Caring for hurricane survivors, moms in Colombia, and Ukrainian families                                                            
Your October 2022 Project HOPE News - the latest from the field on your lifesaving impact
A person with a white hair and mustache wearing sunglasses and a thin tshirt looks to the right, against a background of a hurricane-destroyed home with belongings scattered everywhere.

How We're Helping After Hurricane Ian

Project HOPE prepositioned an Emergency Response Team in Florida before Hurricane Ian made landfall, allowing us to access the most affected areas within the first 12 hours. To date, we've delivered over 250,000 relief items like over-the-counter medicines, diapers, hygiene kits, water and first-aid kits in Charlotte, Collier, Lee and Sarasota Counties. Find out more about how we're saving lives after this disaster with your support.

HOW TO HELP
 
In Colombia, a mother wearing a black shirt and blue medical mask looks at her young toddler lovingly as she holds her in her arms. The toddler smiles at the camera and has curly dark hair and is wearing a blue and pink shirt.

In Photos: The Journey Venezuela’s Mothers Endure

More than 6 million Venezuelans have migrated from their country due to years of humanitarian crisis. Among them are many pregnant women and mothers, many of whom have made the grueling trip to find a better life alone. See how Project HOPE is providing care and community across the border in Colombia.

IN PHOTOS
 
A photo of a safe space for children and families in Poland, showing a group of children with two teachers against a background of brightly-colored bean bags.

In Poland, Ukrainians Find A Safe Space

In Rzeszów, Poland, Ukrainian women and children are finding solace at a child-friendly space and mental health and psychosocial support center established with help from Project HOPE.
Learn More >>

A women in Florida with dark hair and bangs with a dark jacket sits on a gray couch and looks to the right as she is being examined by a health worker in a blue medical mask.

Help Save Lives Now

Will you make a monthly gift to help families impacted by hurricanes and to continue our work in crisis zones like Ukraine? Your gift will ensure families and health workers around the world have the medicines and support they need to survive.
Make a HOPE Partner Gift >>

Two Project HOPE-supported health workers in Colombia use a flash light as they speak to a waiting room of pregnant people in need of care after leaving Venezuela.

4 Facts: Migrant Health

Three decades into the 21st century, the world is on the move like never before. There are more than 280 million migrants worldwide — enough to equal 4% of the entire global population. Learn more about the greatest health concerns they face.
Get the Facts >>

A Project HOPE-sponsored health worker is wearing a navy blue Project HOPE shirt and medical mask a d black pants as she stands sits at a wooden deakd and speaks to a family of two children and their mother in a clinic in Haiti.

Cholera Outbreak Escalates in Haiti

Project HOPE has deployed teams made up of medical, water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH), and other experts to Haiti in response to the first cholera outbreak there in three years. The crisis has been compounded by a a blockade of essential supplies into Port-au-Prince.
Crisis in Haiti >>

Project HOPE in the News
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