Mental Well-being
Greater awareness, reduced stigma and clearer pathways to psychosocial support.
Monitoring, evaluation and transparent reporting help us learn, improve and remain accountable to communities and partners.

Greater awareness, reduced stigma and clearer pathways to psychosocial support.
Practical skills, savings groups and pathways to income and self-reliance.
Children and young people are supported to return to, remain in and thrive through learning.
Safe spaces, rights awareness and stronger systems to prevent and respond to violence.
Leaders, families and community institutions gain knowledge and tools to sustain support.
Participants influence decisions, policy and services that affect their lives.
SKWT combines skills, savings groups, institutional partnerships and beneficiary leadership so results continue within communities. Ongoing monitoring helps us identify what works and adapt programmes to real needs.

We are working toward a Tanzania where every person—especially girls, children and people facing mental health challenges—can live with dignity, safety and opportunity.— SKWT, Looking Ahead