Menu

two women smiling

Women, Youth & Children

Promoting the health and well-being of women, children and youth

Our Impact

See all Women, Youth & Children Impacts

two children walking
  • 160M women, girls and youth with more rights and power
  • 21% of women harmed by another's drinking, research from our Alcohol Research Group showed
  • 10K+ healthcare internship hours worked by at-risk youth

Our Work

Policies and programs to support youth, children and women unlock economic advancement, educational opportunity and better health for communities around the globe. PHI addresses issues such as childhood obesity, asthma, and sexual and reproductive health. PHI has worked for a half century to empower women, youth and girls through research, advocacy, leadership programs, and organizational and professional development. Known for dynamic leadership in improving the health of women, children and youth, our work focuses on uncovering health disparities, understanding their causes and addressing them through evidence-based solutions.

PHI Priority

Building Health Equity

PHI's Rise Up is advancing social justice, education, equity and opportunity for girls and women around the world, with programs in Nigeria, Mexico, India, South Africa, Kenya, Brazil and the United States. Rise Up works alongside girls, women and young people in their own communities to identify the health, safety and economic issues that matter most to them, and equip them with resources, skills and support to take meaningful action. Together, they're activating girl leaders to realize their own potential and stand up for their right to finish school, live safe from violence, say no to child marriage and more—ultimately, supporting girls to become leaders of transformational change in their communities and countries.

Work With Us

You change the world. We do the rest. Explore fiscal sponsorship at PHI.

Bring Your Work to PHI

Support Us

Together, we can accelerate our response to public health’s most critical issues.

Donate

Find Employment

Begin your career at the Public Health Institute.

See Jobs

Emergency room nurse talks with patient

Close

New Study: ED Buprenorphine Linked to Sustained Opioid Use Disorder Treatment

Patients who get their first dose of buprenorphine in the Emergency Department (ED) are more likely to remain engaged in opioid use disorder treatment 30 days post-discharge, finds a new study from PHI's CA Bridge—reinforcing EDs as critical access points to highly effective, life-saving medication for addiction treatment.

read the study

Continue to PHI.org