Medical doctors, nurses, midwives, community health extension workers and a couple of local birth attendants were amongst persons who benefited from the two-day intensive training course on NEONATAL RESUSCITATION AND ESSENTIAL NEWBORN CARE, a critical intervention procedure applied in the first minute after birth which is critical for helping the baby to start breathing especially where medical facilities are unavailable in rural Africa.
It also makes it accessible to rural dwellers that form the bulk of people who are most vulnerable to multiple economic and physical effects of sickle cell disease.
[19][20][21][22][23] VHF GBV Response Programme[24] assists survivors entering the referral pathways to access appropriate health, legal and psycho-social support and services.
Vicar Hope Foundation is also committed to developing strategies and guidelines while collaborating with implementing partners to organize trainings and public awareness programs and enhanced partnership with key stakeholders to curb GBV.
[26] Vicar Hope Foundation coordinated a stakeholder movement that led to the introduction of the Abia State Violence Against Persons Prohibition(VAPP) Law.
VHF Founder, Nkechi Ikpeazu led a coalition of groups to the State House of Assembly to advocate for its passage[27][28] The Foundation maintains a hub for young people at its headquarters.