Africare/Angola

Africare began operations in Angola in 1990.

During Angola’s civil war and through the recovery period following it until 2005, Africare/Angola invested an estimate $21,000,000 into projects, and since has invested $2-3 million per year. Africare/Angola’s projects have addressed…

• Agriculture & Food Security
• Governmental Capacity Building
• Health, HIV & AIDS
• Humanitarian and Emergency Relief
• Malaria
• Nutrition
• Polio Eradication
• Water, Sanitation & Hygiene
• Women’s Empowerment

…reaching an estimated 705,612 beneficiaries.

Africare/Angola’s Portfolio Today:

With a fiscal year 2013 budget of $5,772,309 utilizing funds from…

• United States Agency for International Development
• European Commission’s Humanitarian Aid Department
• World Bank
• United Nations Children’s Fund
• Chevron
• ConocoPhillips
• ExxonMobil
• Total Oil
• GlaxoSmithKline
• Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
• African Medical and Research Foundation
• United Methodist Committee on Relief

Africare/Angola is implementing projects in agriculture; community-based nutrition; community health; community library development; malaria; polio eradication; and water, sanitation and hygiene.

Success in Angola

Polio, a disease many might consider a thing of the past, struck back in Angola in 2005. After remaining polio free since 2001, Angola began seeing cases of the wild polio virus again. Because no cure for polio exists, this potentially fatal, paralysis-inducing virus needed to be contained. Unfortunately, the number of new cases increased as years passed, reaching a maximum of 33 new cases in 2010. Making the situation worse, Angola was exporting the virus to the Congo, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Namibia.

Under the leadership of the Ministry of Health, Africare has worked as part of a consortium addressing Angola’s polio situation since 2000. By training 3,650 local polio volunteers to date to conduct active polio surveillance, facilitate transport for vaccines, promote routine immunization in their communities, and refer children and pregnant women to vaccination posts, Africare empowered Angolans to overcome the disease in six of 12 project provinces. Africare will maintain its presence in high-risk areas and maintain consistent vaccination and vigilance.

Country Stats

Life Expectancy: 41.7 years (USA: 77.9)

Under-5 child mortality: 260/1,000 live births (USA: 7/1,000)

HIV prevalence, ages 15-49: [1.7 – 2.5]% (USA: [0.4 – 1.0]%)

Physicians per 100,000 people: 8 (USA: 256)

People undernourished: 35% (USA: 0%)

People with access to safe drinking water: 53% (USA: 100%)

Adult literacy: 67.4% (USA: 99%)

Gross National Income per capita: $2,335 (USA: $41,890)

People living on less than $1 a day: Not available (USA: 0%)

(HIV prevalence statistics, UNAIDS. All other statistics, 2007/2008 Human Development Report, UNDP)

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