Our Mission: To reduce childhood malnutrition in Haiti and provide people in rural areas access to life-saving medical care.

Reaching those in hard-to-reach places.

 

Much of rural Haiti is accessible only by off-road vehicles, motorcycles or by foot. As a result, people living in these rural villages lack access to basic human needs, like food, medical care, and emergency services.

Watch this short video of Baie d’Orange and the work being done there, put together by The Realm Archives, with Lacey West, Tina Phillips and Thierry Prinston.

Become a SPONSOR

You can sponsor a child who came out of our malnutrition program! Click below to read more about the program.

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We partner with local medical professionals in Haiti.

We partner with Haitian doctors, nurses and aid workers who have a heart for helping their own communities. They know their people and their struggles better than anyone, and our goal is to stand behind and support them as they bring solutions to the life and death situations they face every day. We advocate, fundraise, provide administrative and logistical help, while the local staff lead the way.

We provided a rural village with an ambulance!

We were recently able to purchase a vehicle to be used as an ambulance. There is no other emergency transportation in this village, and it is already saving lives! Click below to learn more!

$72 to save a life

Medika Mamba is a life saving ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF) used to treat malnutrition. Donating $72 buys one box, which treats approximately one child.

Medika Mamba is made locally by Meds and Food for Kids and delivered via motorcycle to our partner clinic.

Learn about our Clean Birth Kits

Most deliveries in rural Haiti take place at home. In these settings a Clean Birth Kit can reduce maternal and child mortality. We partner with nurses and midwives in rural areas to provide them with the tools they need for a clean, sanitary delivery.

It costs just $50 to provide over 200 children a complete, nutritious meal.

In the very rural mountains where we work, people are considered fortunate if they eat once a day. Working to combat malnutrition in an area like this isn’t easy. Several factors contribute to malnutrition, but sometimes it is as simple as not having enough food to eat.

 

Hear updates about our work and life in rural Haiti.

 

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