Prenetics' IM8 Health has formed a global partnership with Vitamin Angels. The company has committed to supporting 400,000 pregnant women, infants, and children under five in underserved communities during the first year of the collaboration, with a long-term goal of reaching millions more by leveraging IM8's growing international footprint and Vitamin Angels' established delivery infrastructure across over 65 countries.
Vitamin Angels has a 31-year track record, a four-star Charity Navigator rating, and a demonstrated ability to reach over 74million women and children annually, with the organization’s most recent three-year cycle saving an estimated 147,000 children's lives and improving over 209,000 birth outcomes.
By embedding this commitment into its core operations, IM8 positions itself as a corporate entity that is committed to making a difference in people’s lives.
Strategic Social Good Partnerships
Prenetics' IM8 Health Supports Vitamin Angels
Trend Themes
-
Corporate-nonprofit Partnerships — A growing pattern of corporations aligning long-term operational commitments with established NGOs creates new models for scalable public-health interventions backed by private resources.
-
Embedded Social Impact — Companies incorporating measurable social outcomes into core business strategy are redefining stakeholder expectations and funding flows for mission-driven services.
-
Global Health Supply Chain Digitization — The convergence of international delivery networks with digital tracking and inventory systems enables transparent distribution of supplements to underserved populations at unprecedented scale.
Industry Implications
-
Nutritional Supplement Distribution — Scaling targeted micronutrient programs through combined corporate and charity networks presents opportunities for product innovation, localized manufacturing, and last-mile logistics redesign.
-
Corporate Social Responsibility Platforms — Enterprise-grade platforms that quantify and report social impact across regions are positioned to disrupt how enterprises justify and allocate ESG-related investments.
-
Telehealth and Maternal Care — Remote monitoring and virtual care services integrated with supplement delivery chains have potential to transform prenatal and early-childhood outcome management in low-resource settings.