One of our latest campaigns, "My Waste, My Responsibility," combines health and the environment. Poor waste management contaminates water, spreads disease, and damages land. Through posters, training, and door-to-door outreach, we empower communities to protect their health.
Latest from the Field
Fair Future Foundation, a Swiss-based non-profit, is an innovative force in global healthcare and social aid.
Transforming Lives Through Innovation: Your Support Fuels Meaningful Change
For more than 16 years, Fair Future has addressed inequalities in healthcare through the Primary Medical Care program, clean water access, and essential services in the most isolated regions of Southeast Asia. Rather than providing temporary relief, we immerse ourselves within communities to develop lasting, sustainable solutions that create meaningful change.
Our team provides essential medical care, combats infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, malaria, and polio, and supplies clean water and nutritious resources to underserved regions that few organizations reach.
By adopting a comprehensive approach, we meet urgent needs and cultivate healthier, more resilient communities, empowering them to improve their quality of life.
We appreciate your presence. Your support enables us to continue this vital work, bringing about positive and lasting change for those who need it most. Thank you very much.
Alex Wettstein – Fair Future Foundation – Updated in February 2025
Every Franc Saves Lives
Every franc you give becomes a life for someone. It can be used to buy nutritious food, fuel the Truck of Life, or fund mosquito nets that protect children from malaria. One hundred francs helps build water tanks or toilets for a village. Five hundred francs funds medical care for a thousand people each month. Here, your generosity doesn’t disappear: it directly transforms into health, water, and dignity.
2024 Annual Report – 15 Years of Concrete Action
How your donations are used?
%
Social and medical actions
%
Fundraising work
%
Field operations and management
Our latest articles
Who are the Kawan Sehat health agents?
In this article you finally discover who are Kawan Sehat health agents, not as numbers but as people. Through portraits and short testimonies they explain who they are, where they live, the patients they care for and why they chose to become the first line of medical care in remote East Sumba hills every day.
Kawan Sehat wound care in remote villages saves lives
In this image Kawan Sehat wound care happens on a bamboo floor where clinics are days away. The agent irrigates, debrides if needed, applies a sterile dressing, checks tetanus, and teaches danger signs. Early care stops infection before it spreads to the blood. This is how primary medicine prevents funerals.
Hambarita water reservoir plaques – eight named tanks
This picture shows Hambarita water reservoir plaques resting on the grass moments before installation. Each plate carries a local name because water is treated like kin. When a tank is called by name, people maintain it, clean gutters, and guard the lid. Eight new reservoirs will store rain, cut disease, and return time to families.
SolarBuddy lamps East Sumba – quality control to classrooms
At Rumah Kambera we checked 2,224 SolarBuddy lamps East Sumba one by one. Volunteers, Rotary, Fair Future and Kawan Baik tested brightness, panels, switches and batteries, fixed faults, logged QR codes, and packed each unit for long journeys to schools with no electricity. Light prevents injuries, improves study, and protects health.
Mbajik solar electrification – first village cinema night
Erwin, the Field Coordinator of the Primary Medical Care programme, spends days crossing muddy roads, broken bridges, and steep trails to deliver medicines to Kawan Sehat agents. His work keeps remote East Sumba villages connected to lifesaving care, dignity, and trusted medical support.
Solar electrification SDN Mbajik | Remote school powered
Solar electrification reaches SDN Mbajik in ultra-rural East Sumba, powering classrooms, water pumps, and internet access. This community-built system transforms education, safety, and daily life—bringing lasting change to one of Indonesia’s most isolated schools.
East Sumba malaria prevention 2025 | Field results summary
This article reports field dates, methods and impact from East Sumba malaria prevention. Teams worked with Puskesmas, schools and village leaders to align education, IRS, LLINs and diagnostics. Data and costs are fully documented so partners and health services can improve coverage, reduce transmission and replicate what works.
Primary medical care donation for 2025/26 program
Fair Future Foundation and Kawan Baik Indonesia made a primary medical care donation of CHF 19,248.96 (around IDR 400 million) covering 32% of the program’s 2025–2026 budget. This funding sustains healthcare access for thousands of people in ultra-rural Indonesian regions lacking clinics, doctors, or medicines.






