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Rathi Guhadasan

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Rathi Guhadasan

Policy and Advocacy Advisor: Child Survival, Health Policy and Equity Group, Global Health Team

A young girl in a yellow headscarf holds her arm out to get a vaccination from a health worker wearing a white coat and gloves.

The journey of a vaccine: World Immunisation Week

Immunisation is one of global health's most powerful tools and one where the UK continues to play a leading role. Yet over 14 million children worldwide have not received a single dose of vaccine. This World Immunisation Week, we celebrate the progress made and call for renewed support for childhood immunisation programmes at home and around the world, to ensure that no child is left behind. 

Emily with newborn baby Blessing, three days old

Every Mother Deserves to Survive the Day She Gives Life

This Mother's Day, spare a thought for the millions of women around the world for whom pregnancy and childbirth are still a matter of life and death — and what the UK can do about it.

Two men shake hands and smile for the camera at world health assembly, where they meet to discuss global health advocacy. They are wearing suits.

Global health advocacy wins for 2025

In a challenging political and economic climate, Save the Children teams in UK, Australia, Germany, Geneva, Norway, USA and the EU fought to make children's health a global priority last year. Learn about our global health advocacy wins in 2025 and how we plan to build on this in 2026. 

Heatwave

Heat: A deadly threat to children's health

The UK faced a recent heatwave and is braced for more to come. As worrying as this is for us, the health implications for children on the frontline of the climate emergency are so much more dire and exacerbated by fragile health systems as well as the recent cuts to overseas development assistance. The UK government must go further and faster to protect children from the devastating impacts of heatwaves and other climate extremes, both at home and abroad.

A birthday cake at a Save the Children UK fundraiser.

Happy Birthday NHS! Now let’s make healthcare free for children everywhere

The NHS, which was delivered during post-war economic decline, turns 77 this Saturday while essential healthcare remains out of reach for over half of the world's population. Millions of children bear the brunt of this inequality, dying from preventable conditions. Universal Health Coverage could change this and with the UK’s leadership in supporting global health, free healthcare for all children everywhere could become a reality.