and community dramas about preventing gender-based violence. The document also features stories of ambulance drivers, midwives, and volunteers who are working to help refugees in Uganda access maternal and reproductive healthcare. Photos show different aspects of UNFPA's humanitarian response such as community meetings, distributions of supplies, and refugee women and children participating in sports.
Unicef now playing a vital role in Bangladesh. Bangladesh is a densely populated country where more than 50% people are poor and illiterate. Life is very difficult here in Bangladesh. As a result most of the children of Bangladesh do not get proper care by their parents or by the government . Unicef is now working with these deprived children for decades. By the help of Unicef, now Bangladesh has overcome some major problem which are found among the children of Bangladesh like diseases, education, proper hygiene, health care etc.
UNICEF established the GOBI-FFF program to save children's lives in developing countries. The program focuses on (1) Growth monitoring, (2) Oral rehydration, (3) Breastfeeding, (4) Immunization, (5) Female education, (6) Food supplementation, and (7) Family planning. These relatively simple and inexpensive interventions can save up to 20,000 children's lives per day by preventing malnutrition, diarrhea, and other diseases that often kill young children in developing nations. UNICEF has used the GOBI-FFF program for over 40 years to improve child and maternal health around the world.
Mariana Merelo Lobo is the Operations Director at Action Against Hunger-UK. She discusses malnutrition, which affects 55 million children worldwide and claims the lives of 19 million severely malnourished children each year without treatment. Action Against Hunger has worked for over 30 years to address both the immediate and underlying causes of hunger and malnutrition in over 40 countries, helping over 4 million people annually. Despite progress, malnutrition remains a major public health issue and cause of death, illness, and long-term physical and mental impairment in children. Action Against Hunger is committed to building on its work to end malnutrition through a new five-year strategy focused on treating malnourished children, responding to disasters, and addressing the
Reverend Ahouantchede Cesar of Espoir de la Famille in Benin describes a program to provide income generating activities for women affected by poverty and HIV/AIDS to strengthen their economic power.
UNICEF is committed to protecting children's rights and improving their health globally. It was created in 1946 to provide emergency aid to children devastated by World War II. Since then, UNICEF has made progress in child healthcare initiatives like immunization and oral rehydration. UNICEF works with governments and organizations worldwide to address threats to children's health from preventable diseases. Its goal is ensuring all children can survive and develop to their full potential.
UNICEF is committed to improving children's health globally. It was created in 1946 to provide emergency aid to children devastated by WWII. Since then, UNICEF has significantly reduced child deaths from diseases like diarrhea and measles through initiatives like immunization, oral rehydration, and promoting breastfeeding. UNICEF has extensive partnerships and works daily with communities to bring practical health solutions to women and children most at risk from the leading causes of child death: respiratory infections, diarrhea, malaria, and malnutrition.
UNICEF's roles in Nepal include providing education, immunizations, and child protection. Its mission is to help children worldwide realize their rights and rescue those in need. UNICEF works as advocates for children and provides emergency supplies like medicine, vaccines, and education in rural areas. It also focuses on health education for mothers and HIV/AIDS programs. Funding is spent in several countries including Nepal, India, and China to support these initiatives.
This document discusses UNFPA's work to provide care, dignity, and lifesaving services to women and girls affected by conflict in South Sudan. It highlights several programs including providing dignity kits to women who deliver at health centers, family planning education, and community dramas about preventing gender-based violence. The document also features stories of ambulance drivers, midwives, and volunteers who are working to help refugees in Uganda access maternal and reproductive healthcare. Photos show different aspects of UNFPA's humanitarian response such as community meetings, distributions of supplies, and refugee women and children participating in sports.
Unicef now playing a vital role in Bangladesh. Bangladesh is a densely populated country where more than 50% people are poor and illiterate. Life is very difficult here in Bangladesh. As a result most of the children of Bangladesh do not get proper care by their parents or by the government . Unicef is now working with these deprived children for decades. By the help of Unicef, now Bangladesh has overcome some major problem which are found among the children of Bangladesh like diseases, education, proper hygiene, health care etc.
UNICEF established the GOBI-FFF program to save children's lives in developing countries. The program focuses on (1) Growth monitoring, (2) Oral rehydration, (3) Breastfeeding, (4) Immunization, (5) Female education, (6) Food supplementation, and (7) Family planning. These relatively simple and inexpensive interventions can save up to 20,000 children's lives per day by preventing malnutrition, diarrhea, and other diseases that often kill young children in developing nations. UNICEF has used the GOBI-FFF program for over 40 years to improve child and maternal health around the world.
Mariana Merelo Lobo is the Operations Director at Action Against Hunger-UK. She discusses malnutrition, which affects 55 million children worldwide and claims the lives of 19 million severely malnourished children each year without treatment. Action Against Hunger has worked for over 30 years to address both the immediate and underlying causes of hunger and malnutrition in over 40 countries, helping over 4 million people annually. Despite progress, malnutrition remains a major public health issue and cause of death, illness, and long-term physical and mental impairment in children. Action Against Hunger is committed to building on its work to end malnutrition through a new five-year strategy focused on treating malnourished children, responding to disasters, and addressing the
UNICEF is the most important NGO in the world according to the writer. They transport essential supplies like food, water, and clothes via plane to Africa to provide humanitarian aid. The United Nations Children's Fund was created in 1946 and is based in New York City, working to help children and mothers in developing countries through emergency relief and humanitarian assistance.
- Over 900 million people do not have enough food to eat according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. 98% of the world's hungry live in developing countries and 65% live in just 7 countries including India, China, and Ethiopia.
- Hunger is the number one risk to health worldwide, greater than diseases like AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis. Malnutrition impairs development and increases risk of disease and early death.
- Hunger has crushing economic impacts on developing nations as malnutrition stunts children's growth and potential lifetime earnings by 5-10%.
UNICEF - United Nations International Children's Fund
established in 1946,by UN general assembly
UNICEF regional office - New Delhi - for south central Asian region covering Afganistan , Sri Lanka ,India,Maldives,Mongolia,Nepal, Headed by Dr.Yasmin Ali
Headquarters - United Nation ,New York.
Governed by 36 Nation Executive Board as in 2010.
UNICEF was formed to provide emergency food & healthcare to children & mother in countries devasted in world war 2
UNICEF focuses on child survival and development, basic education, gender equality, and protecting young people affected by HIV/AIDS. It works with governments and organizations in over 190 countries to save children's lives by providing healthcare, clean water, nutrition, education, and emergency relief. UNICEF also works to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS among young people worldwide by informing and treating those with the disease.
American University Honors Thesis - Allie Stauss, Class of 2014Allison Stauss
The document summarizes a study that evaluated the impact of a community-based agricultural program on child nutrition in Ngaramtoni, Tanzania. The program was implemented at the Jane Olevolos Orphan Center and involved teaching children about nutrition, establishing vegetable gardens, and providing chickens to improve the children's diets. Pre- and post-surveys showed that after consuming foods from the gardens, the children felt happier, more energetic, and healthier. The program aimed to introduce sustainable agriculture practices to address malnutrition issues driven by lack of education, poverty, and cultural preferences in the community.
Maurice Pate founded UNICEF in 1947 after working to feed children in Poland following World War I. UNICEF works in 190 countries providing children with healthcare, education, clean water and relief efforts. Some notable UNICEF campaigns include the Tap Project to provide safe drinking water, work with Kiwanis to eliminate tetanus, and the Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF program on Halloween. Many celebrities support UNICEF including Taylor Swift, Angelina Jolie, Rihanna, and others.
4,000 children die every day from diarrhea caused by lack of access to clean water and sanitation. Around 2.5 billion people still lack access to improved sanitation, including 1.2 billion who have no facilities at all. UNICEF is the world's leading organization working for children, providing emergency relief and development assistance to help children survive, stay healthy, get an education, and be protected from abuse.
Devex uses images and stories to show development in action. Here are the 10 images, shared with us in 2013 by aid groups from around the globe, which are most liked on Facebook.
UNICEF was established in 1946 by the United Nations to provide humanitarian and developmental assistance to children and mothers globally. It works in over 190 countries and territories delivering results for children. UNICEF believes that all children have the right to survive, thrive and fulfill their potential. It focuses on issues like health, nutrition, HIV/AIDS, education, water and sanitation, and child protection. UNICEF is supported by voluntary funding from governments and private donors. It carries out programming through country offices while being guided by its executive board and headquarters.
The document discusses types of hunger such as chronic hunger and disaster-related hunger. It notes that over 1 billion people worldwide experience hunger, and that hungry children are vulnerable, as malnutrition can start during pregnancy and make children more prone to illness. While developed countries waste food, underdeveloped countries have people dying of hunger. Relief organizations provide aid, but long-term solutions include education to help end hunger globally.
The Compassion International Difference: Fighting Poverty WorldwidePaul Digueseppi
Compassion International allows individuals to sponsor children in need around the world, impacting over a million children by providing education and healthcare. Poverty affects over 1.4 billion people, especially women and children, who make up almost half the population in developing countries. Each day, about 10,000 women die in childbirth and 10,000 newborns perish within a month, with over nine million children under five dying each year, two-thirds preventably. Compassion International enables sponsors to change these statistics for over $1 per day by ensuring children get food and education.
This document discusses the threat of an influenza pandemic and provides advice on how to prepare families and businesses. It notes experts warn the world is ill-prepared for a pandemic and mortality from influenza has increased 114% since 1918. The document recommends individuals prepare 2 weeks of food, water, and medication and learn proper hygiene practices. Businesses should create pandemic plans and allow for work from home options. Additional resources on pandemic preparedness are provided.
The document discusses a press release from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization about over 1 billion people going hungry. It also notes that about 1/3 of global food production is wasted annually. This led students at Shreejee International School in Sonepat, Haryana to think about how they could help address hunger in their community. The school worked with local dhabas (roadside restaurants) near Murthal to collect and distribute leftover food to hungry children, bringing them immense joy. The students shared the success of their efforts through public addresses and a street play to inspire others.
Unicef corporate communication analysisQianchang Wei
UNICEF utilizes a variety of communication channels including broadcast media, print media, online channels, and traditional channels to communicate with its various stakeholders. Broadcast media like radio and TV have a wide reach but reduced smartphone usage reduced engagement. Print materials in local languages had success in Kyrgyzstan. Online channels like social media and websites are effective but not universal. Traditional channels engage communities but have limited short-term impact. UNICEF strives to use an integrated approach and continually evaluate and improve its communication performance.
The document discusses improving maternal health globally. It notes that nearly 830 women die every day due to complications during pregnancy and childbirth, most of which could be prevented by improving access to emergency obstetric care and prenatal care. Specifically, it recommends increasing access to trained healthcare professionals for childbirth and ensuring women receive the recommended 4 prenatal checkups. The document also advocates donating to organizations working to build maternal health clinics in developing countries to improve outcomes for mothers and infants worldwide.
2017 Statewide Case Competition: Team 10 - Second Place (UA)Andrea Thomas
This document proposes a community-based solution to reduce stunting and malnutrition in Amhara children in Ethiopia over 5 years. It identifies key issues like maternal malnutrition, infant undernutrition, and lack of clean water. The solution has three main attack points: 1) building maternal homes to address maternal malnutrition, 2) developing an infant staple food to combat undernutrition from 6-24 months, and 3) installing WarkaWater devices for a sustainable source of clean water. The budget outlines costs of $2 million over 5 years to implement maternal homes, supplements, transportation, healthcare workers, and Warkawater devices. The expectation is this comprehensive approach will decrease disease and malnutrition while increasing health awareness.
The ELIMINATE Project aims to eliminate maternal and neonatal tetanus by immunizing over 100 million mothers and their babies with vaccines provided by Kiwanis International and UNICEF. This deadly disease kills nearly 60,000 newborns and women each year through painful convulsions and extreme sensitivity in tiny newborns. Reaching the most neglected families will require $110 million to fund vaccines, medical staff, transportation and additional healthcare services to end this preventable disease and improve community health.
UNICEF was created in 1946 by the United Nations General Assembly to provide emergency food and healthcare to children devastated by World War II. It became a permanent part of the UN in 1954 and is now headquartered in New York City, providing long-term humanitarian assistance to children and mothers in developing countries as well as emergency relief. UNICEF is part of the UN Development Group and over 90% of its revenue goes towards direct program services.
The World Food Programme is the largest humanitarian organization fighting hunger worldwide. It provides food assistance in emergencies to victims of war, conflict, and natural disasters, and helps communities rebuild after crises have passed. The WFP is voluntarily funded and 90% of donations directly support food assistance. In Bangladesh specifically, the WFP works to improve nutrition for mothers, children, and school-aged kids; supports disaster risk reduction and poverty reduction projects; assists refugees; and promotes rice fortification.
ChildFund International Addresses Emergencies and Natural DisastersDV Medical Supply
DV Medical Supply has delivered medical supplies in the US since 1977 and supports ChildFund International's efforts to help children in poverty. ChildFund responds to crises like drought in East Africa and Typhoon Nina in the Philippines in 2016, providing food, water and rebuilding support. They helped over 8 million at risk of malnutrition in Africa and displaced children in the Philippines post-typhoon.
The United Nations was founded in 1945 to replace the ineffective League of Nations and focus on global peace and security. The UN works to keep peace, provide humanitarian aid during emergencies, fight poverty through development projects, protect the environment, and improve health and education. UNICEF was founded a year later by the UN to focus on the well-being of women and children in developing countries. UNICEF's goals include eradicating poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education, promoting gender equality, reducing child and maternal mortality, and combating diseases like HIV/AIDS and malaria.
UNICEF is the most important NGO in the world according to the writer. They transport essential supplies like food, water, and clothes via plane to Africa to provide humanitarian aid. The United Nations Children's Fund was created in 1946 and is based in New York City, working to help children and mothers in developing countries through emergency relief and humanitarian assistance.
- Over 900 million people do not have enough food to eat according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. 98% of the world's hungry live in developing countries and 65% live in just 7 countries including India, China, and Ethiopia.
- Hunger is the number one risk to health worldwide, greater than diseases like AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis. Malnutrition impairs development and increases risk of disease and early death.
- Hunger has crushing economic impacts on developing nations as malnutrition stunts children's growth and potential lifetime earnings by 5-10%.
UNICEF - United Nations International Children's Fund
established in 1946,by UN general assembly
UNICEF regional office - New Delhi - for south central Asian region covering Afganistan , Sri Lanka ,India,Maldives,Mongolia,Nepal, Headed by Dr.Yasmin Ali
Headquarters - United Nation ,New York.
Governed by 36 Nation Executive Board as in 2010.
UNICEF was formed to provide emergency food & healthcare to children & mother in countries devasted in world war 2
UNICEF focuses on child survival and development, basic education, gender equality, and protecting young people affected by HIV/AIDS. It works with governments and organizations in over 190 countries to save children's lives by providing healthcare, clean water, nutrition, education, and emergency relief. UNICEF also works to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS among young people worldwide by informing and treating those with the disease.
American University Honors Thesis - Allie Stauss, Class of 2014Allison Stauss
The document summarizes a study that evaluated the impact of a community-based agricultural program on child nutrition in Ngaramtoni, Tanzania. The program was implemented at the Jane Olevolos Orphan Center and involved teaching children about nutrition, establishing vegetable gardens, and providing chickens to improve the children's diets. Pre- and post-surveys showed that after consuming foods from the gardens, the children felt happier, more energetic, and healthier. The program aimed to introduce sustainable agriculture practices to address malnutrition issues driven by lack of education, poverty, and cultural preferences in the community.
Maurice Pate founded UNICEF in 1947 after working to feed children in Poland following World War I. UNICEF works in 190 countries providing children with healthcare, education, clean water and relief efforts. Some notable UNICEF campaigns include the Tap Project to provide safe drinking water, work with Kiwanis to eliminate tetanus, and the Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF program on Halloween. Many celebrities support UNICEF including Taylor Swift, Angelina Jolie, Rihanna, and others.
4,000 children die every day from diarrhea caused by lack of access to clean water and sanitation. Around 2.5 billion people still lack access to improved sanitation, including 1.2 billion who have no facilities at all. UNICEF is the world's leading organization working for children, providing emergency relief and development assistance to help children survive, stay healthy, get an education, and be protected from abuse.
Devex uses images and stories to show development in action. Here are the 10 images, shared with us in 2013 by aid groups from around the globe, which are most liked on Facebook.
UNICEF was established in 1946 by the United Nations to provide humanitarian and developmental assistance to children and mothers globally. It works in over 190 countries and territories delivering results for children. UNICEF believes that all children have the right to survive, thrive and fulfill their potential. It focuses on issues like health, nutrition, HIV/AIDS, education, water and sanitation, and child protection. UNICEF is supported by voluntary funding from governments and private donors. It carries out programming through country offices while being guided by its executive board and headquarters.
The document discusses types of hunger such as chronic hunger and disaster-related hunger. It notes that over 1 billion people worldwide experience hunger, and that hungry children are vulnerable, as malnutrition can start during pregnancy and make children more prone to illness. While developed countries waste food, underdeveloped countries have people dying of hunger. Relief organizations provide aid, but long-term solutions include education to help end hunger globally.
The Compassion International Difference: Fighting Poverty WorldwidePaul Digueseppi
Compassion International allows individuals to sponsor children in need around the world, impacting over a million children by providing education and healthcare. Poverty affects over 1.4 billion people, especially women and children, who make up almost half the population in developing countries. Each day, about 10,000 women die in childbirth and 10,000 newborns perish within a month, with over nine million children under five dying each year, two-thirds preventably. Compassion International enables sponsors to change these statistics for over $1 per day by ensuring children get food and education.
This document discusses the threat of an influenza pandemic and provides advice on how to prepare families and businesses. It notes experts warn the world is ill-prepared for a pandemic and mortality from influenza has increased 114% since 1918. The document recommends individuals prepare 2 weeks of food, water, and medication and learn proper hygiene practices. Businesses should create pandemic plans and allow for work from home options. Additional resources on pandemic preparedness are provided.
The document discusses a press release from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization about over 1 billion people going hungry. It also notes that about 1/3 of global food production is wasted annually. This led students at Shreejee International School in Sonepat, Haryana to think about how they could help address hunger in their community. The school worked with local dhabas (roadside restaurants) near Murthal to collect and distribute leftover food to hungry children, bringing them immense joy. The students shared the success of their efforts through public addresses and a street play to inspire others.
Unicef corporate communication analysisQianchang Wei
UNICEF utilizes a variety of communication channels including broadcast media, print media, online channels, and traditional channels to communicate with its various stakeholders. Broadcast media like radio and TV have a wide reach but reduced smartphone usage reduced engagement. Print materials in local languages had success in Kyrgyzstan. Online channels like social media and websites are effective but not universal. Traditional channels engage communities but have limited short-term impact. UNICEF strives to use an integrated approach and continually evaluate and improve its communication performance.
The document discusses improving maternal health globally. It notes that nearly 830 women die every day due to complications during pregnancy and childbirth, most of which could be prevented by improving access to emergency obstetric care and prenatal care. Specifically, it recommends increasing access to trained healthcare professionals for childbirth and ensuring women receive the recommended 4 prenatal checkups. The document also advocates donating to organizations working to build maternal health clinics in developing countries to improve outcomes for mothers and infants worldwide.
2017 Statewide Case Competition: Team 10 - Second Place (UA)Andrea Thomas
This document proposes a community-based solution to reduce stunting and malnutrition in Amhara children in Ethiopia over 5 years. It identifies key issues like maternal malnutrition, infant undernutrition, and lack of clean water. The solution has three main attack points: 1) building maternal homes to address maternal malnutrition, 2) developing an infant staple food to combat undernutrition from 6-24 months, and 3) installing WarkaWater devices for a sustainable source of clean water. The budget outlines costs of $2 million over 5 years to implement maternal homes, supplements, transportation, healthcare workers, and Warkawater devices. The expectation is this comprehensive approach will decrease disease and malnutrition while increasing health awareness.
The ELIMINATE Project aims to eliminate maternal and neonatal tetanus by immunizing over 100 million mothers and their babies with vaccines provided by Kiwanis International and UNICEF. This deadly disease kills nearly 60,000 newborns and women each year through painful convulsions and extreme sensitivity in tiny newborns. Reaching the most neglected families will require $110 million to fund vaccines, medical staff, transportation and additional healthcare services to end this preventable disease and improve community health.
UNICEF was created in 1946 by the United Nations General Assembly to provide emergency food and healthcare to children devastated by World War II. It became a permanent part of the UN in 1954 and is now headquartered in New York City, providing long-term humanitarian assistance to children and mothers in developing countries as well as emergency relief. UNICEF is part of the UN Development Group and over 90% of its revenue goes towards direct program services.
The World Food Programme is the largest humanitarian organization fighting hunger worldwide. It provides food assistance in emergencies to victims of war, conflict, and natural disasters, and helps communities rebuild after crises have passed. The WFP is voluntarily funded and 90% of donations directly support food assistance. In Bangladesh specifically, the WFP works to improve nutrition for mothers, children, and school-aged kids; supports disaster risk reduction and poverty reduction projects; assists refugees; and promotes rice fortification.
ChildFund International Addresses Emergencies and Natural DisastersDV Medical Supply
DV Medical Supply has delivered medical supplies in the US since 1977 and supports ChildFund International's efforts to help children in poverty. ChildFund responds to crises like drought in East Africa and Typhoon Nina in the Philippines in 2016, providing food, water and rebuilding support. They helped over 8 million at risk of malnutrition in Africa and displaced children in the Philippines post-typhoon.
The United Nations was founded in 1945 to replace the ineffective League of Nations and focus on global peace and security. The UN works to keep peace, provide humanitarian aid during emergencies, fight poverty through development projects, protect the environment, and improve health and education. UNICEF was founded a year later by the UN to focus on the well-being of women and children in developing countries. UNICEF's goals include eradicating poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education, promoting gender equality, reducing child and maternal mortality, and combating diseases like HIV/AIDS and malaria.
The United Nations was founded in 1945 to replace the ineffective League of Nations and focus on global peace and security. The UN works to keep peace, provide humanitarian aid during emergencies, fight poverty through development projects, protect the environment, and improve health and education. UNICEF was founded a year later by the UN to focus on the well-being of women and children in developing countries. UNICEF's goals include eradicating poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education, promoting gender equality, reducing child and maternal mortality, and combating diseases like HIV/AIDS and malaria.
The United Nations was founded in 1945 to replace the ineffective League of Nations and focus on global peace and security. The UN works to keep peace, provide humanitarian aid during emergencies, fight poverty through development projects, protect the environment, and improve health and education. UNICEF was founded a year later by the UN to focus on women's and children's well-being. UNICEF aims to achieve universal primary education, promote gender equality, reduce child and maternal mortality, combat diseases like AIDS and malaria, and meet other goals by 2015.
The United Nations was founded in 1945 to replace the ineffective League of Nations and focus on global peace and security. The UN works to keep peace, provide humanitarian aid during emergencies, fight poverty through development projects, protect the environment, and improve health and education. UNICEF was founded a year later by the UN to focus on the well-being of women and children in developing countries. UNICEF's goals include eradicating poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education, promoting gender equality, reducing child and maternal mortality, and combating diseases like HIV/AIDS and malaria.
The United Nations was founded in 1945 to replace the ineffective League of Nations and focus on global peace and security. The UN works to keep peace, provide humanitarian aid during emergencies, fight poverty through development projects, protect the environment, and improve health and education. UNICEF was founded a year later by the UN to focus on the well-being of women and children in developing countries. UNICEF's goals include eradicating poverty and hunger, achieving universal primary education, promoting gender equality, reducing child and maternal mortality, and combating diseases like HIV/AIDS and malaria.
The United Nations was founded in 1945 to replace the ineffective League of Nations and focus on global peace and security. The UN works to keep peace, provide humanitarian aid during emergencies, fight poverty through development projects, protect the environment, and improve health and education. UNICEF was founded a year after the UN to focus on women's and children's well-being. UNICEF aims to achieve universal primary education and reduce child mortality, maternal mortality, and the spread of diseases like HIV/AIDS and malaria.
World Help is a faith-based humanitarian organization that exists to serve the physical and spiritual needs of people in impoverished communities around the world.
Last year was another remarkable season in the life of our organization—a year full of growth, expansion, and sustainable impact . . . impact that we are committed to share with passion, detail, and total transparency.
Browse these pages to find firsthand accounts from international partners, staff, supporters, and some of the 2.5 million people on the ground that have experienced true life change because of the work you enabled us to do.
We will take a moment to celebrate, but we won’t stop here.
Our vision for 2013 is to go further than ever before . . . to dream bigger, push harder, and step out in faith together to reach millions more with help and hope.
Together, we can be the change the world is waiting for. We hope you’ll join us. Visit http://worldhelp.net to learn more and get involved.
Humanitarian Action for Children is UNICEF’s global appeal, which highlights the challenges faced by children in humanitarian situations, the support required to help them survive and thrive, and the results possible in even the most difficult of circumstances. Information about UNICEF’s work in these contexts is presented in each country and regional page of the HAC at www.unicef.org/appeals. Appeals and results are updated regularly, based on the country context. The HAC is in line with United Nations inter-agency Strategic Response Plans.
This document summarizes Oxfam's work in 2014-2015. It discusses Oxfam's humanitarian response to 39 emergencies helping over 8 million people. It also discusses Oxfam's development work empowering over 700,000 people and improving livelihoods for over 500,000. Additionally, it discusses Oxfam's campaign and advocacy work fighting inequality and climate change with over 560,000 people taking online actions in support of campaigns.
The document describes Project Tanzania 2009, which was started by Kristle and Michael to support health initiatives for children in Tanzania. It provides details about their visit to Tanzania, including meeting their sponsored child Miriamu. It also discusses the Survive Five program that World Vision is implementing in Tanzania to address the top five causes of child mortality: malnutrition, malaria, vaccine-preventable diseases, pneumonia, and diarrhea. The program aims to increase access to treatments like oral rehydration, antibiotics, vaccination, bed nets, and vitamin A.
4,000 children die every day from diarrhea caused by lack of access to clean water and sanitation. Around 2.5 billion people still lack access to improved sanitation, including 1.2 billion who have no facilities at all. UNICEF is the world's leading organization working for children, providing emergency relief and development assistance to help children survive, stay healthy, get an education, and be protected from abuse.
Save the Children used donor support in 2014 to pursue its mission of helping children worldwide. Key accomplishments included:
1) Responding to crises like Ebola in Liberia and typhoons in the Philippines, as well as ongoing conflicts in Syria and elsewhere.
2) Implementing programs in over 120 countries that improved child health, nutrition, education, economic opportunities and protection from harm. These programs reached millions of children.
3) Advocating for policies and celebrations, like the 25th anniversary of the UN Convention on Children's Rights, to further promote children's welfare on a large scale.
The document discusses efforts to close the immunization gap and fully immunize children worldwide against preventable diseases. It notes that while vaccines have immunized 80% of children globally, 20% remain unprotected. In the 1980s, UNICEF and partners launched a major drive to vaccinate children in developing countries, increasing coverage from 20% to 80%. However, over 6 million children still die each year from preventable causes. The document outlines strategies to achieve vaccine coverage targets and end epidemics by 2030, noting that taking vaccines to remote, marginalized communities is key to closing the immunization gap.
This executive summary from Save the Children's 2014 State of the World's Mothers report finds that over half of maternal and child deaths occur in fragile settings affected by conflict and natural disasters. It examines the impact of humanitarian crises on mothers and children in Democratic Republic of Congo, Syria, the Philippines, and the United States. Key findings include that conflicts have displaced more people than ever before, and fragile states face chronic health challenges in addition to crises. Case studies show humanitarian emergencies undermine health systems and endanger mothers and young children through issues like lack of access to medical care. The report recommends greater investment in disaster-resilient health infrastructure and emergency response to support mothers and families in crisis-affected areas.
The document discusses the issue of global hunger, providing statistics and causes. Over 900 million people worldwide are undernourished, with the majority living in developing countries in Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. Natural causes like harsh climates and inefficient land use, as well as economic issues preventing access to food and sociocultural factors restricting women contribute to hunger. Hunger has severe health consequences and can perpetuate cycles of poverty. While major problems existed in the past, the document expresses hope that with measures like food-for-work programs, better education and transportation, the problem of world hunger can be solved in the future.
UNICEF has been working in India since 1947 to promote children's rights and well-being. Some key milestones include establishing India's first penicillin plant in 1949, assisting refugees from Bangladesh in 1971, and launching the Oral Rehydration Therapy program in 1978 to reduce infant mortality from diarrhea. UNICEF currently works with the Indian government on programs focused on child health, nutrition, education, HIV prevention, and protection.
UNICEF has been working in India since 1947 to promote children's rights and well-being. Some key milestones include establishing India's first penicillin plant in 1949, assisting refugees from Bangladesh in 1971, and supporting oral rehydration therapy in 1978. UNICEF currently works with the Indian government on programs focused on child health, nutrition, education, HIV prevention, and protection.
UNICEF has been working in India since 1947 to promote children's rights and well-being. Some key milestones include establishing India's first penicillin plant in 1949, assisting refugees from Bangladesh in 1971, and supporting oral rehydration therapy in 1978. UNICEF currently works with the Indian government on programs focused on child health, nutrition, education, HIV prevention, and protection.
Over 870 million people worldwide do not have enough food to eat, with Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa most affected. Hunger disproportionately impacts women and children, contributing to millions of child deaths each year. Malnutrition is the leading global health risk, even exceeding diseases like AIDS and malaria. Several organizations work to alleviate hunger, including Action Against Hunger which treats malnourished individuals and increases access to water/sanitation for millions annually. While progress has been made, hunger remains a severe global problem.
Similar to Presidential Peace Conference by McLean, Nyron: UNICEF (20)
This document outlines an agenda for a District Rotaract Representative (DRR) training session focusing on membership development. The agenda includes reviewing session objectives, discussing background information, a group activity, and conclusion. Session objectives are to understand the relationship between clubs and districts, the process for starting new clubs, and identifying membership opportunities. The document then outlines various membership development opportunities, strategies for starting new clubs, ideas for social events and service projects, and concludes by asking attendees to identify outcomes to improve member recruitment and retention.
This document discusses an upcoming 2022 Rotaract Preconvention and provides examples of events hosted by Multidistrict Information Organizations (MDIOs). It introduces three leaders of the preconvention and defines an MDIO as a regional group of Rotary districts that disseminates information and facilitates communication between Rotaract clubs. It then provides two case studies describing annual events hosted by the Big West Rotaract MDIO in the western US and Canada, and the Rotaract Brasil MDIO which hosts a national conference and public speaking competition. The document concludes with mentions of a 2021 presidential conference hosted by the Ascension Rotaract Network MDIO and a collaborative virtual service project.
The document discusses how to create a winning culture for a Rotaract club. It emphasizes establishing clarity, communication, contribution, consistency and celebration. Key aspects of culture that are highlighted include vision, values, priorities, and measuring outcomes. Specific strategies are presented, such as understanding where the club currently stands, setting goals, identifying problems inhibiting progress, taking action to address problems, and continually measuring results. Overall, the document provides guidance on evaluating a club and implementing practices that foster an engaging, high-performing culture for members.
This document provides information about an upcoming 2022 Rotaract Preconvention. It discusses upcoming training with the District Rotaract Representative and two district service projects - I.C.A.R.E. for natural disaster relief and Mexico Build to help build homes. It also describes an opportunity program where Rotaractors can be mentored by Rotarians in their field of study. Finally, it gives tips for organizing a successful district conference, including making contacts, creating a budget, choosing a venue, developing a presentation theme, doing a sound check, and the conference itself.
IC22 Rotaract - Keys to level up your influence_Casas&Guerra (2).pptxRotary International
This document outlines a presentation on keys to level up influence as a leader. It discusses the definition of influence and importance of principles of influence in leadership. The principles of influence covered are reciprocity, authority, consistency, liking, consensus and scarcity. The agenda includes defining influence, discussing these principles, a facilitated discussion in groups on applying the principles to Rotary situations, and a question and answer session. The learning objectives are to understand influence's importance in leadership, describe influence principles, and discuss applying them to Rotary clubs.
The document summarizes a presentation given by members of the Rotaract Club of Birmingham on their Service Ambassadors program. It describes the need for the program to increase member engagement in service projects. It outlines the structure of having 3 chair positions divide responsibilities for organizing a monthly service project and partnering with a local non-profit. It shares results from the 2020-21 year that showed increased service hours and events from the monthly projects. The presentation encourages attendees to consider which aspects of the Service Ambassadors program could work for their own clubs.
Phoenix MacLaren, a District Rotaract Representative from 2016-2019 and current District Rotaract Coordinator from 2019 to present in District 5050 Canada, led a session on training Rotaract club officers. The objectives were to discuss how to train club officers within a district, address conflict resolution, and discuss leadership best practices. MacLaren emphasized that district leaders are responsible for providing Rotaract leaders with the knowledge and skills needed to lead clubs and districts confidently through events like district meetings, conferences, and assemblies.
The document summarizes a workshop on burnout management presented at the 2022 Rotaract Preconvention. It includes an agenda for the workshop which covers personal care, boundaries, and signs of burnout both externally and internally. It provides guidance on setting boundaries by identifying the boundary to set, the ideal relationship, what needs to change, and an explicit next step. An example is given of setting an email boundary to not respond after 5pm and communicating this change to others who contact you frequently.
This document describes the leadership development program of the Rotaract Club of Birmingham. It provides background on the club's history and membership. The purpose of the leadership development program is to engage future club leaders, develop skills through a speaker series, assessments, professional partners, and a group project. Participants work with a Rotarian partner and new generations chair to bolster leadership skills for the club and their careers. Clubs are encouraged to incorporate aspects of this program into their own leadership development.
RI Convention 2022_Rotaract Pre Convention_2022.06.04 NewGen Peacebuilders.pptxRotary International
This document is about the 2022 Rotaract Preconvention. It discusses how Rotaractors are at the roots of peacebuilding. It highlights Lebanon as a small, diverse country with pronounced challenges. It describes the UNLEASH innovation process and recognition of Young Champions of Lebanon. It discusses certification in peacebuilding and paying it forward. Finally, it lists hunger projects from the 2021 Rotaract Positive Peace Training that addressed issues like food access, nutrition, and supporting family farms and women.
This document outlines an agenda for a Rotaract district representative training session. The agenda includes an overview of the training, icebreakers to get to know participants, and sessions on understanding the role of district Rotaract representative, the election process, working with Rotary, and a panel discussion. The role of district Rotaract representative involves supporting leadership training, membership growth, service projects, and acting as a liaison between Rotaract clubs and Rotary in the district. Requirements include prior experience and an election process overseen by the district governor.
IC22 Rotaract Precon_Making an Impact Through Rotary Grants.pptxRotary International
This document provides information about Rotary grants and how Rotaract clubs can get involved. It discusses the different types of grants including district grants, global grants, and disaster response grants. It provides details on qualification requirements, the grant application process, areas of focus, and how to conduct community assessments. Rotaract clubs are encouraged to start with district grants and gain experience to later apply for global grants in partnership with Rotary clubs. Attendees will learn ways they can support grant projects through fundraising, implementation, and supporting The Rotary Foundation.
This document outlines strategies for Rotary and Rotaract clubs to be more inclusive of people with disabilities. It discusses using person-first language that emphasizes the person over their disability. It recommends making meetings accessible through universal design principles, both in-person and virtually. Providing mentoring opportunities and building partnerships with disability organizations can help connect people and promote awareness. Following these strategies of empathy, awareness, and action can help clubs advance diversity, equity, and inclusion.
The document announces a 2022 Rotaract Preconvention event that will focus on networking, impactful service projects, and how the three can work together. It introduces two speakers for the event - Taylor Huie, a Rotarian and Rotaractor from Michigan who is the Executive Director of the Ascension Rotaract Network, and Daniel Zavala, a past Rotaract District Representative from Venezuela who is now the President of The Rotaract Foundation. Discussion topics for the event include how networking can create impactful service projects, experiences collaborating through service, and how service projects can help grow one's network.
The document summarizes a presentation given by Jessica Poor and Cameron Shevlin from the Rotaract Club of Birmingham. It provides details about the club's history, current membership statistics, and leadership structure. It then discusses how the club pivoted to engage members virtually during the pandemic through initiatives like a membership engagement challenge on Slack, donut dates, and #SelfieSunday posts. The presentation concludes with a discussion on continuing to engage members, especially younger demographics, through family-friendly events and developing a junior Rotaractors program.
This document discusses best practices for holding hybrid Rotary meetings. It begins with asking participants about their experiences with online, in-person, hybrid, and no meetings during the pandemic. Small groups then discuss how they organized hybrid meetings, what went wrong, and what went well. The groups share a best practice example. The presenters thank participants and provide contact information.
The document discusses partnerships between Rotary and Peace Corps to promote peace. It introduces the president of Partnering for Peace, Kim Dixon, and Rotary Peace Fellow Shannon Carter. It then shares the story of Terrance Stevenson and his experience finding passion through partnerships in Armenia, learning about himself, his community, and enacting change. The importance of partnerships is discussed in terms of the power of diversity, collective action, and creating sustainable systems for positive impact and peace. The document concludes that lasting peace is built on sustainable investments in economic development, institutions, and societal attitudes that foster peace.
The document announces a panel discussion at the 2022 Rotaract Preconvention on Rotary's new area of focus on the environment. The moderator is Doris Grimm from RC Madrid-International in Spain and panelists are Devankar Mukhi from Rotaract Michigan in the USA and Daniel Zavala from Rotaract San Joaquin in Venezuela. It provides details on Rotary's 7 areas of focus, with the new 7th area being supporting and protecting the environment through conservation, sustainability, and fostering harmony between communities and the environment, with a budget of $18.4 million to reduce the effects of climate change and environmental degradation.
The document outlines the agenda and logistics for the 2022 Rotaract Preconvention. It provides information on session rooms, food options, and networking details. It then lists the schedule of events which includes presentations on outstanding Rotaract projects from different regions, as well as international award winners. Finally, it outlines an upcoming workshop on burnout management, detailing the background and signs of burnout, different types of burnout personalities, and introducing the five pillars of burnout management approach.
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A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
LAND USE LAND COVER AND NDVI OF MIRZAPUR DISTRICT, UPRAHUL
This Dissertation explores the particular circumstances of Mirzapur, a region located in the
core of India. Mirzapur, with its varied terrains and abundant biodiversity, offers an optimal
environment for investigating the changes in vegetation cover dynamics. Our study utilizes
advanced technologies such as GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and Remote sensing to
analyze the transformations that have taken place over the course of a decade.
The complex relationship between human activities and the environment has been the focus
of extensive research and worry. As the global community grapples with swift urbanization,
population expansion, and economic progress, the effects on natural ecosystems are becoming
more evident. A crucial element of this impact is the alteration of vegetation cover, which plays a
significant role in maintaining the ecological equilibrium of our planet.Land serves as the foundation for all human activities and provides the necessary materials for
these activities. As the most crucial natural resource, its utilization by humans results in different
'Land uses,' which are determined by both human activities and the physical characteristics of the
land.
The utilization of land is impacted by human needs and environmental factors. In countries
like India, rapid population growth and the emphasis on extensive resource exploitation can lead
to significant land degradation, adversely affecting the region's land cover.
Therefore, human intervention has significantly influenced land use patterns over many
centuries, evolving its structure over time and space. In the present era, these changes have
accelerated due to factors such as agriculture and urbanization. Information regarding land use and
cover is essential for various planning and management tasks related to the Earth's surface,
providing crucial environmental data for scientific, resource management, policy purposes, and
diverse human activities.
Accurate understanding of land use and cover is imperative for the development planning
of any area. Consequently, a wide range of professionals, including earth system scientists, land
and water managers, and urban planners, are interested in obtaining data on land use and cover
changes, conversion trends, and other related patterns. The spatial dimensions of land use and
cover support policymakers and scientists in making well-informed decisions, as alterations in
these patterns indicate shifts in economic and social conditions. Monitoring such changes with the
help of Advanced technologies like Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems is
crucial for coordinated efforts across different administrative levels. Advanced technologies like
Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
9
Changes in vegetation cover refer to variations in the distribution, composition, and overall
structure of plant communities across different temporal and spatial scales. These changes can
occur natural.
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
Beyond Degrees - Empowering the Workforce in the Context of Skills-First.pptxEduSkills OECD
Iván Bornacelly, Policy Analyst at the OECD Centre for Skills, OECD, presents at the webinar 'Tackling job market gaps with a skills-first approach' on 12 June 2024
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
2. UNICEF works to give
kids a healthy start
1 in 4 CHILDREN, or 159
million, are stunted (chronically
malnourished).
3. First 1,000 days: the brain’s
window of opportunity
THE FIRST 1,000 DAYS of
nutrition are critical to a child's
physical and mental
development.
4. More than 2.5 million children
face imminent risk of death
from severe acute malnutrition
(SAM).
5. Investing now: critical,
efficient and cost-
effective
“When Boko Haram attacked our village they shot dead
some locals and took away our belongings like grains.
This attack compelled us to flee the village to seek
refuge in Maiduguri. We made the journey on foot for
several days with no food, no shelter or no drinkable
water. This hazard condition we experienced exposed
my child to sickness and malnutrition.”
-Mariam, in Muna garage IDP camp, Maiduguri, Borno
state, northeast Nigeria
9. Yemen: 460,000
children U-5 with SAM
“Children can’t wait for yet
another famine declaration
before we take action…We learned
from Somalia in 2011 that by the
time famine was announced, untold
numbers of children had already
died. That can’t happen
again.”
– Manuel Fontaine, UNICEF
Director of Emergency Programs
10. unicefusa.org 10
UNICEF is providing:
Malnutrition
screening
services to
identify children in
need
Therapeutic
food to treat
malnutrition
Clean water
to offset drought
Vaccinations
to protect from
deadly diseases
11. unicefusa.org 11
Children cannot wait. Act now.
Get active. Save
lives.
UNICEF
KID
POWER
Download the App.
Buy the Band.
www.unicefkidpower.org
Donate.
Save
Children
from
Famine
Make a life-saving gift today.
www.unicefusa.org/famine
Host a screening.
The
Beginning
of Life
Download the film. Host a
screening. Raise awareness.
www.thebeginningoflife.com
12. Impact of your support
$0.37 could provide 1 life-saving, ready-to-use
therapeutic (RUTF) packet to help 1 severely
malnourished child begin her road to recovery of full
health.
$12 could provide life-saving, therapeutic milk to treat 2
severely malnourished children.
$24 could provide an emergency water and hygiene kit
for one family.
$55 could provide 150 packets of RUTF to bring 1
severely malnourished child back to health.
$60 could help pay for school supplies to help at least 20
children continue their education.
www.unicefusa.org/famine