2009: THE BEGINNING OF ONGOING WORK IN MALAWI

Malawi continues to face profound healthcare challenges—where preventable diseases like malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV/AIDS remain widespread, and medical infrastructure is still stretched beyond capacity. In 2009, our work in the region began with a simple but urgent objective: expand access to care and address the root causes of childhood mortality. During an early visit to Salima District Hospital, that mission became deeply personal. A young child suffering from malaria—a disease that is both preventable and treatable—could not be saved. It was a moment that made one thing unmistakably clear: the gap was not just medical, it was systemic. That reality has not disappeared. It is why the work continues. From the beginning, the focus was never on short-term intervention alone, but on building long-term, community-driven solutions. What started as a response to crisis has evolved into an ongoing commitment to strengthening local infrastructure—supporting access to basic medical care, clean water, equipment, and health education.Today, that work continues alongside the community—focused not on a finished outcome, but on sustained progress toward a healthier, more self-sufficient future.

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THE OUTPATIENT CLINIC