Media contacts:Laura Blank708.872.5265 (c) Holly Frew 253.709.3190 (c) Expert sources:Paul MacekRobert Zachritz Drought, food crisis, famine: What's the difference?
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The needNutritious food is a critical building block for children’s growth and development. Half of all childhood deaths can be traced to malnutrition. And when parents are weakened by hunger, they cannot work, grow crops or provide for their families. | ||
Severe food shortages result from factors that often compound each other:
| Nutritious food is a critical building block for children’s growth and development. | |
Feeding centers — Following a humanitarian crisis, World Vision establishes emergency feeding clinics and often provides supplemental food until the situation has stabilized.
Agricultural assistance — World Vision provides farmers with seeds and tools for raising crops and livestock.
Agricultural training — We teach farmers improved agricultural techniques such as crop rotation, drip irrigation, conservation farming and the planting of nitrogen-fixing trees that enrich depleted soil.
Nutrition education — World Vision trains parents in the importance of feeding their children foods that contain essential nutrients such as vitamins A and C.
Improving product storage — World Vision helps communities protect their available food resources with better storage techniques. In Mali, for example, we built granaries that decreased the annual food storage loss from 30 percent to 3 percent.
Marketing assistance — By identifying and providing resources for marketable products, World Vision helps farmers earn a stable income for their families. For example, we helped Brazilian farmers cultivate and market a crop of organic peppers after local environmental changes made it impossible to grow their previous crops.
Natural resource management — World Vision emphasizes the value of caring for natural resources. Farmers are taught to protect their greatest asset — their land — by preventing soil degradation, increasing sustainability, and enhancing productivity.
Food for Education ProgramThrough World Vision's Food for Education program, students in Afghanistan who attend school and perform well can receive food to take home to their families. Stories from the Niamey campsFamilies driven from their homes in search of work or food talk about their life in temporary camps in Niamey, Niger. | ||
Resources for journalists
Additional resources | ![]() A young boy in a refugee camp in Southern Africa eats his rice. The food crisis in Southern Africa grows worse by the day as grain prices continue to rise. ![]() In Honduras at a World Vision distribution center, a pregnant mother receives essential food supplies to prevent malnutrition. | |
When disaster strikes, contact us for expert interviews, photos, b-roll and other resources. | ||