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Working Hard to Make Life Fun
Dalgis Alandete is a tutor in one of our Child-Friendly Spaces (CFS) helping to provide a safe space where children can play and feel supported. What are some of the problems that Venezuelan children are facing in Colombia? Venezuelan children don’t have homes to protect them from the rain and there have been reports of […]
Welcome to Quiche!
Quiche, Guatemala is a beautiful region, but poverty, climate change and lack of healthcare can make it a tough area to grow up. Find out about our work in Quiche.
Forget Springtime in Paris
Forget Paris, Washington DC is the place to be in Spring. Where you’ll find the headquarters of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank Group.
Growing the Wrong Way
Save the Children has been in Lebanon since the 1950s, advocating for children’s rights with and through long-standing partnerships with excellent local organisations.
Summer of play
Save the Children are delighted to be supporting Summer of Play for a second year. I visited North Tyneside in July to see the programme for myself.
What to do when you've done all you can
Right now, we’re living in a world where so much feels outside our control. What happens when you’re constantly fearful, but feel you can’t change anything?
End of year message from Gwen Hines - CEO of Save the Children UK
As we close out another year and look ahead to 2022, I have been taking stock of the last twelve months, including my first six months as Chief Executive.
Message of solidarity to trans and non-binary people
Esther Hodges, member of our LGBT+ Allies network, shares a statement of solidarity and support to trans and non-binary people.
Reasons to smile
These pictures will brighten up your day! We're celebrating the joy of children who have what they need to be healthy, happy, and free to play.
Why the G7 matters
It’s time to get back to the big issues that affect us all. And G7 is the place to do it. Here's why.
One Year On: Lockdown Life on the Bettws Estate
With COVID-19 effecting families around the UK, read how families on the Bettws Estate in Wales are getting through it, together.
2021: Optimism and Change
For those of us who believe in child rights and universal rights more widely, this is a time to demonstrate that human solidarity can make a difference.
International DJ and charity ambassador Cuppy hosts the first Gold Dust Conference
International DJ and Save the Children Ambassador Cuppy hosts the first Gold Dust Conference celebrating the impact achieved by the Cuppy Foundation.
Rays of hope for 2021
Kevin Watkins, CEO of Save the Children UK, takes a look back at the year and offers some rays of hope for 2021.
Staying steadfast in our commitments to children
This is the defining decade for a just transition on climate change and for delivering on the Sustainable Development Goals.
Tomorrow is now
CEO Kevin Watkins on the importance of international cooperation built on human rights, dignity and equality.
The legendary resilience of Yemen’s women faces a new test – the Coronavirus
By Sukaina Sharafuddin – Media and communications coordinator at Save the Children in Yemen I gave birth to my son four years ago, amid a background of falling bombs. Since that day, I have been praying for him and us to live long enough to see the other side of the war that has been […]
Fighting for breath: time to invest in oxygen delivery systems in India
It’s estimated better access to medical oxygen could reduce childhood pneumonia-related mortality in India by at least 35%.
Delivering a potential COVID-19 vaccine to the world: understanding the scale of the challenge
If we assume 70% of the world’s people need to be immunised to achieve herd immunity, that means producing vaccines for more than 5 billion people. To put this into context, the global demand for vaccines totalled 3.5 billion doses in 2018.
Being a force for good in the face of global challenges to the protection of civilians
This week, the UN Secretary-General published his annual report on the Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict. It helps countries like the UK understand what’s really happening in key conflicts.
Eating away the Covid-19 pandemic
Written by Webster Makombe Whilst the trending phrases during the Covid-19 pandemic are “social distancing” and “self-isolation”, where I am from we are saying “kusiri kufa ndekupi”. A Shona call of desperation which translated into English means “caught in between a rock and a hard place”. The Covid-19 pandemic has shaken the world into a […]
194 governments unanimously adopt COVID-19 resolution
Save the Children stands behind the World Health Organization and its leadership to drive the global public health response against COVID-19.
Winning the global fight against COVID-19 depends on bringing relief to war-weary families
In a camp in Syria a boy told our team, “We’re used to the war now. Even when it hits nearby, we hide in caves. But with this virus, we can’t hide.”
Coronavirus crisis: what are the next steps for children in the UK?
The take-up of our Emergency Grants Scheme gives us some indication of the level of deprivation some families are experiencing during this crisis.
“It’s time to stand together to fight Covid19,” a Bangladeshi frontline health worker urges people to be kind
Abdus Sobhan is a frontline health worker in Save the Children’s HIV prevention project, working with people who inject drugs and with other high-risk groups. He is based in Dhaka. I provide methadone to people who inject drugs and are at high risk of contracting HIV. I did not expect that my job would land […]
Tribute to Patricio Walmsley: Save the Children Emergency Health Unit staff member
Last week the Emergency Health Unit (EHU) received the very sad news that our staff member, Patricio Walmsley, who deployed with us numerous times, was killed in a plane accident in his home country Argentina. He was working for the Argentinean flying ambulance service at the time. His friend and colleague Christopher Forbes has written […]
Partnership in the face of pandemics
This blog is co-authored by Ariane McCabe, PhD, Director of Global Health and Public Affairs, GSK Vaccines and by Claire Leonie Ward, PhD, Health Advocacy Adviser at Save the Children UK. As the world’s attention and resources are focused on tackling the global pandemic, what does this mean for those most at risk of exposure […]
World leaders must look up from their COVID-19 blinkers – before it’s too late
When global leaders shift their gaze back to the wider horizon, what will the world look like for children? A series of separate developments demands their attention.
Midwives, Women and Newborns: Access to Midwifery care in the time of Covid19
Today is the International Day of the Midwife and 2020 is the Year of the Nurse and the Midwife. It should be a time to celebrate. For most women, birth is uncomplicated and welcoming their new baby into the world is a joyful event which midwives are privileged to witness and be a part of. […]
Nigeria’s weak primary health system cannot cope with pandemics
The federal government and all states must act swiftly to put systems in place to ensure uninterrupted financial flows to the primary health care level.
Life in lockdown is proving tough for Britain’s families
We know from our work across the country that the coronavirus crisis is hitting families hard – and the poorest families hardest of all. For many of Britain’s poorest children, today will be another day trying to learn or play at home without toys or basic furniture such as a table or bed. Another day […]
The changing face of COVID-19: a live tracker of its impact on children
New research and estimates on the potential socio-economic impact of COVID-19 across child poverty, health & nutrition, education and protection.
Health extension workers: the backbone of Ethiopia’s immunisation programme
Dayo Mohamed, a 38-year-old health extension worker in Ethiopia’s Somali Region, has served his community for almost 12 years. The incidence of vaccine-preventable diseases has dropped significantly.
The COVID-19 threat to Generation Equality: Harnessing data insights to protect the most vulnerable girls
Now, when Sustainable Development Goal targets risk drifting irrevocably out of reach for the most marginalised girls, monitoring their outcomes is more vital than ever.
A good news story: how Bangladesh is winning the fight against childhood pneumonia
Bangladesh’s success in expanding the pneumococcal vaccine has been a huge step forward in reducing child deaths from pneumonia. But further work is needed.
Bangladesh’s amazing ‘Doctor Apas’
Over the last 3 years, we’ve worked with the government of Bangladesh and other partners to develop the National Strategy for Community Health Workers.
Making a virtual parliament work
From navigating digital meetings to the challenge of keeping up morale in the virtual sphere, many of us have experienced the ups and downs of working from home in the past month. As Parliament is about to come up against the same issues, I’ve drawn on what we’ve learned over the past month to offer some key tips.
CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC: AN UPDATE FROM OUR CEO
We are all struggling to come to terms with the scale, severity and global reach of the Coronavirus pandemic. At this critical juncture, I wanted to briefly set out how Save the Children is responding to what is the gravest humanitarian challenge in our organisation’s history. When we were founded 100 years ago, countries around […]
Even in the toughest of times, we can do better by Britain’s kids
The Government has already done a lot for workers, but we would love to see some extra help for our youngest citizens too. Despite the steps that have been taken, many children will still be struggling.
Covid-19: one global health priority among many
Why keeping existing health programmes going in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic is imperative to avoid millions of deaths worldwide. The coronavirus has been spreading rapidly across the world and numbers of confirmed cases and deaths keep rising. As we all witnessed countries shutting down in an effort to slow the progression of the […]
Lessons from civil society resilience as we face COVID-19
“Adapt, Improvise, Overcome – the human spirit will always survive” These are the words of advice a colleague who worked in Ebola affected areas sent to me at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. I expected something much more technical and practical. He is right of course. At a certain point, it’s the spirit and […]