Provide Life-Saving Support to Children Facing Crises and Disasters
Global Emergency Response
Children's lives can change in an instant in the wake of conflict and disasters. Today humanitarian emergencies are more frequent and severe, fuelled by conflict and climate change.
In moments like these, how quickly help arrives can mean everything. With your support, we can move fast to provide life-saving aid. Our crisis and disaster response not only provides relief and saves lives of children. We nourish, comfort and protect children who’ve experienced violence, displacement, earthquakes, typhoons and floods. We continue to walk beside them as their communities recover and rebuild.
Your Support Can Impact Lives In These Places
Rebuilding Homes Post-Typhoon in Vietnam
Building disaster-resilient homes with essential safe water and latrine facilities for families affected by Typhoon Yagi
Hunger Crisis Response & Famine Prevention in South Darfur, Sudan
Food assistance for households with children under 5 years, and pregnant and lactating mothers facing acute malnutrition to reduce the risk of malnutrition and famine.
An Inclusive Future for Children with Disabilities in Iraq
Provide specialised learning support for children affected by conflict and exclusion.
Education and Clean Water for Rohingya Refugees
Improve clean water access, sanitation and hygiene through provision of latrines, handwashing faciliites and water filtration tables. Provide education support through community-based learning facilities and vocational training for Rohingya refugee children.
Middle East Crisis Response
World Vision has been working in the Middle East for over 50 years. Our teams are on the ground responding with life-saving support to reach the most vulnerable children and families. Your support is critical in delivering timely essentials such as food, clean water, healthcare, and psychosocial support. Your help brings safety and comfort to children and families who need it most.
We Support Their Recovery
Before, during and after emergencies, we are there. With decades of experience in the world’s most fragile places, we have built the capacity to support children and their communities not just to survive crises and disasters, but to move forward with strength.
Survive
World Vision is among the first to respond - delivering food, water, medicine, and shelter within 24 to 72 hours.
Recover
Through psychosocial support and safe spaces, we help children recover from the trauma of conflict or disaster.
Build
We help communities prepare for floods, droughts & crises by improving infrastructure and providing emergency training.
Impact Made Possible
In 2025, your giving enabled us to reach 4,401,872 people affected by crises and disasters, helping them survive, recover, and build a future.
Stories of Crisis & Disaster Response
From Mandalay to Yangon: What I Witnessed Changed Me Forever
The Life of a Child Surviving the Myanmar Earthquake
Myanmar Children at Risk of Abuse and Exploitation Following Devastating Earthquake, Warns World Vision
Deepening mental health crisis in Syria, following last month's earthquakes, warns World Vision
5 things we have learned responding to earthquakes
World Vision deeply concerned about the fate of unaccompanied children in Syria
Why cash is king in emergency responses
Worst needs from earthquake in over a decade, will take over a generation to recover
World Vision Singapore Launches Public Fundraising Appeal, Doubles pledge to S$200,000 to support the escalating need for immediate relief items
Frequently Asked Questions
Having a Disaster Response Fund ready to use, the global pre-positioning resource network ensures we can respond rapidly to any disaster, with pre-positioned supplies (seven warehouses strategically-located worldwide), preparedness plans and trained staff worldwide.
Community development programmes include training in disaster preparation and prevention (e.g. first aid, how to respond to a disaster, improving the construction of buildings, developing early warning systems, and mapping potential threats and vulnerable areas).
World Vision is a signatory to the Red Cross Code of Conduct – we commit to assisting people irrespective of ethnic, religious or political affiliations. Our emergency projects are in line with the Sphere Project’s Humanitarian Charter and Minimum Standards in Humanitarian Response, which outline internationally-recognised minimum standards for emergency response. As a member of the Humanitarian Accountability Partnership (HAP), we are also accountable to communities in our emergency response.
Children: In the context in which World Vision works, children are in greatest need of protection from further injury, disease or neglect, with assured attention to their basic needs, including psychosocial needs. While World Vision prioritises families in distribution and livelihood initiatives, our child-friendly spaces also provide children a safe place to play, begin emotional healing and re-establish a normal routine.
Relief supplies: In addition to shelter, food and water, assessment of other needs is pivotal to ensure that our response also facilitates long-term physical relief.
Education: Our field staff aims to improve vulnerable children’s well-being with both formal and informal education, which includes life-skills training, and more.
Psychosocial support: Conflicts and disasters cause significant psychological and social suffering. Therefore, we protect and improve people’s mental health and psychosocial well-being by reducing the effects of disasters through psychosocial services.
Health & nutrition: Another priority is to save lives, alleviate suffering and promote the return to normalcy by addressing the health and nutritional needs of the affected.
Shelter: Exposure to cold, rain or mosquitoes can be life-threatening, while the lack of privacy, loss of belongings, and inability to provide for affected children is extremely distressing for displaced communities. Tents or tarpaulins help to protect families while more permanent structures (that can withstand possible future disasters) are rebuilt.
Water & sanitation: Water and sanitation are critical, as victims are much more susceptible to illness (e.g. diarrhoea) and death from diseases which rise from the inadequacy of sanitation and clean water supplies. Using contaminated water for washing can also aggravate injuries and infections. Water purification and other solutions for will therefore limit diseases and save lives.
HIV/AIDS: It is vital that HIV/AIDS interventions are integrated into the structure of all disaster response programmes to ensure that HIV/AIDS victims are not made more vulnerable.
Protection: Humanitarian protection is about respect for the fundamental rights of people, for their safety, dignity and integrity as human beings.
Our quick response does not undermine our focus to help effect long-term solutions. We assist victims to transit from the relief phase to the recovery and rebuilding phase. The latter includes permanent housing, clean water, sustainable sources of food, access to education, and re-established livelihoods. Our global risk reduction strategy educates communities, down to family-level disaster preparedness, and instills community-based disaster risk management programmes.
An estimated 1 in 11 children around the world needs humanitarian support due to conflict, hunger, and climate disasters.