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Emergency Medicine Kenya Foundation

Emergency Medicine Kenya Foundation establishes GPS-enabled ambulance dispatch centres. © Judith Neilson Foundation.
Emergency Medicine Kenya Foundation establishes GPS-enabled ambulance dispatch centres. © Judith Neilson Foundation.

In Kenya, an estimated 57 people die every hour—many from conditions that could be treated with timely emergency care. The Emergency Medicine Kenya Foundation (EMKF) is working to change this by expanding emergency services, training healthcare providers, and equipping hospitals with essential life-saving resources.

Our partnership supports Project 47, a nationwide initiative designed to strengthen emergency medical care in all 47 counties. EMKF works closely with the Government of Kenya to develop emergency care policies, establish GPS-enabled ambulance dispatch centres, upgrade emergency departments, and train thousands of healthcare workers in emergency care.

With a proven track record—supporting reforms in 28 counties, strengthening the capacity of 140 public emergency departments, and training over 5,000 healthcare providers—EMKF is helping to build a more resilient and responsive emergency healthcare system.
Together, we are supporting long-term, systems-level change to ensure no Kenyan is left without help in a moment of crisis. Learn more about EMKF’s work by visiting their website.

country Kenya
theme Health

Read the story /

Emergency care begins before the hospital  

Emergency Medicine Kenya Foundation

In Nakuru County, the first person to reach an emergency is often not a doctor or nurse, but a motorbike rider, taxi driver, public transport worker, or community health worker. 

Working within this reality, Emergency Medicine Kenya Foundation and the County Department of Health Services are creating a reliable first response system that connects communities with formal emergency medical care.

By training community health workers as both first responders and instructors in basic first aid, crisis coordination, and the management of the emergencies most common in their areas, they are empowered not only to provide immediate lifesaving care but also to cascade this knowledge through local units and organised groups, building sustainable community networks that extend far beyond a single training.

This aligns with WHO’s recommendation to train lay first responders in resource-limited settings, helping bridge the gap between communities and formal emergency medical services,

said Ritah Ochola, County Community Strategy Focal Person. What was once an informal and fragmented response is now becoming structured and dependable. By strengthening the first link in the chain of survival, communities are experiencing faster action, reduced injury severity and higher survival rates long before patients reach the hospital.

And when patients do arrive, hospital emergency departments – like Coast General Hospital in Mombasa, where infrastructure and systems have been upgraded – are better prepared to deliver timely, reliable emergency medical care. Together, these investments connect the community to the hospital as part of one national emergency healthcare system.

Emergency Medicine Kenya Foundation is embedding emergency medical care into Kenya’s public healthcare system. By training healthcare workers, establishing ambulance dispatch centres, and equipping emergency departments, the foundation works nationwide with governments across all 47 counties to reduce preventable deaths and ensure emergency care is a core part of national health delivery.

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