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- Children in alternative care - UNICEF
Many children in orphanages are not orphans and have at least one parent or other relative In fact, the majority of children without parental care are placed in kinship care or family-based alternative care
- Children in Gaza need life-saving support | UNICEF
Since the start of this war, UNICEF staff have remained on the ground, working with partners to provide safe drinking water to displaced families, treatment for severely malnourished children, and medical supplies and vaccines for children in hospitals and shelters
- The State of the World’s Children 2023 - UNICEF
Zero-dose children are those who have not received their first diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus vaccine (DTP1) Under-vaccinated children are those who received one dose, but not a third protective
- Stories of loss and grief: At least 17,000 children are . . . - UNICEF
GENEVA, 2 February 2024 – "UNICEF estimates that at least 17,000 children in the Gaza Strip are unaccompanied or separated
- Reintegrating Children From Institutional Care - UNICEF
8 The GoM should promote the delivery of community-based care for orphans and other vulnerable children Not only is it better for children’s wellbeing and development, but also it is cheaper compared to institutional care 9 Discussions with CCIs should continue, including talks on alternative utilisation of
- Volunteering in orphanages | UNICEF South Asia
Genuine orphans can be successfully reunified with extended family members such as uncles, aunts, grandparents, cousins or older brothers and sisters or other families If you aren’t a qualified professional, please reconsider volunteering with children - especially in orphanages and other institutions
- Situation Analysis of Children in the Philippines - UNICEF
On behalf of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA), I would like to congratulate the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Philippines, and the team behind the Situation Analysis on the
- An Introduction to Kafalah - UNICEF
as an alternative care option for orphans and abandoned children 2 The term sharia3 refers to a set of rules which governs the life of a Muslim 4 Kafalah etymologically means, “taking care”, “sponsoring someone”, and “responding on behalf of someone” 5 The practice developed out of particular concern for the upbringing of “orphans and
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