2024 MONTHLY DONOR IMPACT
Thank you for standing with the world’s children in 2024.
Monthly donations play a crucial role in UNICEF’s life-saving work for children. Last year saw children’s rights and survival threatened by worsening conflicts, hunger, economic insecurity and climate disasters. With you by our side, UNICEF was able to reach more children in the world’s toughest places with essential support, including humanitarian aid, life-saving vaccines, nutrition, water and education.
Scroll for a special video message and updates about your impact as a monthly donor.
In the first half of 2024, the unwavering support of our monthly donor community allowed UNICEF to deliver critical aid in some of the world’s most challenging emergency situations including:
- Reaching 5.2 million children and families with safe drinking water in Sudan
- Providing over 240,000 Rohingya children with educational support in Bangladesh
- Vaccinating over 700,000 children against measles in Afghanistan
- Reaching over 400,000 children with nutrition services in Syria
Your monthly gifts allow UNICEF to be there for children wherever the need is greatest.
SEE YOUR IMPACT
Alaa
in Gaza
As polio resurfaced in Gaza, a UNICEF-supported polio vaccination campaign ensured children like baby Alaa were protected from the life-threatening disease. Thanks to your support, UNICEF was there to work with partners to stop the spread of the disease despite the ongoing crisis. "Vaccinating my daughter was a relief after so much struggle,” says Alaa’s mother. “I am grateful to UNICEF for providing vaccines for children.”
Adan
in Sudan
Six-month-old Adan is the very first child to receive the malaria vaccine in Sudan. Malaria is one of the world’s deadliest diseases, killing nearly half a million children under the age of 5 each year in Africa. With your generosity last year, UNICEF rolled out malaria vaccines for the first time in the country to help dramatically reduce child hospital admissions and mortality from the disease. “Vaccination is important to fight malaria. It is a dangerous disease, and children cannot tolerate it,” says Adan’s mother. “This vaccination will protect our children.”
Valeria
in Moldova
Six-year-old Valeria started speaking thanks to therapy sessions in a UNICEF-supported sensory room. At the age of two, Valeria was diagnosed with hearing impairments. And while recent surgery allowed her to hear, she could not speak because she could not perceive sounds. Thanks to the activities she did in the sensory room, Valeria began to perceive her own sounds and understand that she was speaking.
DON’T MISS THE SPECIAL VIDEO MESSAGE ABOUT YOUR IMPACT.