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In August, The New York Times ran the headline: A New Way to Reduce Child Deaths: Cash. The story covered new research from a large randomized study of GiveDirectly’s cash transfer program in Kenya, finding that giving money to families, no strings attached, led to a 48% drop in child deaths.
In this episode of No Strings Attached, host Tyler G. Hall speaks with Caitlin Tulloch (Head of Research) and Caroline Teti (Head of Human-Centered Design) about how those findings are reshaping our approach to maternal and infant health.
They unpack what the study found and how we’re applying it to our new pilot for pregnant women in Kenya. They also address questions we’ve heard from supporters, like whether giving moms money could unintentionally encourage pregnancy, how the program stacks up on cost-effectiveness, and whether it still aligns with GiveDirectly’s model of unconditional support.
Learn more at givedirectly.org/mortality2025
By GiveDirectlyIn August, The New York Times ran the headline: A New Way to Reduce Child Deaths: Cash. The story covered new research from a large randomized study of GiveDirectly’s cash transfer program in Kenya, finding that giving money to families, no strings attached, led to a 48% drop in child deaths.
In this episode of No Strings Attached, host Tyler G. Hall speaks with Caitlin Tulloch (Head of Research) and Caroline Teti (Head of Human-Centered Design) about how those findings are reshaping our approach to maternal and infant health.
They unpack what the study found and how we’re applying it to our new pilot for pregnant women in Kenya. They also address questions we’ve heard from supporters, like whether giving moms money could unintentionally encourage pregnancy, how the program stacks up on cost-effectiveness, and whether it still aligns with GiveDirectly’s model of unconditional support.
Learn more at givedirectly.org/mortality2025