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

For children in poor communities, the collateral damage from COVID-19 is just as big a risk as the virus itself.

These are some of the ways the pandemic is affecting children in developing communities:

  • School closures: Schools have closed, and many children may never return.
  • Food shortages: Food is scarce, due to disrupted supply chains and lockdown laws.
  • Gaps in healthcare: Health clinics are struggling to cope, and many immunisation campaigns have been suspended.
  • Job losses: The psychological stress on families is enormous, with parents losing work and facing an uncertain future.
  • Increase in domestic violence: Sadly, this has resulted in an increase in domestic violence, with children both experiencing or witnessing abuse in their homes.

The five priorities of our response intersect to help stop the spread of the virus and mitigate its potential harm, whether direct or indirect, to children and young people.

1. Stop COVID-19 from infecting children and communities

We are distributing soap, hand sanitiser, gloves and masks to families, and personal protective equipment to health workers. Community hand-washing stands are being constructed, and hygiene information is being provided. For children being treated for COVID-19 or subject to quarantine measures, we are creating child-friendly spaces with age-appropriate toys and books.

2. Help children continue learning

With schools closed, we are supporting children’s education through learning programs delivered online or via radio. We remain vigilant and prepared to address the increased risk of online sexual abuse that accompanies children’s greater exposure to the internet, and are focused on increasing the knowledge and self-protective behaviors of children and families who have been moved to rely on the online environment. For students without online access, we are distributing home learning kits with materials and guidelines for their use.

PNG hotline

3. Keep children safe from harm

We are supporting community-based child protection systems that identify and respond to cases of child abuse or exploitation, and providing virtual, online and phone-based counselling and emergency safety planning for women and children experiencing violence. We are supporting national social and protective essential services so that they can continue operating, and delivering rapid training to their staff so that they can screen for and respond to vulnerabilities in families. Temporary shelters have been provided for young people who live on the street, and safe care arranged for children separated from their caregivers due to COVID-19 treatment or prevention measures. 

4. Ensure that children get the food they need

To help the most vulnerable families keep food on the table, pay rent and cover other basic household needs, we are providing cash transfers. Where possible, we are distributing food and basic household items directly to communities, carefully abiding by COVID-19 protection measures.

5. Supporting young people to play an active role in the response

We will be surveying children to understand their concerns, ideas and opinions. Their feedback will influence our program response. Young people are being given the tools to develop their own videos to share with their peers and the wider community. As we work with governments, local partners and communities to respond to the pandemic, we will ensure children’s voices are heard.

Together, we can protect children around the world from the impacts of COVID-19

Together we will fight to protect children from the direct impacts of COVID-19, and from the cascade of effects caused by the virus, including the economic crisis that is unfolding throughout the world. 

Help prevent the spread and impact of COVID-19 in the world’s poorest countries. Support our COVID-19 emergency appeal to help the children and families who are most vulnerable during this crisis.

If you donate before 30 June, your donation is tax deductible on your next refund.

Infectious diseases like COVID-19 can have a detrimental and long-term impact on children in the countries where ChildFund works, communities that are already vulnerable because of poverty.

The COVID-19 pandemic is not only threatening the physical health and wellbeing of children and families, but the hard-fought development advances of the past 20 years. There is a real risk that many communities will back-slide into extreme poverty.

Below we detail why children and families living in poverty need your help more than ever.

1. Children and families living in poverty are less able to absorb the shocks caused by the global response to

COVID-19.

Most of us are experiencing the ripple effects of COVID-19 long before we know someone who gets the virus. For children and their families living in poverty, those ripple effects can be devastating and last a lifetime.

Many low-income jobs involve a lot more interaction with the public and a lot less stability. Parents working in a local market selling goods, for example, are at a higher risk of being exposed to the virus. If the market closes to encourage social distancing, they lose their source of income and, without unemployment benefits, will no longer be able to provide for their children.

A worsening economic situation for families already living in poverty can lead to increases in child labour, child marriage and other child protection issues. The psychological stress on many families is enormous, with many parents losing work and facing an uncertain future. Sadly, this has been accompanied by an increase in domestic violence, with children both experiencing or witnessing abuse in their homes.