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Welcome Back!

Last time you were here, you were looking to help vulnerable children and families. Your support can save and change lives.

Five-year-old Murugan (pictured above) watches as the water trickles out of a gurgling filter. As his cup fills with clear, clean water, the smile on his little face grows larger. Where Murugan lives in Sri Lanka’s Nuwara Eliya district, waterborne diseases like diarrhoea are a serious problem and often lead to children becoming malnourished.

Children here face many health challenges, including poor water quality and a lack of education about health care among parents. But ChildFund’s Ensuring Nutrition, Health and Children`s Health (ENHANCE) program has helped address the issue of safe drinking water by distributing filters to early childhood development (ECD) centres and conducting awareness programs through our local partner organisations.

Eight ECD centres, including Murugan’s, have received water filters, which remove lead and other impurities from water so it can be safely drunk. The filters also reduce the risk of potential diseases.

“This is one of the best water purification systems introduced to us. I want to thank ChildFund Sri Lanka for helping to provide clean water for children,” says Mrs. Puwaneshwari, a teacher at the Walaha ECD centre.

Together with T-Field, its local partner in Nuwara Eliya, ChildFund has built a dam to collect water from a spring and distribute the clean water through pipelines to the community. The project has benefited 170 families.

The awareness campaigns have emphasised boiling water before drinking it at home and teaching children and adults to wash their hands after using the toilet. ENHANCE takes an integrated approach to helping children establish good health, addressing nutritional needs, child care, family habits, personal and environmental hygiene, safe water and sanitation practices and food security.

“My child used to fall sick often, but after learning about the importance of boiling drinking water, I always boil our drinking water now, and I can see a difference,” says Malarselvi, a mother at the ECD centre. “They don’t fall sick as often as they used to.”

“This is my first hoodie ever! Normally I only receive new clothes two times per year, in summer and winter, when my parents have good crops. In bad harvests, my parents can`t afford stuff like new clothes or school bags or toys for me,” says 11-year-old Thao (pictured below), who struggled to contain her excitement.

Thao is one of more than 2,000 children in poor communes in Kim Boi district, an area new to ChildFund Vietnam`s support who received fleece hoodies in January 2015.

“Now that I`ve got this hoodie, my mum and my dad won`t have to worry about getting me clothes. I also won`t feel scared of the strong cold winter wind when I go to school,” she adds.

In Kim Boi district, the average family income per capita is approximately $300 per year, primarily from rice and maize farming.  More than 90 per cent of the local population is from the Muong ethnic group. Here, one in three households are considered poor, which is much higher than the provincial average (17 per cent) and the national average (13 per cent).

Due to the difficult economic conditions of many families, children often lack basic items such as clothes or books for their daily activities. ChildFund Vietnam is providing children with these small but important items that help to improve their daily lives, while also continuing to implement long-term community development activities within their community.

“Through this activity, we want to help families living in difficulty in our project areas,” says Ms. Nguyen Thi Thai Ha, ChildFund Vietnam`s sponsor relations manager. “With our gift, we hope that these children will stay healthy while going to school or doing daily activities, so that they can develop to their full potential both physically and mentally.”