PAHO - Pan American Health Organization

10/24/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/24/2025 15:13

Latin America and the Caribbean renew commitment to end violence against children and adolescents at PAHO-UNICEF regional consultation

iStock/Carlos alberto Ramirez Gaviria
Credit

Washington, D.C., 24 October 2025.- Governments, civil society, youth representatives, and international partners from across Latin America and the Caribbean renewed their commitment to end violence against children and adolescents during a high-level regional consultation co-hosted by the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) and UNICEF.

The region continues to have the highest rates of violence against children and adolescents worldwide. Nearly two out of three children aged 1 to 14 experience violent discipline at home, and one in five girls experience sexual violence before reaching 18. Interpersonal violence remains a leading cause of death for young people. Despite progress and political commitments, efforts to protect children from violence remain insufficient.

Over two days of dialogue, held virtually on the 23 and 24 October, more than 300 participants - including ministers and senior officials from the health, education, justice, and child protection sectors, as well as representatives of civil society, youth leaders, and international partners - came together to discuss concrete actions to build safer environments for children and adolescents.

"Every child has the right to grow up free from violence, safe in their homes, schools, and communities, and to enjoy a childhood full of opportunities," said Dr. Jarbas Barbosa, Director of PAHO. "The change we want to see in the health system is clear: health services must be in daily contact with communities. When health workers identify individuals who are at-risk early and provide them with quality support, it makes a real difference to survivors of violence, their families, and communities. It is a unique opportunity to improve public trust in the response system and decisively demonstrate that violence is never justified."

"For millions of children in Latin America and the Caribbean, violence remains in their homes, schools, communities or online, undermining their mental health, fueling cycles of poverty, and even perpetuates violence into the next generations," said Anne-Claire Dufay UNICEF Deputy Regional Director for Latin America and the Caribbean. "The good news is we know what works to end violence. We need bold investments to ensure every child is protected-investments in prevention, in early detection, in quality services, and in justice systems that respond with dignity and care. When we protect children from violence, we are not only saving lives-we are shaping the future of the region."

From evidence to action

The Consultation advanced an evidence-to-action agenda structured around four key areas for preventing and responding to violence:

  • Legal and policy frameworks to prevent and respond to violence.
  • Parenting programs to break cycles of violence against children and adolescents.
  • Safe and enabling learning environments.
  • Comprehensive health and protection services to respond to survivors.

Each session featured examples of good practices from countries across Latin America and the Caribbean, showcasing concrete solutions that have delivered results.

Commitment and next steps

Participants underscored that effective prevention requires whole-of-government and whole-of-society approaches, with particular attention to early childhood, mental health, digital safety, and social-protection systems. Contributions from survivors, youth representatives, artists, and international experts underscored the importance of working together to drive real change.

They reaffirmed their determination to consolidate multisectoral partnerships and strengthen collaboration between the health, education, social protection, and justice sectors, together with civil-society, survivor and youth networks, to accelerate progress toward ending violence. Countries also made commitments to strengthen national health and protection systems that are coordinated, data-driven, and responsive to the needs of every child and adolescent.

About the regional consultation

The Regional Ministerial Consultation on Ending Violence against Children and Adolescents in Latin America and the Caribbean was convened by PAHO and UNICEF to exchange experiences, identify effective strategies, and strengthen regional cooperation toward achieving the commitments made at the Global Ministerial Conference to End Violence Against Children (Bogotá, 2024) and the Sustainable Development Goals 16- which calls on all countries to promote peaceful and inclusive societies, provide access to justice for all, and build effective, accountable, and inclusive institutions, including the specific target (16.2) to end abuse, exploitation, trafficking, and all forms of violence against and torture of children.

News Releases
Violence against children
Noncommunicable Diseases and Mental Health (NMH)
PAHO - Pan American Health Organization published this content on October 24, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on October 24, 2025 at 21:13 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]