Building Healthy Communities

Communities are at the heart of AMREF’s work. Our goal is to enable communities to live healthier lives.
We work with the some of the poorest and most marginalised people in Africa from remote rural areas, urban slums, nomadic communities and areas affected by conflict.
We develop health projects in close consultation with communities so that they are relevant to their specific needs; whether they are living in a slum in Nairobi, an internally displaced people’s camp in northern Uganda or a remote rural area in Ethiopia.
Communities identify their own health needs and AMREF then works with them to develop projects that will meet these needs. We believe that the community is resourceful, and so we put their interests and opinions first – working in partnership at all levels, every step of the way.
AMREF empowers communities to take control of their own health development and to help them demand the assistance and services to which they are entitled.
Across the many communities we work with, AMREF targets those who are most vulnerable to ill health: women, children under the age of five and young people.
Strengthening Health Systems
Despite an increase in health spending in Africa, many people have limited access to good quality health care, especially in remote and rural areas. The burden of diseases such as HIV, TB and malaria, lack of health workers and management and organisational failures have all had a devastating effect.
Most of the funding received for health in Africa has been targeted at major diseases such as malaria and HIV. While there have been some improvements in prevention and treatment of these diseases, all is not well with health care services as a whole. Maternal mortality is increasing and life expectancy is worsening in many African countries.
Greater emphasis is placed on curative health care in hospitals and health centres in major towns and cities, rather than education for prevention and basic treatment in poor rural and urban communities.
AMREF takes a more holistic approach to health by focusing on the different components needed to deliver effective health care, including; formal health workers, community health workers, laboratories and drug supplies.
For example, it’s no good fighting HIV/AIDS solely by pumping money into anti-retroviral drugs. There has to be an adequate number of qualified health workers to administer them. Good systems need to be in place for distributing these drugs beyond major towns and cities. And communities need to know how HIV/AIDS can be prevented.
We are training health workers at all levels across Africa, educating communities about health prevention and improving the management of health services.
AMREF’s strategy focuses on strengthening health systems to ensure that they better serve the needs of poor and vulnerable communities. In order to do this, they must place people at the centre and ensure wider use of local knowledge. AMREF gives communities the skills, knowledge and confidence to demand the health services they deserve and supports national, regional and local health authorities to provide them.
AMREF is also improving laboratory services across East Africa and training laboratory technicians, assuring better diagnosis of illnesses, especially in rural areas.
Meanwhile, we strengthen the systems used to gather health information from the community level, right up to the national level. This ensures that available health care better corresponds to people’s needs.