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Home | Impact of Change
Impact of Change
For a quarter century, AKF USA has been
investing in people, extending a helping
hand to communities and individuals
so they may live with dignity and hope.
Your contribution can make a tremendous
impact on saving lives, educating
children and helping families to lift
themselves out of poverty.
Here’s a glimpse at how far your
contribution actually goes.
- In 1989, diarrhea was the #1 killer of children under
five globally. AKF was a pioneer in research and
promotion of oral re-hydration therapy, an affordable
treatment for diarrhea-related dehydration. By 2000,
diarrhea-related deaths declined by half, preventing
more than 1 million deaths every year.
- 2.5 million people have benefited directly from
the Aga Khan Foundation’s rural support programs
worldwide, with indirect beneficiaries reaching close
to 12 million people in over 8,400
village organizations.
- In Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, 260,000
students along with their parents and
teachers have benefited from AKF’s School
Improvement Program.
- Aga Khan Agency for Microfinance disbursed
more than 150,000 loans to poor and
low-income households in 2006, amounting
to $109 million. These loans help build
businesses, improve living standards and
provide a pathway out of poverty.
- After civil war in Tajikistan, AKF’s agricultural reform program brought new land into
production with the construction of irrigation channels and improved productivity with better
farming techniques, enhanced seed varieties and crop diversification. In eastern Tajikistan,
food self-sufficiency increased dramatically from 15% in 1993 to 80% by 2002.
- Since its inception in April 2006, the Partnership for Advancing Community Education
in Afghanistan has set up 2,076 classes in 870 communities in 17 Afghan
provinces, reaching 2,173 teachers (27% female) and nearly 60,000
students (69% girls) and trained 850 school management committees to
monitor community-based education classes.
- Aga Khan Health Services cares for 1.8 million people annually and employs 8,000
staff, operating 320 medical facilities in East Africa, South and Central Asia,
including primary health care clinics, diagnostic centers, women’s hospitals and referral
hospitals.
- The Community-led Initiatives for Child Survival Project, supported by the U.S. Agency for
International Development is creating an affordable, decentralized health care system to reach
nearly 90,000 people in 67 villages in the Wardha district of Maharashtra, India.
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