Rainbow Light is the #1 natural women’s supplement brand in the United States, and we understand the critical function nutritional supplements perform in improving maternal and infant survival rates, birth weights, and children’s physical and cognitive development.
As a founding supporter and platinum level sponsor of Vitamin Angels, Rainbow Light has donated over 15 million prenatal and children’s supplements to at-risk women and children worldwide. This support plays a vital role in reducing mortality and morbidity rates, birth defects and other ailments caused by nutritional deficiencies.
Malnutrition is a global concern, leading to the deaths of nearly 10 million children each year.1 “Rainbow Light has been with Vitamin Angels since we started over 15 years ago. Their commitment to maternal health has grown every year. Rainbow Light has helped Vitamin Angels make a tremendous difference in hundreds of thousands of women’s and babies’ lives all over the world!” noted Vitamin Angels Founder and President, Howard Schiffer.
Your purchases of Prenatal One™, Prenatal Petite™, Complete Prenatal System™, and Kid’s One Multistars® multivitamins drive donations to Vitamin Angels. Thank you for your support. Together we are making a meaningful difference in the lives of women and children around the world.
Founded in 1994, Vitamin Angel Alliance is a non-profit, non-sectarian organization providing basic nutrition to areas of extreme poverty, catastrophic need, and civil strife. Learn more at www.VitaminAngels.org
Rainbow Light also provides continual support through sponsored employee volunteer programs and donations to Second Harvest Food Bank in Santa Cruz, California, where our corporate headquarters are located.
Rainbow Light donates children’s multivitamins to NUTRIR Barranquilla, benefiting
impoverished children in Colombia. NUTRIR Barranquilla is a non-profit organization working to provide nutritional recovery programs, prevent malnutrition and improve the physical, emotional and intellectual development of children in deprived areas of Columbia.
1 Altafuller, Paul, and Grant Washington-Smith. “Malnutrition and Cognitive Function in Developing Countries.” Nutraceuticals World, October 2008.