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Communities thrive when their children are thriving.

Children can only reach their full potential if they and the families that support them, and the communities that surround them, have equitable support and resources. Analysis from our Child Well-Being Index ® enables a new level of insight into the issues that affect the futures of our children and our communities.

Child Well-Being Movement

In 2017, United Way of Greater Atlanta launched the Child Well-Being Movement—a movement to unite people and resources across sectors to make lasting improvements in the well-being of children, families and the communities that surround them. Our guiding question is “how are the children?” United, we’re working toward a future where we can respond with “all the children are well.”

Our Child Well-Being Agenda is built on a clear vision of what communities look like when all the children are well:

Babies are born healthy
Children grow up in secure homes and safe neighborhoods and have healthy food and access to medical care
Kids read proficiently by third grade
Teens graduate from high school prepared for college, careers and life
Families are financially stable
Adults are educated, employed and housed

Child Well-Being Index ®

We developed the Child Well-Being Index ® as a diagnostic tool to tell us where each neighborhood stands in their progress toward saying, “all the children are well.” We use the Index insights as a compass to collectively, with nonprofit, business and government partners, direct resources in ways that can most powerfully improve child well-being and transform lives for the better.

The Index incorporates data from multiple sources. Neighborhood Nexus is the primary data partner for the United Way of Greater Atlanta Child Well-Being Index ®. In this role, they gather and maintain the data from the various sources, including the Georgia Department of Education, Georgia Department of Public Health and the U.S. Census Bureau.

Child Measures
  • % Low Weight Births
  • % Students Exceeding 3rd Grade Reading Standards

  • % Students Exceeding 8th Grade Math Standards

  • Student Mobility Score

  • High School Graduation Rate

  • % 16 to 19-Year-Old enrolled in school or in the workforce

  • % of children without health insurance
Family Measures
  • % Families Not Financially Stable​

  • Families with Housing Cost Burden​

  • % Births to Mothers without a High School Diploma

Community Measures
  • % Enrolled in Post-Secondary Education​

  • % Adults without a High School Diploma​

  • % Adults without Health Insurance​

  • Unemployment Rate​

  • % Access to Broadband Internet ​

  • Food Accessibility Score

New Insights From the Index

The latest Index data offers insights into the issues affecting children, families and communities at a neighborhood level. These insights enable us and our partners to match investments to the communities where our efforts can have the greatest impact on child well-being. Through the data, we’ve identified Greater Atlanta’s high-need areas, the more than one-third of our neighborhoods facing lower levels of resources and support to help kids thrive. In 79 of these high-need neighborhoods, child well-being is declining, meaning that the 77,000 children who live there face inequitable barriers to reaching their full potential.

Map of Greater Atlanta counties showing a scale of need

Our Investment Priorities

Data from the Child Well-Being Index ® led us to identify four areas for resource investment with the highest potential to improve child well-being across the 13-county Greater Atlanta region.

Economic Stability

Helping families and individuals build wealth through job training, stable housing, financial education, and lower health costs.

Brighter Future

Enlisting and supporting communities to envision their futures.
Elijah Youth Apprentice

College and Career Ready

Uplifting untapped potential by providing unique opportunities for success.

Strong Learners

Helping readers become leaders.

Our Impact

These aren’t just numbers. They’re our neighbors. In the past year...

34,148
children became strong learners.
82,310
youth had paths opened for higher education and high growth careers.
61,356
people received access to health care, improving their economic stability and quality of life.
13,539
lives improved because of community-led solutions in Clayton, South DeKalb and South Fulton counties.

Where We Serve

We serve 13 counties across Greater Atlanta. Find yours.

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