Give the Gift of a Healthy Future
Preventing and treating diseases that are the biggest killers of children under five — like malaria — can have one of the greatest impacts on the wellbeing and prosperity of families.
In 2024, we’ve used our evidence and experience to drive community-led solutions — training local people to diagnose and treat common diseases and extend health services to remote communities.
However, there is still so much more that needs to be done, and we’re asking for your help.
Join us this giving season in making a real difference!
You can give the gift of a healthy future in 2024 to support our work and help us achieve even more in 2025. Your gift will make a difference for children, mothers, families and communities affected by malaria and other preventable diseases.
Thank you!
We want a world free from malaria
Click on the calendar below to learn more about Malaria Consortium's impact in 2024, as we strive for a future where no child dies from malaria.
Worked on 43 projects in 23 countries
78 million blister packs of SMC medicines distributed
200,000+ community members trained to deliver the SMC programme
3.1 million insecticide-treated nets distributed
650,000+ people protected by insecticide treated nets in Nigeria
8,000+ mosquito nets delivered to internally displaced people in South Sudan
20,000+ women seen in antenatal care clinic
Read Adut's story here
22,000+ community distributors and MoH staff trained in Mozambique
Adut's story: Promoting sexual and reproductive health in South Sudan
Women and girls in conflict and crisis areas face a higher risk of experiencing gender-based violence (GBV). Survivors are more likely to experience mental health concerns and might also be living with a disability, often struggling to access the healthcare they need due to unstable conditions. In South Sudan, our expertise in malaria and community health services allows us to expand access to sexual and reproductive health, mental health support and disability care.
Malaria Consortium launched a transformative gender equality and social inclusion programme in Aweil Centre and Aweil South, Northern Bahr El Ghazal state, as part of the Health Pooled Fund project. The programme trained healthcare workers on gender-based violence, clinical management of rape, mental health support, disability inclusion, and adolescent sexual and reproductive health rights.
We identified influential women and religious leaders to engage marginalised women and girls, like Adut, to become adolescent sexual and reproductive health rights champions. Adut shares her experience about being a champion and how through the project, stigma surrounding sexual health is slowly reducing.
San's story: Collaborating with mobile, migrant and forest-going workers to tackle malaria
In Cambodia and Ethiopia, we’re providing crucial malaria services to mobile and migrant communities in remote areas where healthcare access is limited. In Cambodia we’re working with locally recruited and well-trained mobile malaria workers (MMWs) to reach people across six northern provinces along the international border with Thailand, Laos and Vietnam. Thanks to MMWs’ knowledge of local population movements, we are rapidly identifying and treat remaining pockets of malaria cases and prevent cross-border re-introduction.
San, a dedicated mobile malaria worker in Cambodia, reflects on how his efforts in testing and treating local community members have directly contributed to a noticeable decline in malaria cases.
Choose your stocking fillers below to give the gift of a healthy future this 2024.
Your gift can make a meaningful difference to children, mothers, families and communities affected by preventable diseases like malaria.
Make a monthly donation
Send a Christmas card and give the gift of a healthy future
Thank you!
From everyone at Malaria Consortium, we wish you a very happy festive season, filled with good health.
We are very fortunate to receive not just financial support, but also such warmth and generosity towards what we are trying to achieve — a world where no child dies from preventable diseases, like malaria.