Six integrated service pillars delivering measurable health impact across Rwanda's communities.
Integrating Rwandan families with comprehensive approaches supporting evidence-based maternal services at community level.
Building partnerships and coordination networks for antenatal care utilization and skilled birth attendance.
Transparency, coordination, and evidence-sharing with community health workers and district health teams.
Coordination in community-based maternal health decisions and integrated care pathways.
mHealth platforms for antenatal appointment tracking and maternal health reminders.
Digital data collection tools for CHW reporting and follow-up on mother-baby pairs.
Dashboards for facility-level monitoring of maternal and neonatal health indicators.
MCH programme sustainability is achieved through government co-financing, bilateral donor funding, and community health insurance integration. RHI's blended value model ensures long-term programme continuity beyond initial grant cycles.
Deploying community-based NCD screening for hypertension, diabetes, and cardiovascular diseases across Rwanda.
Training CHWs on NCD risk factor identification, basic counselling, and referral pathways.
Implementing evidence-based behaviour change communication for lifestyle disease prevention.
Establishing community NCD support groups and self-management education programmes.
Mobile screening tools for blood pressure and blood glucose measurement at community level.
Patient follow-up systems ensuring continuity of NCD care between facility visits.
Digital referral pathways connecting communities to specialist NCD care at district hospitals.
NCD programmes are financed through a mix of impact investment, government NCD programme co-funding, and fee-for-service components within the national community health insurance scheme (Mutuelle de Santé).
Deploying standardized metrics frameworks for routine health outcomes data collection across all RHI programme areas.
Conducting population-based surveys of community health indicators and programme reach metrics.
Publishing quarterly outcomes dashboards accessible to government, donors, and community stakeholders.
Continuous quality improvement cycles informed by real-time programme data and community feedback loops.
Research partnerships with Rwandan universities and international academic institutions.
Documentation and dissemination of programme learnings through peer-reviewed publications and policy briefs.
Health outcomes work generates revenue through commissioned research, government evaluation contracts, and consultancy services for other health organizations seeking evidence and evaluation expertise.
Building mobile-first digital platforms for NCD patient monitoring, medication adherence, and follow-up.
Integrating mHealth solutions with Rwanda's national Health Management Information System (HMIS).
Creating interoperable electronic health records ensuring NCD care continuity across levels of care.
AI-assisted screening tools for early detection of hypertension and diabetes at community entry points.
SMS-based medication reminders and health education content in Kinyarwanda.
Digital health data quality assurance training and mentoring for facility staff.
Digital NCD tools are licensed to government health systems and other NGOs on a cost-recovery basis, creating a sustainable revenue stream that cross-subsidizes services in underserved communities.
Strengthening community-based disease surveillance and early warning systems for epidemic-prone diseases.
Building community emergency preparedness plans and rapid response capacity at sector level.
Integrating One Health approaches into CHW training curricula for zoonotic disease prevention.
Facilitating cross-sector health security exercises and simulation drills with district authorities.
Supporting International Health Regulations (IHR) compliance and reporting across Rwanda's health system.
Coordinating with Rwanda Biomedical Centre and global health security partners on preparedness frameworks.
GHS work is funded through Rwanda Ministry of Health contracts, bilateral funding from USAID, CDC, and WHO, and emergency preparedness grants from global health security funding mechanisms.
Real voices from the communities we serve — sharing their experiences with RHI's health programmes and the difference it has made in their lives.
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