The Orphan Crisis: The trends shaping the next decade

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Trend 1: A global shift toward family-based care 

There is growing international momentum to reduce institutionalization and expand: 

  • kinship care (grandparents, aunts/uncles) 
  • foster care systems 
  • supported independent living for older adolescents 
  • community-based services that prevent separation in the first place 

UNICEF’s focus on measuring children in alternative care and residential care reflects this strategic direction.  

What’s changing: the goal is moving from “rescue and place” to prevent separation, strengthen families, and create safe pathways when family care is not possible. 

 

Trend 2: More “single orphans,” more complex caregiving realities 

Because many children losing a parent still have one surviving parent or relatives, the biggest need is often: 

  • household income stability 
  • school retention support 
  • mental health and trauma care 
  • protection from exploitation, early marriage, and child labor 

This is especially true where the surviving caregiver is struggling with poverty, illness, or displacement. 

 

Trend 3: The orphan crisis is increasingly connected to girls’ outcomes 

For girls, caregiver loss and unstable care arrangements can compound risks such as: 

  • school dropout (especially at puberty) 
  • transactional exploitation and trafficking vulnerability 
  • early marriage pressure 
  • untreated reproductive health needs and stigma 

This is why programs like GLOW UP combining education, health & well-being, and nutrition are essential rather than “extra.” 

 

Trend 4: Displacement and migration will keep rising 

UNICEF’s displacement data shows a steep upward trajectory through 2024. 
Climate shocks, conflict spillover, and economic instability are expected to intensify child mobility and family separation pressures. 

 

Global outlook: what the world must do now 

Addressing the orphan crisis at scale is not only about care placements; it’s about preventing caregiver loss and preventing family separation. 

The most effective solutions tend to cluster into five areas: 

  1. Keep caregivers alive: strengthen health systems, HIV treatment continuity, maternal health, and emergency health response.  
  1. Prevent separation: social protection (cash support), disability services, parenting supports, food security, and school access. 
  1. Build family-based alternative care: safe, monitored kinship and foster care; supported living for older youth. 
  1. Protect children in crisis: family tracing and reunification, case management, child-friendly services in displacement settings. 
  1. Invest in adolescence: skills training, mentorship, psychosocial support, and pathways to employment—especially for girls. 

 

Where GLOW UP fits in: turning data into a girl’s future 

GLOW UP’s model aligns with what global evidence consistently points to: holistic support is what protects girls and builds long-term independence. 

For girls aged 10–18 in orphanages or foster care systems, the highest-impact interventions often include: 

  • education continuity and learning support 
  • health education and dignity resources (including menstrual health) 
  • nutrition support that improves attendance and concentration 
  • targeted skills training and leadership development 
  • mentorship and psychosocial care that rebuilds confidence after loss 

This is how you move from “survival” to a genuine pipeline of empowered female leaders. 

 

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