ER International Foundation
Nigeria is the leading country with the highest Malaria infections and mortality rate in the World. According to the WHO, there are over 100 million Malaria infections in Nigerian. In 2018, Nigeria recorded over 97,000 deaths consequent of Malaria and more than 60 per cent of this number are Children under 5, pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers who reside in rural communities and slums.
Our solution is to provide these vulnerable population free access to quality medical care (including tests and treatment of Malaria), while simultaneously health-educating them on Malaria prevention. And this we hope to achieve by partnering private community clinics and hospital, to provide an all-year access to Malaria treatments for beneficiaries.
By creating the WELLNESS program, we target to enroll 1 million beneficiaries within the next 1 year, and reduce Malaria mortality rate by up to 10 per cent within same period.
In Nigeria, 1-in-10 persons die daily from Malaria (WHO 2018), and most of the casualties are pregnant women, breast-feeding mothers, and children under 5. According to the World Health Organization, it recorded 585,000 malaria deaths in 2010, and 91% of the number was recorded in Africa (WHO 2010), and the last 7 years have seen a dismal stagnation with regards to efforts to roll-back Malaria.
Nigeria currently has over 100 million active cases of Malaria, and most of these cases are among children under 5, pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers, who reside in rural communities and slums.
Our approach is to identify these communities susceptible to Malaria, create a beneficiaries base, enroll them for the WELLNESS program and ensure they get an all year health plan in a private clinic less than 1 kilometre from their community.
While tests and treatments are on-going, beneficiaries will be health-educated on Malaria prevention and given Mosquito nets, to enable them stay safe. Also, beneficiaries will be encouraged to visit the hospital quickly immediately they notice Malaria symptoms, instead of resorting self-medication.
The WELLNESS PROGRAM is a collection of dedicated exercises to tackle the scourge of Malaria, and below are description of the project’s activities:
- Mapping, Identification and Location of Most Vulnerable Communities to the Scourge of Malaria: WELLNESS PROGRAM has built a team of volunteers in FCT. In active collaboration with the Local Departments of Health, we will be able to identify and locate the most vulnerable communities to the malaria epidemic, with little or no access to quality healthcare, across Abuja. At the moment, our team has successfully identified and located 10 communities and the project has commenced in some.
- Documentation and Enrollment of Beneficiaries: Beneficiaries whose data have been captured are enrolled into the WELLNESS PROGRAM, and are issued Personal Unique Code (PUC) with information on the closest partnering hospitals to their locality (we partner with hospitals that are less than a kilometres to benefiting communities; and in areas where private hospitals are not close, our volunteers set up a bi-weekly medical outfit within the benefiting communities, to enable proper consultations, testing, and treatments of Malaria. The PUC enables hospitals to verify who is a beneficiary and who is not, by logging to our website to verify the code.
Our target population are Children under 5, pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers, who are resident in rural communities and slums, and lack access to basic quality medical care. It is fact that this population are most vulnerable to the scourge of Malaria, as such, we provide them a one year access to quality malaria treatment, while educating them on preventive measures to fight Malaria.
Visits to some of the benefiting communities has allowed us see the avoidable measures to stem Malaria. An example is a small village outside of Abuja, called Yimi. The village accommodates almost 2 thousand persons and has a lot of overgrown bushes and lots of gutters with stagnant water. In such cases, we encourage residents to come and and clear such environments, and we join them to do it. These are some of the preventive measures we preach as part of the WELLNESS program. We also encourage our target beneficiaries not to self-medicate when they notice symptoms of Malaria, and that is why we made the project a one year free access to quality medical care.
- Expand access to high-quality, affordable care for women, new mothers, and newborns
In 2018, the World recorded 405,000 deaths resulting from Malaria. 67% of these deaths, representing 272,000 deaths, were among children under 5 years of age. 94% of the deaths occurred in Africa, with Nigeria atop with 24%. 39% of the 11 million pregnancies exposed to Malaria infection in sub-Saharan Africa occurred in Nigeria and DR Congo. (WHO World Malaria Report 2019).
A one-time treatment will achieve little in curtailing the scourge of Malaria, since very little can be done immediately to establish a long-term Malaria preventive approach. That is why we created a year-long access to medical care with sensitization.
- Growth: An organization with an established product, service, or business model rolled out in one or, ideally, several communities, which is poised for further growth
- A new business model or process
In the last decade, a lot of effort have gone into fighting Malaria in Nigeria, with little or less to show for it. While many might say that the failure was due to Government's lack of leadership in the fight against Malaria, we think it is because of lack of long-term strategy. Many Organizations just shared Nets and anti-Malaria drugs to people on the way, and such practice actually promotes self-medication.
We came up with a long-term health plan to enable our target population (Children under 5, pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers) to be able to fully treated of Malaria, while educating them on how to stay safe and prevent future Malaria infections.
Public hospitals in Nigeria are totally lacking in drugs and are mostly dilapidated structures, particularly public Primary Health Centers in rural communities. Some of these facilities do not have qualified clinicians.
That is why we prompted to use private hospitals are partners for the project. So, up until now, no project of this design ever existed in Nigeria, and we designed it so to enable effectiveness and efficiency of the project.
The beneficiary-enrollment process is done on our website (www.erifoundation.com), after which a Personal Unique Code is generated. Now, hospitals that partner with us verify the beneficiary's Personal Unique Code on our website before administering the benefits of the WELLNESS program on such patient. You cna find the list of hospitals currently partnering with us on our website (www.erifoundation).
Currently, the WELLNESS program has 696 beneficiaries in 4 rural communities in Abuja, Nigeria(verifiable on our website), and all beneficiaries were enrolled through our online Beneficiaries enrollment page on our website. The web page is https://www.erifoundation.com/wellness-programme/
- Ancestral Technology & Practices
- Crowdsourced Service / Social Networks
- Internet of Things
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- Women & Girls
- Pregnant Women
- Infants
- Children & Adolescents
- Rural
- Poor
- 3. Good Health and Well-Being
- 11. Sustainable Cities and Communities
- Nigeria
- Nigeria
The WELLNESS Program currently serves 696 beneficiaries. It hopes to cover 1 million beneficiaries in the next 1 year. And a beneficiary population of 6 million in the next 5 years.
The paramount goal of the WELLNESS Program within the next one year to to provide free access to quality medical care to combat malaria, to children under 5, pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers who reside in rural communities without access to good healthcare.
Currently, our primary barriers are Finance and the COVID-19 pandemic. So far, the Organization funds up to 95 percent of the project, as such, cannot make quick progress.
The current COVID-19 pandemic makes going to the field to get beneficiaries a little difficult.
We are currently applying Grants and speaking with Philanthropists to support the project with resources that can make a difference.
On the COVID-19, our volunteers are strictly observing the Social distance guideline and we are exploring the use of media to reach our prospective beneficiaries.
- Nonprofit
Full-time Staff: 8
Part-time staff: 15
Volunteers: 56
Our team is made up of professionals who had served in various capacities in different Non-profits across Nigeria. And these experiences are what we bring to bare in working on the WELLNESS Program
We currently partner over 50 private clinics, and they are saddled with the responsibilities to provide the testings and treatments, while my team identifies susceptible communities and beneficiaries. At the end of the month, we pay the general hospitals for the number of patients treated per head on a discounted cost.
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- Individual consumers or stakeholders (B2C)
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To access funding for the project.
- Funding and revenue model
- Monitoring and evaluation
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