HealthBringing health to the last mile
A van, a nurse and a box of essential medicines. That is what healthcare looks like where the road gives out.

The last mile is not a metaphor here; it is a literal stretch of track the ambulance cannot manage. Beyond it, a clinic is a full day's journey, which for most families means no clinic at all. Our answer is to make the clinic mobile.
A single medical van carries more than it looks like it should — a nurse, a doctor on rotation, essential medicines, and the diagnostic basics that turn a vague complaint into a treatable diagnosis. For those who need it, the programme reaches further still: dialysis support and eye camps that restore, quite literally, a person's sight and independence.
Where the road gives out, healthcare has to arrive on wheels — or not arrive at all.
What changes at the last mile is not just access but dignity. People who are used to being told the nearest help is unreachable are instead met at their doorstep, unhurried, by someone who knows their name and their history.
It is not a hospital, and it does not pretend to be. But a van, a nurse and a box of the right medicines have a way of redrawing the map — until the last mile is simply the next stop on the route.
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