VIVA RIO: Providing health care services in low-income and violent neighborhoods
Enabling health care access in low-income neighborhoods in Rio de Janeiro is not an easy task. Violence, lack of infrastructure, and lack of trained personnel willing to work in these areas are just some of the obstacles to the improvement of health services for people living in this city's poor communities. To respond to these concerns, some non-governmental organizations have begun to partner with the local government in order to improve coverage and quality of health services in the favelas. One organization that stands out is VIVA RIO (VR), a part-research, part-service-delivery institution that has been operating as a service provider with the local government since 2008 and has successfully contributed to improvement of basic health service coverage in Rio's southern and northern zones. Currently, VR operates 57 basic health units and 2 psychosocial units, benefiting 950,000 people in 35 of the city's neighborhoods. Learn more.









