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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.

In 2012, seven incredible ChildFund supporters set themselves a dual challenge – to run an international marathon and raise significant amounts of money to support health programs in Timor-Leste.

Some runners chose the Paris Marathon in April, while others opted for Dublin’s ‘friendly marathon’ in October. Although divided in geography, they were united in their fundraising efforts to improve healthcare in a country where children die far too often from preventable illnesses. All up, they managed to raise over $62,000 – no small feat – to help educate community health volunteers to spread essential healthcare messages.

With the money raised, 538 community volunteers in the district of Cova Lima have been provided with healthcare training relating to malaria, diarrhoea, dengue, nutrition and malnutrition. Such knowledge is vital in poor, rural communities where access to health services is limited and families may not otherwise know how to identify, prevent or manage disease.

These hard-working volunteers have already started to share what they have learned with their communities. Over 43,000 people have attended outreach sessions in their villages, while another 16,000 have benefited from home visits.

ChildFund has also distributed over 4,000 anti-malaria bed nets to support the work of the volunteers, helping them to educate families about the importance of malaria prevention.

ChildFund Australia and ChildFund Timor-Leste would like to send a heartfelt message of thanks to our 2012 marathon runners for making this work possible. Hayley, Terry and Tom, thank you for running the Paris Marathon. Anjelique, Deni, James and Karly, thank you for running the Dublin Marathon. Your hard work and endless fundraising events are paying off right now for families and communities in Cova Lima, Timor-Leste.

As Guatemala recovers from its latest earthquakes and more than one million children face severe malnutrition in the drought-stricken Sahel region of West Africa, the work of aid organisations is changing. The incidence and severity of natural disasters are increasing and there is growing international acceptance of the link between environmental issues and poverty reduction.

At the Rio+20 Conference in June, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Disaster Risk Reduction, Margareta Wahlstršm, gave some startling numbers. Over the last 20 years, it is conservatively estimated that disasters have killed 1.3 million people, affected 4.4 billion and resulted in economic losses of $2 trillion. Staggering when you consider what this means in terms of shattered lives and communities, missed opportunities and lost gains.

Here in Australia, we live in a disaster-prone region. According to the World Disasters Report 2010, in the period 2000-2009, as many as 85 per cent of people affected by disasters were in Asia and the Pacific. More recently, the Asian Development Bank has stated that people living in our region are now four times more likely to be struck by natural disasters than those living in Africa and 25 times more likely than those living in Europe or North America.

Distributing relief items during the 2011 Sri Lanka floods

Children are particularly vulnerable when disasters strike. Reducing environmental risks is now recognised as a critical child protection issue, particularly in developing countries where people are disproportionately affected by extreme weather events. Increasingly our attention is turning to disaster risk reduction – building community capacity to cope with disasters and conflicts, and providing relief when disasters strike, so that children are safer and communities are more resilient in the face of natural, political or economic crisis.

For this to work well, children must be part of the solution. We know children experience the world differently to adults so it is important to engage them in issues that affect their lives. For example, in the Philippines, an Eco-Scouts program involves young people in disaster planning and management. In Laos, a program is underway to introduce disaster risk reduction through the school curriculum. Physical improvements can also be made to better protect children against disasters, such as building upper floors in schools in flood-prone areas and improving roads and bridges.

Small Voices, Big Dreams survey