MTN Foundation Hospital
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Health Clinics

Affordable, quality healthcare for the communities who have nowhere else to turn — delivered through our network of health clinics and mobile camps across Asia.

Mary
Mary
Maternal Care · MTN Hospital

She had been in labour for nineteen hours. Her grandmother brought her to our clinic at midnight — three kilometres on foot through darkness. There was no other option. Our team was ready.

Mother and baby both survived. They named the baby Grace. The grandmother sat outside the ward and wept with relief. This happens in our clinic dozens of times a month — not because it is remarkable, but because we built a free hospital where no one else would.

54,750 patients last year. Each one someone's Grace.

Read Mary's story →
The Scale of the Problem
4.6B
people globally lack access to essential health services
WHO/World Bank, 2025
56%
of rural populations excluded from basic healthcare — more than double the urban rate
ILO, 2024
100M+
households pushed into poverty every year by out-of-pocket medical costs
WHO, 2025
3.6M
people die each year from lack of timely access to healthcare
WHO, 2023
The Difference We Make
50+
hospital beds serving patients who had no other option — the only facility for miles
23
ICU beds in a community that had no critical care before this hospital existed
54,750+
patients treated annually — free care for every patient who cannot afford to pay
Free
all treatment for patients below the poverty line — no one turned away for inability to pay
Medical Director

Serving Those Who Have Nowhere Else to Turn

Our health clinics were established by Mission to the Nations to meet a critical gap: fishing communities, daily wage laborers, and rural poor often cannot afford private care, and government facilities are overburdened. The model — combining facility-based care with mobile outreach teams — is replicated wherever we operate across Asia.

Under the leadership of Dr. Sona, our clinics provide outpatient care, pharmacy services, maternal health, general medicine, laparoscopic and general surgeries, and ICU care. During the COVID-19 pandemic, our facilities were converted entirely into COVID treatment centres, serving hundreds of patients.

Many patients receive free or heavily subsidized treatment. For thousands of families each year, our health clinics are the difference between recovery and suffering.

Hospital Services

Outpatient Department (OPD)
Pharmacy
Maternal & Child Health
General Medicine
ICU (23 beds)
Operation Theatre
Laparoscopic Surgery
Clinical Laboratory
15 Private Rooms
General Ward (12 beds)
Oxygen Supply
Ventilator
Mobile Health Camps
MTN ICU during COVID
MTN Hospital
COVID-19 Response · Second Wave

In the second wave of COVID-19, we ran out of oxygen. Not because we were unprepared — because the whole country ran out. Cylinders that normally arrived in two days took eight. Patients who needed two litres a minute were getting one. The team rationed it by hand, hour by hour, through three nights.

Some of the patients in those beds had been brought in by families who then could not return — roads were closed, villages in lockdown, phones unanswered. A few elderly patients were never collected. They were frightened. Our staff sat with them through the nights, checked their oxygen every twenty minutes, held their hands when they asked for someone. When the cylinders arrived on the fourth morning, the ward was quiet for a long time. Every person in those beds was still alive.

We did not send anyone away. We did not close. We never have.

Read Samuel's story →
Maternal & Infant Health

Mother & Child Programme

Mother and infant checkup
A destitute mother, 7 months pregnant
Prenatal Nutrition · Coastal Village

She was seven months pregnant when our community health worker first visited her village. Her baby was already measuring small — not because anything was wrong, but because she had been eating one meal a day for most of her pregnancy. Not from neglect. From having nothing more to give.

She had not taken a single vitamin. She did not know she needed to. No one had ever told her. The nearest clinic was fourteen kilometres away. When our worker sat with her and explained what folic acid does — how it builds the spine, the brain, the nervous system of the child she was already carrying — she was quiet for a long time. Then she said: why did no one come before? Her baby was born six weeks later. Small, but healthy. The weight came. It always comes, when the mother has what she needs in time.

She asked why no one came before. Your gift means someone comes.

Read the Mother & Child case study →
🌿

Prenatal Nutrition Support

Every destitute pregnant woman in our catchment area receives folic acid, iron tablets, vitamins, and a weekly nutritious food package. This programme was designed after field research revealed high rates of low birth weight in coastal villages — directly linked to nutritional deficiency during pregnancy.

SDG 2 · SDG 3
📚

Nutrition Awareness & Education

Community health workers conduct monthly group sessions for destitute pregnant women and new mothers — covering balanced diet, safe breastfeeding, infant feeding practices, and hygiene. Delivered in villages so no woman needs to travel to attend.

SDG 2 · SDG 3 · SDG 4
🩺

Regular Prenatal Checkups

Blood pressure monitoring, weight tracking, anaemia screening, and foetal development checks at every stage of pregnancy. Available at the Foundation Hospital and delivered by mobile health camps to women in remote villages.

SDG 3 · SDG 5
👶

Postnatal Mother & Baby Care

Checkups for new mothers and infants in the first six months. Infant weight monitoring, breastfeeding support, immunisation guidance, and postnatal nutrition supplements to support recovery and infant development.

SDG 3 · SDG 2

Why this matters: Low birth weight is the single strongest predictor of infant mortality and lifelong health outcomes. Our field team documented elevated low birth weight rates in coastal villages — a direct consequence of nutritional deficiency during pregnancy. This programme addresses the root cause.

Hospital Gallery

Be There When It Matters Most

A baby named Grace is alive today because our clinic was open at midnight. Your gift keeps that door open — for the next mother, the next child, the next family who has nowhere else to turn.

Help the next patient →