-WGH is a movement that strives for greater gender equality in global health, and is dedicated to empowering female leaders of today and improving the global health of tomorrow.
The Women in Global
Health (WGH) Movement honored Kenya’s Mercy Owuor of Lwala Community Alliance
alongside 12 other women at the movement’s “Heroines of Health” gala event that
took place last evening in the Swiss Capital Geneva, on the margins of the
ongoing World Health Assembly.
WGH is a movement that strives for greater gender equality
in global health, and is dedicated to empowering female leaders of today and
improving the global health of tomorrow. It is recognizing Mercy for her
role in the “help a child reach their 5th birthday” initiative that is
championed by the Lwala Community Alliance initiative. This initiative strives
to extend clinical services and community outreach efforts to children under
the age of 5 in order to reduce under-5 mortality in the community by 64% .
Mercy Owuor is the community programs director for Lwala
Community Alliance in Migori, Kenya, where she oversees the Kenya program team,
leads and directs the execution of the annual program plan. Lwala Community
Alliance is a community-led innovator, tackling the multidimensional drivers of
poor health. It works with primary care facilities and the communities to
drastically reduce maternal and child mortality in western Kenya, by tackling
the key drivers of deaths – unplanned pregnancies, mother-to-child transmission
of HIV, poor prenatal care, unskilled deliveries, poor clinical practices, lack
of emergency transport, and delayed treatment of childhood illnesses.
In 2016, the Alliance was selected as one of the 17 Social
Enterprises that took part in the Healthymagination
Mother and Child Program, an accelerator initiative of GE Healthymagination and the Miller Center for Social
Entrepreneurship. Designed to equip the
participating social enterprises to scale up their businesses and attract
additional investment, the program involves a three-day, in-person workshop,
followed by a six-month online accelerator program that included weekly,
in-depth mentoring from Silicon Valley-based executives who themselves have
undergone rigorous selection and training as social entrepreneur mentors at the
Miller Center, as well as GE business leaders. Participating social
entrepreneurs get to acquire business fundamentals, improve their strategic
thought processes, and articulate a business plan that demonstrates impact,
growth and long-term financial sustainability.
“We are thrilled for Mercy and for the Lwala Community
Alliance for this well-deserved recognition” said Robert Wells, Executive
Director, GE Healthymagination. “We believe that social enterprises such as
these are a key part of the formula that is required to innovatively and
sustainably bring quality care to communities in otherwise underserved areas.
It is for this reason that we launched the healthymagination Mother and Child
programme to equip amazing individuals such as Mercy that are striving to
increase the quality, access and affordability of maternal and child health in
sub-Saharan Africa”
As one of the key partners of the WGH movement, GE
Healthcare actively supports its’ vision to elevate and support the role of
women in healthcare, whilst creating gender responsive leaders in global
health.
“Mercy, together with her colleagues at Lwala, has dedicated
her life to work within her community to bring accessible and innovative
healthcare delivery solutions that not only address care, but also prevention
and healthy behavior. She is indeed a great ambassador for the many women
leaders in Africa and the world over, that are striving to serve the 5.8
billion people with little to no access to quality healthcare,” said Terri
Bresenham, President and CEO, Sustainable Healthcare Solutions, GE Healthcare.
“At GE, we are very proud to be associated with the Women in Global Health
Campaign and its’ amazing honorees, and look forward to continuing to partner
with them for a healthier world.”
[1] Women in Global Heath. Available from
www.WomenInGH.org/about. Last accessed May 2017.
[2] Lwala Community Alliance, Programs. Available from
http://LwalaCommunityAlliance.org/programs/health. Last accessed May 2017.
[3] Lwala Community Alliance, Impact Report: Maternal and
Child Health, 2016.
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