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July 2016

GE Miller Center Healthymaginaion

GE Miller Center Healthymaginaion

Boosting the Odds for Mothers and Children in Sub-Saharan Africa

Healthymagination Mother and Child Programme, a collaboration of GE and Santa Clara University's Miller Center, aims to bolster 17 social entrepreneurs addressing maternal and child health in sub-Saharan Africa

GE/Miller Center program provides 17 social entrepreneurs focused on maternal or child health in the region with a 3-day workshop, six months of training and mentoring, and a pitch competition.

NAIROBI, KENYA,  July 19, 2016 – The healthymagination Mother and Child Programme—launched in March 2016 by GE and Santa Clara University’s Miller Center for Social Entrepreneurship to address maternal and child mortality by supporting African social entrepreneurs operating in the health sector—has taken the first big step toward achieving its objective: selecting the first group of social enterprises that will receive training and mentoring.

After a rigorous evaluation process, 17 social entrepreneurs from Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia were selected to be in the programme’s first cohort and are currently attending a three-day, in-person workshop in Nairobi, Kenya. This kick-off event packs core business lessons into a powerful three-day event facilitated by senior-level Miller Center mentors and GE business leaders. It is designed to help the social entrepreneurs acquire business fundamentals, improve their strategic thought processes, and articulate a business plan that demonstrates impact, growth and long-term financial sustainability.

“Social innovations and entrepreneurs in the health sector have in recent years yielded sustainable solutions to some of the world’s biggest health challenges,” said Jay Ireland, GE Africa president and CEO. “It is for this reason that the healthymagination Mother and Child programme is focusing on training and mentoring social entrepreneurs working on increasing the quality, access and affordability of maternal and child health in sub-Saharan Africa, thereby enabling more women and children to experience better health.”

Thane Kreiner, Ph.D., executive director, Santa Clara University's Miller Center for Social Entrepreneurship said, “Despite major gains made globally in maternal and child mortality, the levels in sub-Saharan Africa remain unacceptably high. This GE and Miller Center collaboration takes an innovative and highly practical approach to  combating this challenge, by providing African social entrepreneurs with the skills and resources they need to expand the positive impact of their interventions.”

“We are excited to work with our first cohort of social entrepreneurs to improve mother and child care in Sub-Saharan Africa.  This program builds on GE’s strong track record in bringing innovation to emerging markets while increasing positive health outcomes,” said Robert Wells, executive director of strategy for GE’s healthymagination commitment.

The initial workshop will be followed by a six-month, online accelerator programme, where mentorship will be provided by high-profile Silicon Valley-based executives who have themselves undergone mentorship training by Miller Center. This accelerator and mentorship programme will culminate in a “Premier Pitch” event in Africa where the 17 participants will present their respective enterprises to an audience of potential investors. 

This training and mentoring that blends Silicon Valley entrepreneurial principles with venture impact investing utilizes Miller Center’s Global Social Benefit Institute (GSBI®) methodology, which has been proven and refined through 12 years of working with more than 570 social enterprises worldwide. Participants will also be introduced to GE’s portfolio of products; hence they will gain specialized support and training on technologies and resources for the maternal and child health sector.

The social enterprises selected for the healthymagination Mother & Child programme are below, along with the countries in which they operate and the social entrepreneurs leading them:

  • Access Afya (Kenya; Dr. Daphne Ngunjiri)
  • ayzh, (Kenya; Habib Anwar and Zubaida Bai)
  • Health Builders (Rwanda; Tyler Nelson)
  • Health-E-Net (Kenya; Pratap Kumar)
  • Hewa Tele (Kenya; Steve Alred Adudans)
  • LifeNet International (Uganda, Burundi and DRC; Stefanie Weiland)
  • Live Well Social Enterprise Business (Zambia; Charles Kalonga)
  • Lwala Community Alliance (Kenya; Julius Mbeya and Ash Lauren Rogers)
  • Nurture Africa (Uganda; Brian Iredale)
  • Outreach Medical Services (Nigeria; Dr. Segun Ebitanmi)
  • Peach Health (Ghana; Cobby Amoah)
  • PurpleSource Healthcare (Nigeria; Olufemi Sunmonu)
  • SaferMom (Nigeria; Adeloye Olanrewaju)
  • Telemed Medical Services (Ethiopia; Yohans Emiru)
  • The Shanti Uganda Society (Uganda; Natalie Angell-Besseling)
  • Tulivu Imaging (Kenya; Matthew Rehrig)
  • Village Hopecore International (Kenya; Anne Gildea).

For more information on the programme, see http://www.scu-social-entrepreneurship.org/mother-and-child-1/

About GE
GE (NYSE: GE) is the world’s Digital Industrial Company, transforming industry with software-defined machines and solutions that are connected, responsive and predictive. GE is organized around a global exchange of knowledge, the "GE Store," through which each business shares and accesses the same technology, markets, structure and intellect. Each invention further fuels innovation and application across our industrial sectors. With people, services, technology and scale, GE delivers better outcomes for customers by speaking the language of industry. www.ge.com

About GE’s healthymagination commitment
GE’s healthymagination commitment is about better health for more people. We continuously develop and invest in innovations that deliver high-quality, more affordable healthcare to more people around the world. For more information about our healthymagination commitment, visit www.gesustainability.com.

About Miller Center for Social Entrepreneurship
Founded in 1997, Miller Center for Social Entrepreneurship is one of three Centers of Distinction at Santa Clara University in California. Miller Center accelerates global, innovation-based entrepreneurship in service to humanity. Its strategic focus is on poverty eradication through its three areas of work: The Global Social Benefit Institute (GSBI), Impact Capital, and Education and Action Research. To learn more about Miller Center or any of its social entrepreneurship programs, visit www.scu.edu/MillerCenter.

About Santa Clara University
Santa Clara University, a comprehensive Jesuit, Catholic university located 40 miles south of San Francisco in California’s Silicon Valley, offers its more than 9,000 students rigorous undergraduate curricula in arts and sciences, business and engineering; master’s degrees in business, education, counseling psychology, pastoral ministry and theology; and law degrees and engineering Ph.D.’s. Distinguished nationally by one of the highest graduation rates among all U.S. master’s universities, California’s oldest operating higher-education institution demonstrates faith-inspired values of ethics and social justice. For more information, see www.scu.edu.

Contacts
Raissa Ahishakiye | GE@newmark.co.ke |
Pat Haines | Miller Center | 408-551-7118 | phaines@scu.edu

 

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