February: Born to ThriveFrom February to April, we will be calling on Canada to advance a future where every child is born to thrive by making a new pledge to the Global Financing Facility (GFF). We are focusing on protecting the world’s children at a moment when global gains are at risk of slipping backward.
read more
ending TB: why progress must be protectedEvery year on March 24th, World Tuberculosis Day reminds us of both how far we’ve come and how much work remains. Tuberculosis (TB) is preventable, treatable, and curable. Yet today, it remains the world’s deadliest infectious disease, continuing to take millions of lives and affect families and communities across the globe. The reality is difficult […]
read more
2025 Parliamentarian’s Year in Review 2025 was a year of significant change. Even amidst rising global crises and a rapidly changing political landscape, advocates and parliamentarians rose to meet the moment. Read about it in the 2025 Parliamentarian's Year in Review.
read more
[TV] U.S. withdraws from World Health OrganizationLast week, the US officially pulled out of the World Health Organization – a devastating move that puts millions of lives at risk and threatens the future of global health. Global health experts, including Results' own Ekatha Ann John, warn that this not only threatens progress in fighting infectious diseases like TB, HIV, malaria and more, but pulls us further away from health equity worldwide 🌍⚠️
read more
RECORDING: February Action Kick-OffThis Action Kick-Off, we're learning about the Global Financing Facility, a global partnership strengthening health systems worldwide to help end preventable deaths among children, adolescents, and women – and how we can take action to make an impact.
read more
January: #ProgressWorthProtectingFor decades, Canada has played a pivotal role in reducing extreme poverty. Today, cuts to international assistance as global needs rise put those gains at risk. Drawing on 40 years of advocacy, we call on leaders to defend the progress we’ve made.
read more