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Call for EOIs: UNICEF Wasting Prevention & Treatment Programme in Lao PDR

Deadline: 07-Feb-2026

UNICEF, in partnership with the Government of Lao PDR, is advancing the Child Nutrition Fund Programme to prevent and treat child wasting. Targeting 11 provinces and 100 districts, the programme supports over 400,000 children and 387,000 pregnant women through maternal nutrition, child growth monitoring, and severe acute malnutrition treatment. Civil society partners play a key role in service delivery, community engagement, and strengthening health systems.

Overview of the Programme

The Child Nutrition Fund Programme in Lao PDR is a collaborative initiative led by the Ministry of Health and UNICEF to address child malnutrition, particularly wasting. The programme functions as a catalytic financing mechanism, strengthening government investments while focusing on provinces with the highest malnutrition burden.

Key Objectives:

Who is Eligible to Participate

Civil society organizations and partners with experience in:

Target Population

Key Focus Areas

Maternal Nutrition

Child Wasting Prevention

Early Identification and Treatment

Health System Strengthening

How Partners Can Contribute

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

1. Who can partner with the programme?
Civil society organizations, NGOs, and health service providers with experience in maternal and child nutrition.

2. What is the scale of the programme?
11 provinces and 100 districts, covering over 400,000 children and nearly 387,000 pregnant women.

3. What are the main interventions for children?
Growth monitoring, vitamin A supplementation, deworming, infant and young child feeding counselling, and severe acute malnutrition treatment.

4. What are the main interventions for pregnant women?
Nutrition counselling, weight monitoring, micronutrient supplementation, and integrated antenatal and postnatal care.

5. How can partners contribute to system strengthening?
Through capacity building, guideline updates, pre-service training, and improvements in governance, supply chains, and planning.

6. Are hard-to-reach communities included?
Yes, community-level implementation focuses on remote and underserved areas.

7. Is monitoring and reporting required?
Yes, partners are expected to support routine data collection, reporting, and follow-up for sustainable impact.

Conclusion

The UNICEF Child Nutrition Fund Programme in Lao PDR offers a strategic opportunity to address child malnutrition at scale. By integrating maternal nutrition, child wasting prevention, treatment services, and health system strengthening, the programme enables partners to make measurable, lasting improvements in nutrition outcomes. Engagement in community-level interventions ensures that vulnerable children and pregnant women receive timely, high-quality support, contributing to long-term health, resilience, and national capacity to combat malnutrition.

For more information , visit UN Partner Portal.

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