Our Programs

Our projects facilitate the deployment of the Hikma Health System in over 20 countries across the world.

Care Innovation Grant

About the Program

Hikma Health’s Care Innovation Grant is a grant funding opportunity for non-profit clinical organizations around the world.

The Care Innovation Grant provides funding to clinics and organizations to implement the Hikma Health electronic health record (EHR) system. Clinics and organizations operating mobile or stationary clinics, which provide care to vulnerable populations in resource-limited areas, and that are looking to improve their operational efficiency and patient care through the use of an EHR are encouraged to apply.

Hikma Health will fund cash grant awards to clinical organizations for a one year period. The grant amounts will be determined by the Hikma Health board of directors based on the needs of individual organizations, with a maximum possible grant award of $5,000 USD. Funding will be contingent upon the availability of funds and satisfactory completion of milestones.

Year of Migration Health 2022

About the Program

In 2022, Hikma Health launched a pilot of the Care Innovation Grant, branded as the “Year of Migrant Health” or YMH. The YMH grant opportunity provided funding to clinics and organizations to implement the Hikma Health electronic health record system (EHR). Clinics and organizations operating mobile or stationary clinics which provide care in resource-limited areas to vulnerable populations, and that were looking to improve their operational efficiency and patient care through the use of an EHR received grant funding to deploy the Hikma Health system.

Read our update on lessons learned coming out of the YMH 2022 grant cycle, and our earlier update halfway through.

Hikma Health Grant Recipients

  • Saglamliga Khidmat Public Union (SKPU) – Baku City, Azerbaijan (2022)

    Saglamliga Khidmat Public Union (SKPU) works to improve access to quality and patient-centered tuberculosis services in Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan hosts over over 650,000 internally displaced people and more than 80,000 conflict-affected persons. SKPU plays a vital role in reaching thousands of patients across the country who are at risk of tuberculosis. SKPU intends to use Hikma Health's EHR system to expand their reach in screening, diagnosing, and referring patients to quality tuberculosis care.

  • Ibrahim Khan Jhagra Foundation (IKJF) – Peshawar, Pakistan (2022)

    Ibrahim Khan Jhagra Foundation (IKJF) is based in Peshawar, Pakistan, which has unfortunately experienced acts of extremist violence leading to more displaced individuals.

    IKJF hopes to utilize the Hikma Health EHR system in their clinic to improve OBGYN and pediatric care.

  • Med Global – Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh (2022)

    MedGlobal works to provide free, sustainable healthcare services to refugees, displaced persons, and the most vulnerable in crisis-affected areas and low-resource settings worldwide. Nearly 1 million Rohingya refugees currently reside in Bangladesh after suffering ethnic cleansing and persecution in Myanmar. Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh has among the highest concentration of refugees in the world.

  • Blue Mission – Saida, Lebanon (2022)

    Blue Mission Organization is a community-based and independent Lebanese organization that promotes and protects the rights of vulnerable populations. Their programs include primary health, mental health, education, life skills programs, training and protection. Blue Mission Organization utilizes mobile teams to deliver critical medical services to Syrian and Palestinian refugees, as well as Lebanese host community members. The Hikma Health EHR system will assist the mobile teams to deliver quality care to their patients, ensuring record history is easily accessible in the field.

  • Roberto Clemente Health Clinic (RCHC) – Rivas, Nicaragua (2022)

    The Roberto Clemente Health Clinic (RCHC) is the only 24-hour clinic providing health care services to 35 communities in the rural area of Tola, Rivas.

    RCHC hopes to use Hikma Health's EHR system to protect patient records previously lost to flooding and to help facilitate community outreach.

  • Diabetes Promotions Program Organization (DPPO) – Omdurman, Sudan (2022)

    Diabetes Promotions Program Organization (DPPO) utilizes primary healthcare centers to link patients directly to specialized diabetes care units to ensure continuity of care. DPPO hopes to use Hikma Health’s EHR system to make linking patients to follow-up care easier.

  • Juba Foundation – Mogadishu, Somalia (2022)

    Juba Foundation is based in Mogadishu, manages health and nutrition projects in over 9 regions in the country. Somalia has more than 2.9 million internally displaced persons, including over 30,000 refugees and asylum seekers. Over the years, 92,000 refugees have returned to Somalia, but continue to face challenges due to conflict, insecurity and the effects of climate change such as cyclical droughts and floods.

  • Refugee Health Alliance – Tijuana, Mexico (2022)

    Refugee Health Alliance provides free holistic medical care in Tijuana to 2 clinics, 30 shelters, and through community outreach.

  • Catholicon-Aid – Ethiopia (2024)

    Catholicon-Aid operates a clinic within an internally displaced persons (IDP) site in Mekelle, the capital of Ethiopia’s Tigray region. The clinic provides free sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services, including antenatal care, delivery, postnatal care, family planning, SGBV support, and STI treatment. Following the 2021 conflict between federal and regional forces, thousands of people were displaced to Mekelle, where ongoing insecurity—particularly in western Tigray—prevents their return.

  • Parker's Mobile Clinic – Nigeria (2024)

    Parkers Mobile Clinic is a not-for-profit organization working to expand healthcare access for vulnerable populations across South-east Nigeria. Operating in both urban and remote rural communities, the clinic delivers essential health services through mobile medical units, telemedicine, and targeted outreach.

  • Doctors of the World – US/Mexico (2024)

    Doctors of the World USA (DOTW) delivers emergency and long-term medical care to vulnerable communities, while advocating for universal access to healthcare. DOTW focuses on five key issues: conflict and crisis, sexual and reproductive health, refugees and migrants, harm reduction, and environmental health. Their Border Health Program in El Paso, Texas—a critical entry point for migrants seeking asylum in the United States provides essential medical services to migrant populations, building on DOTW’s deep expertise in healthcare delivery and advocacy for underserved communities in crisis-affected settings.

  • North East African Community Health (NEACHI) – Uganda (2024)

    North-East African Community Health Initiative (NEACHI) Uganda is a nonprofit organization delivering quality, accessible healthcare to some of the most disadvantaged communities in Eastern Uganda. Through its Mobile Community Clinic Project, NEACHI provides essential medical care to remote and disaster-affected districts including Tororo, Bududa, Manafwa, Budaka, Bukwo, and Namisindwa—home to over 2.5 million people living in extreme poverty and facing recurrent floods, landslides, and drought.

  • Atlantic Humanitarian Relief – Jordan (2024)

    Atlantic Humanitarian Relief (AHR) is a nonprofit medical organization providing free healthcare services to refugees and impoverished communities across Jordan and Syria. Since 2013, AHR has conducted over 20 relief missions, offering medical, surgical, dental, and humanitarian support through mobile clinics, surgical teams, and a year-round fixed dental clinic in the Zaatari Refugee Camp.

  • HACEP – Ghana (2024)

    HACEP-Ghana’s Maternal and Child Health Clinic on Wheels (MCHCOW) delivers essential healthcare services to vulnerable communities in Ghana’s Upper East Region, an area affected by protracted conflict and limited health infrastructure.

    Through its mobile clinic, HACEP-Ghana provides high-quality maternal and child health services—including medical care, preventive interventions, and health education—directly to underserved populations.

  • AIPDC – Associação de Iniciativa para o Desenvolvimento da Comunidade – Mozambique (2024)

    AIPDC – Associação de Iniciativa para o Desenvolvimento da Comunidade is a Mozambican nonprofit delivering essential healthcare to underserved mobile populations along the Beira corridor, particularly at the INCHOPE crossing—a major intersection linking southern and northern Mozambique with inland countries.

  • Prime Foundation – Peshawar, Pakistan (2024)

    Prime Foundation is a not-for-profit charitable organization committed to improving healthcare access and outcomes for underserved communities in Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan.

    Located in Garhi Sherdad, Peshawar, their Community Health & Development Center (CDC) is dedicated to delivering primary healthcare to underserved communities in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. Serving a catchment population of approximately 34,000 people—including low-income families, refugees, and marginalized groups.

  • Namibia Planned Parenthood Association – Namibia (2024)

    Namibia Planned Parenthood Association (NAPPA) is a nonprofit organization working to ensure all Namibians—particularly young people, marginalized groups, and underserved communities—have access to comprehensive sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) information and services.

    Operating Youth-Friendly Health Clinics in 7 of Namibia’s 14 regions, NAPPA delivers a wide range of SRH and HIV/AIDS services. These clinics are housed within Multi-Purpose Youth Resource Centers, in partnership with the Ministry of Sports, Youth and National Services.

    Against a backdrop of high teenage pregnancy, HIV incidence, and gender-based violence, NAPPA plays a critical role in tackling Namibia’s deep-rooted socio-economic and health inequalities through youth-focused, accessible, and stigma-free service delivery.

  • Asociación Legión Honduras – Honduras (2024)

    Asociación Legión Honduras is a nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting human dignity and building the resilience of vulnerable populations across Honduras. Offering free services without intermediaries or cost to beneficiaries, the organization focuses on supporting individuals affected by poverty, violence, displacement, and humanitarian crises.

    With more than 60% of Honduras’s population living in poverty—particularly in rural areas—and a growing number of migrants in transit through the country, Legión Honduras provides essential support where needs are most acute.

  • Keeping Alive Societies Hope (KASH) – Kenya (2024)

    Keeping Alive Societies Hope (KASH) is a grassroots nonprofit organization based in Kisumu, Kenya, working to advance the health, rights, and economic empowerment of marginalized populations—particularly adolescent girls, young mothers, and women living in the city’s informal settlements such as Nyalenda, Obunga, Kondele, and Manyatta.

    KASH addresses the urgent intersection of gender inequality, poverty, and HIV/AIDS—issues that disproportionately affect women in Kisumu. With women now making up the majority of those living with HIV, and HIV-related illnesses remaining a leading cause of death for girls and women aged 15–49, KASH provides critical support through community health programs, rights-based advocacy, and harm reduction services.

  • Centre for Initiative and Development – Nigeria (2024)

    Centre for Initiative and Development (CFID) is a nonprofit organization based in Jalingo, Taraba State, Nigeria, with field offices across 10 northern states.

    Operating in a region characterized by limited healthcare access and economic disparities, CFID delivers quality, affordable healthcare to underserved communities through both static and mobile models of care.

    CFID’s fully equipped diagnostic center in Jalingo provides testing and care for HIV, Hepatitis B and C (including HBV DNA and HCV RNA), TB, malaria, and blood sugar levels.

  • Wekeza - Tanzania (2024)

    Wekeza Child Generation is a nonprofit organization working to improve healthcare access for low-income and underserved communities in Tanzania. The organization collaborates with Evangelical Lutheran Church Tanzania (ELCT)–Nyakato Health Center, which provides care to over 15,000 people, including remote fishing communities living in and around the Lake Zone region.

    Operating in under-resourced settings with high patient-to-provider ratios, Nyakato Health Center extends essential medical services to rural and out-of-network areas. Through this partnership, Wekeza Child Generation supports efforts to strengthen healthcare delivery for marginalized groups.

  • Tanzania Youth Inspiration Organization (TaYIO) - Tanzania (2024)

    Description goes here
  • Bal Umang Drishya Sanstha (BUDS) - India (2024)

    Bal Umang Drishya Sanstha (BUDS) is an India-based nonprofit organization dedicated to improving child and adolescent health by bringing essential healthcare services directly to marginalized communities. Through a fully equipped Mobile Health Van, BUDS delivers primary care, preventive screenings, health education, free medication, and referrals to specialized services across Delhi/NCR, Uttarakhand, and Uttar Pradesh.

    The mobile clinics primarily serve infants, children, and adolescents, and are staffed by a team of qualified physicians and community health workers. To date, BUDS has provided personalized, community-based care to over 176,000 individuals, addressing critical gaps in access to healthcare among underserved populations.

  • Family Support Trust (FST) – Zimbabwe (2024)

    Family Support Trust (FST) is a Zimbabwean nonprofit organization established in 1997 to provide comprehensive medical and psychosocial support to survivors of sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV). In a country where 1 in 3 women experience physical violence and 1 in 4 experience sexual violence in their lifetime, FST plays a vital role in supporting vulnerable women and girls, particularly in high-risk urban areas like Harare.

    FST operates six survivor-friendly clinics located within public hospitals across Zimbabwe, including Harare Central, Mpilo Central, Chitungwiza Central, Mutare Provincial, Masvingo Provincial, and Beitbridge District Hospitals. These clinics offer free services to survivors, including HIV and STI testing, pregnancy screening, trauma counseling, and preparation of medical affidavits for legal proceedings. FST also provides ongoing support throughout the legal process and recovery journey.