Укр Eng

Press-releases

04.08.2006

“The Cradles of Hope”: Victor Pinchuk Foundation has opened a new neonatal intensive care center

On 4 August, a neonatal intensive care center was opened in the maternity hospital of the Vladimerets town (Rovenskaya region). It was done within the Cradles of Hope program being implemented by the Victor Pinchuk Foundation which envisages a networking of the neonatal centers nationwide.

During the inauguration, the Cradles of Hope program manager Larissa Polyakova voiced her expectation for saving the premature newborns' lives with the help of medical facilities granted by the Foundation.

"Since we launched the project on the eve of the 20th Commemoration of the Chernobyl catastrophe, we started from the districts within the Chernobyl zone. As Vladimerets has a Chernobyl spot, there is correspondingly a high rate of pathology or pathology hazard here. "Moreover, there was no maternity hospital in Vladimerets at all, though, according to statistics, the town demonstrates the highest birth rate in the Rovenskaya region and one of the highest birth rates in Ukraine", - she underlined.
   
As Larissa Polyakova informed, cost of the facilities delivered to the center totaled 304 000 hr. and that of ambulance, which the Foundation purchased for transporting the infants from the Rovno region to the regional children center, made up above 300 000 hr.

According to Serguey Buravskiy, chief of the obstetric-gynecological department of the Vladimerets maternity hospital, opening of the neonatal center would enable to identify timely the pre-natal abnormalities and to render assistance or, if needed, to transport children to the regional center by ambulance. "We would have never obtained this sum from the budget, especially from the local ones. It's a huge amount of money. Had it not been the Foundation, we would have had only a shell, i.e. this premise, but an empty one", - he stressed.
 
"The district depends on the State subsidy by 90%; it is very difficult to find the funds on our own, and therefore, we need such philanthropists as the Victor Pinchuk Foundation. We used to transport women in childbirth, covering 30 km.  At present, all the conditions have been created for aiding them on the spot or, in special cases, for transporting them to the regional maternity hospital', - Aleksandr Bobrik, chairman of the Vladimerets district public administration says.

The Cradles of Hope program has been developed and funded by the Victor Pinchuk Foundation to facilitate the infant mortality problem solving.

The program plans a nationwide networking of specialized neonatal centers (the neonatal intensive care departments) in the coming years.

The program includes: procurement of medical facilities, their maintenance, running of the advance training courses for the neonatal centers' doctors.

As a first phase of the program, a neonatal intensive care center was opened in the Chernigov maternity hospital in June 2006. The other three neonatal centers are due to open till the end of the year - in Poltava, Lutsk, Dnepropetrovsk.

The Children of Chernobyl Relief and Development Fund (Ukraine-USA) acts in this project as a partner of the Victor Pinchuk Foundation.

According to the State Committee of Statistics of Ukraine, about 4 000 infants under a year die annually in the country. No stable tendency for the infant mortality reducing is observed in Ukraine so far.
 
The Victor Pinchuk Foundation was established on 23 February 2006 with the aim of coordination and more efficient implementation of the charitable programs of Victor Pinchuk. The main programs of the Foundation are The Cradles of Hope project, The Contemporary Art Center in Ukraine, "Zavtra.ua" project for supporting the talented students. 
Share |

Back to the list

Video

RSS All video
05.12.2012

STB - International scientific conference for neonatologists

05.12.2012

ICTV - International scientific conference for neonatologists

05.12.2012

STB - International scientific conference for neonatologists

03.12.2012

ICTV - International scientific conference for neonatologists

Pages 89 90 91 92 93 ... of 93
 

News

RSS All news

In Vinnytsia, a mental health center of the nationwide network RETURNING (ukr. ПОВЕРНЕННЯ), founded by Victor and Olena Pinchuk, has opened

13.05.2026

The Vinnytsia Mental Health Center of the nationwide RETURNING network (ukr. ПОВЕРНЕННЯ) will provide free professional psychological support to more than 4,000 military personnel, veterans, and their families every year. The project was founded by Victor and Olena Pinchuk to support the mental health of Ukraine’s defenders, veterans, and their family members who have experienced the psychological consequences of the war caused by Russian aggression.



Source:

The Vinnytsia Mental Health Center of the nationwide RETURNING network (ukr. ПОВЕРНЕННЯ) will provide free professional psychological support to more than 4,000 military personnel, veterans, and their families every year. The project was founded by Victor and Olena Pinchuk to support the mental health of Ukraine’s defenders, veterans, and their family members who have experienced the psychological consequences of the war caused by Russian aggression.

Speaking about the importance of building a culture of mental health care in Ukraine and overcoming the stigma surrounding psychological support, Victor Pinchuk, founder of the RETURNING project, said:

“In the culture and traditions of our society, there is still prejudice: ‘What do you mean, see a psychiatrist? What will people say — that I went to a mental hospital?’ In the West, it’s the opposite: the first thing a person does when there is a problem in the family, with children, between husband and wife, or at work, is turn to a psychologist or psychiatrist. Sometimes it is even difficult to book an appointment there. In our country, this tradition and culture still do not exist. That is why it is important for defenders to talk about it with one another, and for doctors to explain why it is necessary.”

The RETURNING Mental Health Center in Vinnytsia is a space of support, safety, and recovery for active-duty military personnel, veterans, former prisoners of war, and their family members. The center provides individual and group support, works with the consequences of traumatic experiences, helps stabilize emotional conditions, and restore a sense of grounding and stability. When needed, specialists may prescribe medication. Special attention is given to psychological inclusion — creating a safe and confidential environment free from judgment and stigma.

The RETURNING project demonstrates a successful partnership between the private sector and the state, where philanthropists establish centers on the basis of state and municipal medical institutions. Through the support of the RETURNING project, part of the facility underwent major renovation, resulting in a modern, comfortable, and barrier-free center designed in accordance with accessibility standards and the needs of people who use wheelchairs.

The center includes offices for individual and family counseling, a group therapy room, a reception area with a waiting space, a day-care unit, a treatment room, and accessible restrooms. It also features a pottery studio — a space for free self-expression that helps visitors reduce stress, better understand their emotional state, and gradually regain a sense of control and inner support through working with clay and materials.

The center is equipped with technology and materials to support both specialists and visitors throughout the recovery process. These include computer equipment, multimedia systems, the Shiftwave System psychological relaxation device, VR headsets, art therapy and pottery supplies, psychological games, anti-stress and tactile tools, as well as professional literature for specialists.

Visitors at the center are supported by a multidisciplinary team that includes psychiatrists, a physician psychologist, a clinical psychologist, a nurse, a male nurse, and a medical registrar. This ensures a comprehensive approach to care that addresses each person’s clinical, psychological, and social needs.

“Seeking support from mental health professionals is not a sign of weakness, but an important step toward recovery. After combat experience, captivity, loss, or prolonged exhaustion, it can be difficult for a person to cope with the consequences of what they have lived through on their own. Our goal is to create a safe space where military personnel, veterans, and their loved ones can receive professional support without judgment and with respect for their experiences,” said Inha Tyshkul, Head of the RETURNING Center in Vinnytsia.

Support at the Vinnytsia RETURNING Center is provided free of charge in an outpatient format or, when necessary, at visitors’ places of residence. Specialists work with stress-related conditions, anxiety and depressive disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder, adjustment and psychosomatic difficulties, as well as psychotic conditions.

As of today, 15 centers of the RETURNING network, founded by Victor and Olena Pinchuk, are operating in Vinnytsia, Dnipro, Zhytomyr, Ivano-Frankivsk, Kyiv, Kropyvnytskyi, Lutsk, Odesa, Poltava, Rivne, Ternopil, Uzhhorod, Khmelnytskyi, Cherkasy, and Chernihiv. During the first phase of the RETURNING project, 25 centers are planned to open across Ukraine, with the capacity to provide support to more than 100,000 military personnel, veterans, and their family members annually.

Address of the RETURNING Center in Vinnytsia:
92 Khmelnytske Highway, Main Building, Letter “B”, Vinnytsia, Ukraine

Reception phone number:
+38 067 581 97 57

Email for inquiries:
[email protected]

STILL JOY – FROM UKRAINE INTO THE WORLD @ BIENNALE ARTE 2026. A Collateral Event at the 61st International Art Exhibition — La Biennale di Venezia. Presented by the Victor Pinchuk Foundation and the PinchukArtCentre

08.05.2026

On 7 May 2026, the Victor Pinchuk Foundation and the PinchukArtCentre opened the project “Still Joy — From Ukraine Into the World” which is an official Collateral Event of the 61st International Art Exhibition — La Biennale di Venezia. During the opening ceremony, speeches were delivered by Victor Pinchuk, businessman and philanthropist, founder of the PinchukArtCentre; Tetyana Berezhna, Deputy Prime Minister for Humanitarian Policy of Ukraine and Minister of Culture of Ukraine; the exhibition’s curators Björn Geldhof, Artistic Director of the PinchukArtCentre, and Oleksandra Pogrebnyak. Hlib Stryzhko, a veteran and marine who returned from Russian captivity, and Yuliia “Phobia” a senior sergeant in the Armed Forces of Ukraine, marine and combat medic, also addressed the audience. 

Pages 1 2 3 4 5 ... of 5
Created and supported by: «Art Depo» Creative Agency