Macquarie 50th Anniversary Award
Macquarie 50th Anniversary Award funding is helping Last Mile Health support up to 14,000 community and frontline health workers, strengthen existing operations in Liberia and expand to Malawi and Ethiopia, providing lifesaving community-based healthcare for more than 100 million people and directly reaching up to 17 million people.1
people without access to healthcare in remote communities2
community and frontline health workers expected to be supported1
people in Liberia, Ethiopia and Malawi will have access to community-based primary healthcare1
In this video, hear from Dalitso Baloyi, Country Director, Malawi for Last Mile Health as he talks about the organisation’s mission to expand access to high-quality, primary healthcare for remote communities across Africa.
Illness is universal; healthcare is not. The World Health Organisation estimates that half of the world’s population lacks access to essential health services. This has a devastating impact on health outcomes, with millions of people dying every year from preventable causes. Ensuring access to quality, community-based primary health services for people living in the world’s remote communities poses many challenges, including the growing shortage of skilled healthcare providers and low investments in national health systems.
Last Mile Health is tackling this issue by expanding access to primary healthcare for remote communities in Africa. Its approach is to partner with governments to train national networks of community and frontline health workers. Serrena, who lives in a community of 800 people in Liberia, is one of those health workers. After completing her training, gaining access to high-quality and low-cost diagnostic tools such as malaria testing kits that only cost as much as one dollar, and receiving regular supervision, she’s able to provide home-based primary health care to her community.
In Liberia, health workers like Serrena have now conducted over 11 million patient visits and delivered over one million treatments for malaria, diarrhoea and pneumonia to children under five.1
There is an incredible opportunity to scale this work globally. A 2017 study published in the Journal of Global Health showed that if we were able to train and equip teams of community and frontline health workers to expand rural coverage of at least 30 primary health services, we could save at least 30 million additional lives by 2030.3
Last Mile Health’s vision is to create a world where a health worker is within reach of everyone, everywhere.