Save A Child’s Life

Every day, over 15,000 children under 5 die.

80% of these deaths are preventable or treatable TODAY.

Problem: Malaria in Children

A child dies from malaria every 2 minutes. Yearly, approximately 200 million people contract malaria and over 400,000 die from it.

Problem

Malaria is one of the most severe public health problems worldwide and is specifically dangerous to young children and pregnant women. Children who contract malaria can suffer from severe anaemia (major cause of poor child-development) and cerebral malaria (swelling of the brain that causes seizures and other neurological complications). For pregnant women, malaria increases the risk of spontaneous abortion and stillbirth. In addition to the health impact, malaria creates a significant economic toll associated with costs from healthcare, absenteeism, days lost in education, and decreased productivity. These costs are estimated to be over $12 billion per year in Africa alone.

 

Solution

Malaria is easy and inexpensive to prevent:

  • Long-Lasting Insecticidal Bed Nets (LLINs): Distribute LLINs to all people in an affected area. These nets are set up at night around sleeping areas, and block, kill, and/or repel mosquitoes.
  • Seasonal Malaria Chemoprevention (SMC): Provide children between the ages of 3 months and 5 years with anti-malarial medicine during the rainy season. This has been proven to reduce approximately 75% of all malaria cases.
  • Media Health Campaigns: Broadcast large scale media health campaigns via radio, televisions and mobile videos to millions of people in low income communities, regarding how to identify and protect themselves against malaria and how to access local resources and health workers.

Cost

  • LLINs: A LLIN costs only $2 per net and protects two people for up to three years.
  • SMC: Total cost for delivering SMC is $4.25 per child per rainy season.
  • Media Health Campaigns: Costs $22 per DALY (disability adjusted life year) or $602 per life saved.

 

Charities

  

Problem

206 million people are affected by schistosomiasis and 1.5 billion are infected with STH. The World Health Organization (WHO) calls these parasitic worms a “neglected tropical disease” that affect the poorest and most marginalized communities in the world. Infection with these parasites can result in anemia, blood in urine, abdominal pain, and genital discomfort. These symptoms can lead to impaired cognitive development, reduced school attendance, long-term stunted growth, internal organ damage (such as liver fibrosis), increased risk of HIV infection & bladder cancer.

 

Solution

School-Based Deworming Programs.

  • Mass deworming pill distributions given through schools in at-risk communities is an inexpensive & safe solution to treating STH and schistosomiasis.
  • Deworming can lead to a 25% increase in school attendance and better health outcomes, jobs & earnings.

Cost

School-based deworming initiatives cost less than $0.50 per child per treatment.

 

Charities

Problem: Intestinal Worms & Parasites

Controlling and eliminating parasitic worms in infected children is one of the most effective ways to improve a child’s health.  Schistosomiasis is a parasitic worm transmitted through infested water typically during everyday activities, such as bathing, fishing & washing clothes in lakes, rivers or ponds. STH is another parasitic worm transmitted through feces and soil.

Problem: Iodine Deficiency

Iodine is a crucial nutrient necessary for healthy brain development in children. Iodine deficiency is the leading preventable cause of intellectual & development disabilities in the world.

Problem

Over 2.2 billion people live in areas at risk of iodine deficiency. Iodine deficiency can lead to severe intellectual and development impairments. Poor nutrition in the first thousand days of a child’s life can stunt their growth leading to reduced school & work performance, which creates major life implications.

 

Solution

Salt Iodization.

  • Iodine deficiency can very easily be prevented by consuming salt with small amounts of iodine (i.e. iodized salt).
  • Based on research from the Copenhagen Consensus, salt iodization is one of the best investment strategies in international development & there is strong evidence that it can lead to a significant, positive effect on a child’s cognitive development.

Cost

Salt iodization programs can be supported at $0.02 – $0.05 per person per year. This includes the costs to source the material & distribute to mothers & newborn infants.

 

Charities

Problem

Children aged 6-months to 5-years in many areas of extreme poverty are at high-risk for Vitamin A deficiency (VAD). An estimated 100,000 children die each year from VAD-related causes. This deficiency causes stunting, anemia, dry eyes (the leading cause of preventable childhood blindness) & susceptibility to infection and death. Vitamin A deficiency is due to diets that include few animal sources & little fortified food.

 

Solution

Vitamin A Supplementation.

  • Oral vitamin A supplementation is the most widely practiced & proven approaches to control deficiency in high risk countries & areas.
  • One of the most effective interventions is periodic prophylactic vitamin A supplementation to pre-school children of age 6-months to 5-years.

Cost

Vitamin A supplementation is inexpensive – generally estimated to cost around $2.46 per child per year.

 

Charities

Problem: Vitamin A Deficiency

Vitamin A is an essential nutrient that supports the immune, vision & reproductive systems. Trials conducted by GiveWell found that Vitamin A supplementation delivered in locations with high child mortality rates is one of the most effective ways to save & improve a child’s life.

Problem: Lack of Access to Health & Wellness Information

Lack of information to health & wellness information combined with sociocultural barriers results in millions of preventable deaths, especially among children, in developing countries.

Problem

5.3 million children under the age of 5 die every year. Over half of these deaths are preventable, if simple, inexpensive interventions, such as handwashing, were used.

Solution

Media Health Campaigns:

  • Media health campaigns broadcast via radio, television & mobile videos to millions of people in low-income countries to facilitate information exchange.
  • These campaigns raise awareness of local health care services & promote positive behaviors.
  • In a single campaign, communities can be educated on multiple health issues and the availability of local resources.
  • Ex. Exclusive breastfeeding of infants & seeking treatment for known symptoms associated with fatal diseases.

Cost

Research from Givewell on the efficacy of media health campaigns show that mass media inteventions have the potential to be highly cost-effective given its ability to reach many people at scale. For example, DMI’s campaigns are estimated to cost only $22 per DALY (disability-adjusted life year) or $602 per life saved.

 

Charities

 

Problem

Nearly half of all deaths in children under 5-years are due to malnutrition. Micronutrient malnutrition can lead to blindness, birth defects, compromised immune systems & cognitive and developmental delays.

 

Solution

Cost-Effective Food Fortication Programs.

  • Food fortication is one of the least expensive solutions to combat malnutrition with proven results.
  • Charities work with small local mills to help fortify staple foods with the correct dosage of micronutrient premix (including iron, folic acid, B12 & zinc)

Cost

Estimates show that food fortication programs costs only $0.53 per person per year.

 

Charities

Problem: Micronutrient Malnutrition

Without proper nutrition, children become ill & cannot attend school. This causes the poverty trap to deepen — people become ill & vulnerable to disability or death, they cannot attend school or work, their families lose resources in order to care for them — and the cycle perpetuates.

Problem: Low Immunization Rates

Many infants & children are vulnerable to severe disease outbreaks — leading to increased mortality.

Problem

Several factors prevent infants and children from being immunized including transportation costs, cultural barriers & lack of awareness. The following vaccines are extremely important for children: BCG (against tuberculosis), PENTA (again diphteria, tetanus, whooping cough), PCV (against pnerumoccal disease) & MCV (against measles).

 

Solution

Provide money & resources to low-income households in return for fulfilling specific behavior conditions – such as vaccinations – is one of the most highly-effective solution to increase immunization rates. Conditional cash transfer programs have been proven to increase immunization rates, while also increasing awareness of the overall health benefits of childhood vaccinations.

 

Cost

On average, the total cost to immunize one child through the New Incentives program is $47 per child.

Charities

Problem

Many illnesses can be easily treated with access to high-quality, affordable & sustainable medical devices. However, without this equipment, these untreated illnesses can get exponential worse leading to severe health implications. Similarly, many medical devices get donated; however, many times the costs to service and/or fix a broken part in these devices are not financially feasible, leading to an inability to use the machine altogether.

 

Solution

Create affordable and sustainable medical technology for everyone.

  • Dedicate resources to conduct real, on-the-ground assessments of the needs of emerging markets to support health, productivity & independence – and then take action.
  • Identify the biggest gaps and opportunities in health care where technology can do the most good.
  • Design affordable, world-class medical products that work in the toughest circumstances.
  • Build global distribution network to ensure their products get to those who need them most. 

Cost

The costs of researching, designing & launching these medical devices vary greatly based on the device.

For example, Equalize Health was able to design & launch a product, Brilliance Lamp, a high-quality, low-cost phototherapy lamp to treat babies suffering from jaundice and/or brain damage. This lamp costs $400-$500 compared to the previous, traditional phototherapy devices which costs anywhere from $1,500-$10,000.

 

Charities

Problem: Lack of Access to High-Quality, Affordable Medical Devices

Without the right medical equipment, hospitals & clinicians cannot provide adequate treatment to the world’s poorest people.

Problem: Shortage of Frontline Health Workers

On average there are 2 health workers per 1,000 people in Africa, compared to 24 for every 1,000 people in the United States. Health care “systems” in developing countries are chronically under-funded, under-stocked & understaffed.

Problem

Developing countries lack access to essential health care while the world’s poorest people are the ones who need the most care. More than 24% of the global burden of diseases fall on people living in African countries, while only 3% of the world’s health workers operate with less than 1% of the world’s financial resources. Sub-saharan Africa in particular makes up only 13% of the world’s population, yet suffers an estimated 66% of global maternal deaths, 41% of global stillbirths & 40% of global newborn deaths.

 

Solution

Empowering Community Health Workers (CHWs) to Provide Reliable & Affordable Care.

  • Training & educating community health workers to provide affordable & reliable care, along with essential medicines & products.
  • Governments need assistance from nonprofits to strengthen and professionalize their community health systems.
  • Recruit, train, equip & manage government-recognized networks of local Community Health Workers who go door to door within their neighborhoods, providing health education, diagnoses, medicines & health products.
  • Focus training on high-impact areas where CHWs can make the biggest difference at a low-cost, including pregnancy and newborn care, malaria, pneumonia, diarrhea, nutrition, immunization & family planning.

Cost

Funding the compensation, basic medicine/supplies & technology infrastructure for these Community Health Workers costs roughly $3.09 per person served per year.

 

Charities

Problem

Economic inequality is caused by a multitude of factors for those living in extreme poverty. Lack of access to education, basic health care, inadequate food & reliable shelter — all make it very difficult for the world’s poorest to break out of the cycle of poverty. Similarly, the poor and politically disenfranchised – mostly women and girls, racial and sexual minorities – are particular vulnerable to the effects of conflicts, cultural discrimination & injustice.

 

Solution

Coordinated Action.

  • The best way to bring about real change is to implement multifaceted, broad solutions to the root causes/problems and ramifications of poverty.
  • These include: long-term health & welness development, emergency & disaster relief, as well as political advocacy for sustainable change.

Cost

With low-cost solutions to target the root causes/problems that cause extreme poverty, we can make a signficant improvement to those living on less than $1.90 per day.

 

Charities

Problem: Economic Inequality & Social Injustice

Around 700 million people worldwide live on less than $1.90 a day. Financial security, access to information & job opportunities are the foundation of sustainable economic equality. Spurring economic development by offering resources & training is the best way to help the world’s poorest break the cycle of poverty.