Zimbabwe Aug 17, 2021 Getting Munashe Back “I can’t find the words to express the joy I have in my heart for what Smile Train did for our child.”
Argentina Aug 10, 2021 FĂ©lix Didn't Need Luck, He Had Smile Train and GSK Smile Train and GSK worry about the details of care, freeing parents to focus only on their child's recovery.
Argentina Jun 24, 2021 How Smile Train Helped Aaron Smile Even Before He Was Born Our model of empowering local cleft teams makes all the difference for families like Aaron's.
United States May 21, 2021 Pamela Sheeran on Smile Train’s Investment in Expanding Non-Surgical Cleft Care An interview with the woman behind our comprehensive cleft care programs.
United States May 21, 2021 California State University, Fullerton (CSUF) Students Turn Crisis into Smiles How one chapter of Smile Train’s Smile Impact Society made 2020 its most lucrative year yet.
United States Apr 21, 2021 Why My Son Says He Always Wanted a Cleft How Jasmine went from fear and self-doubt upon receiving the news that her baby would have a cleft to raising a six-year-old who is #CleftProud.
United States Mar 15, 2021 How Smile Train Kept Making Smiles Through COVID-19 While other cleft organizations’ operations were indefinitely suspended or severely cut back, Smile Train was able to keep moving.
Argentina Feb 26, 2021 Milagros Finishes Strong How Smile Train helped a girl who nearly didn't survive infancy grow to become queen of the rink.
United States Dec 24, 2020 Fraternity Brothers Spread Smiles Through the Pandemic These dedicated Smile Train supporters didn't let COVID-19 stop their annual fundraising event.
Colombia Oct 21, 2020 Healing Heartbreak with a Smile (Dogs Help, Too) Angelica was 15 years old, single, and had just given birth to a baby with a cleft. All she knew about clefts was how she had seen people with them harassed without mercy. But she promised to never give up on the little life before her.
Congo, Democratic Republic of the Oct 19, 2020 A Walk to Freedom Nkunda had to hide in the bushes on his journey to school every day. Something needed to be done.