Yemen: Preventing cholera to save lives
“We had to walk for over two hours to get to the hospital. My husband had to borrow money from friends to cover the fees for the medical examination,”
Read stories showcasing the human impact of CARE's work around the world.
“We had to walk for over two hours to get to the hospital. My husband had to borrow money from friends to cover the fees for the medical examination,”
Families returning to Bashiqa lack everything. The city’s water, electricity and health networks, are destroyed. The extent of destruction is overwhelming.
If you live in Zambia, you support the rest of your community.
At the Murerekwa Primary School, health is a noisy affair.
How did cocoa farmers do it? By focusing on financial literacy, improved agriculture, and women’s empowerment.
Two years after the Nepal earthquake, skilled female masons are in high demand.
Create informed consumers.
CARE’s Karl-Otto Zentel has just returned from Yemen and answers five burning questions about the crisis affecting nearly 19 million people.
Imagine you had a choice between spending $0.27 on a day to feed a child or $1.33. Seems like a no-brainer: go cheaper, right? Actually, wrong.
In FY2023, CARE worked around the world, contributing to saving lives, fighting poverty, and increasing social justice.