CEO's Message

Be part of a caring nation

World Vision South Africa burns with a desire to bring positive and lasting change to the lives of children who would otherwise not have had an opportunity to live life in all its fullness. 

Currently, we're looking intensively at issues that determine the well being of children. We opened a Health and HIV & AIDS Learning Laboratory in Bloemfontein on Tuesday, 14 September, and envisage great outcomes from this new endeavor. 

We also show strategic intent and dedicated focus on overall health issues. We strive to increase the percentage of children in program areas who attain functional levels of reading, basic math and essential life skills, and we place particular emphasis on households enjoying economic well-being.

We consistently strive to tackle the root causes of poverty with a view to having sustainable community based programs. One of the world’s largest privately funded Christian-based humanitarian NGOs, World Vision focuses on child-based and community-orientated programmes involving transformational development, emergency relief and advocacy.

I appeal to all South Africans to stop and ask what they can do to get involved with the fight against poverty. It is everyone’s responsibility. In the words of former Archbishop Desmond Tutu, ‘it is time to develop a caring nation’.

Please also visit our very special and interactive page on Facebook. Simply search for "World Vision South Africa" and show us your support with your comments, consistent feedback and by means of inviting your friends and those on your Facebook network to become a friend of World Vision South Africa. You may even want to start a richly rewarding journey as a child sponsor, who knows! 

Le
hlohonolo Chabeli
National Director and CEO
World Vision South Africa

 

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KEEPING OUR EYES ON THE CHILDREN OF SOUTH AFRICA

World Vision is a Christian relief, development and advocacy organisation dedicated to working with children, families and communities in around 100 countries to overcome poverty and injustice. Motivated by our Christian faith, we serve all people regardless of religion, race, gender or ethnicity. 

 

ALL CHILDREN HAVE A FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT TO HEALTH

Almost one third of the children under five who die each year could be saved each year if governments rebalanced health spending to ensure provision of low-cost, simple interventions such as safe water and hygiene, bed nets, and basic maternal and newborn care.

A World Vision report has called for an urgent scaling up of preventive maternal and child health interventions, with a particular focus on bolstering community-level health interventions.

“Our world is in the grip of a chronic humanitarian crisis with more than 24 000 children under 5 dying every day,” says Lehlohonolo Chabeli, National Director and CEO of World Vision South Africa. “Yet we know that even in the poorest countries most child deaths are not inevitable.

“At least 2.5 million children’s lives could be saved each year by implementing low-cost, simple interventions such as water and hygiene, bed nets, and basic maternal and newborn care. As many as six million children could be saved yearly by combining these approaches with more strategic allocation of resources to meet needs at the community level and by fulfilled global donor commitments.”

Chabeli says most health funding at both donor and national levels is spent neither on the biggest child killers which are diarrhoea and pneumonia, nor on basic essentials like clean, safe water, sanitation and nutritious food. 

“Prevention is better, and more cost-effective, than treating children when they get ill. If countries want to ensure the survival of their next generation, they must focus on providing low-cost, low-tech interventions to keep these young children and their mothers healthy.
“Of course, it’s also true that an estimated 270 million children live in what amounts to a health care desert, lacking access to even the most basic provision.  Millions more are confronted with health care that is patchy, and often unaccountable, unaffordable and poor quality. 

Chabeli adds, “All children have a right to health. For there to be any chance of saving six million children a year from preventable causes, leaders at all levels must make keeping mothers and children healthy a top funding priority.” 

History shows that this is worth doing: in 1960, 20 million children a year died from preventable causes, compared with 8.8 million children now. 

“It is a fact that six million more children a year could be saved from death by 2015. It is a fact that more than 24 000 children will die today. These are the reasons behind World Vision’s decision to have launched a global campaign, “Child Health NOW”, to improve maternal and child health in communities where it works.

Key child health core interventions include:

Adequate warmth for the child, exclusive breastfeeding, early identification of asphyxia and home-based resuscitation techniques, clean birthing practices and hand washing, cord care, early identification of infection and referral, exclusive breastfeeding and effective complementary feeding, vitamin A and zinc, hand washing, clean water, oral rehydration salts, hygienic food preparation, early identification and referral, insecticide treated bed nets, wound treatment, better nutrition.

Key maternal interventions: later marriage and birth spacing, iron folate and calcium supplements, insecticide treated nets to reduce malaria, clean birth practices and hand washing of mother and birth attendant, peer support of mother, immediate breastfeeding to reduce bleeding, strategies to reduce delays in obtaining treatment.

For more information, email Sonia Cronje, Senior Manager: Communications, at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it  

 
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