All Articles & News: Fair Future’s Impact in Rural Areas
This page gathers all news and field articles from Fair Future Foundation. Medical missions, clean water projects, malaria prevention, solar electrification, logistics and training in ultra-rural Indonesia. Transparent reports, real stories, measurable impact. Follow our work, step by step, from the field to long-term solutions.
Welcome to the Fair Future News! Our teams have crafted each article, story, and update.
These pages showcase unique content reflecting our mission, work, and community interactions.
True stories. Real people. Humanitarian action in motion.
Here you’ll find stories from the field—100% real, 100% original. Every article is written by us, by those who live these moments, walk these roads, and treat these illnesses. We write them by hand, after the long days, often from tents or remote villages, because we believe in showing what’s real.
The people, the lives, the wounds, the repairs—this is not fiction. This is our daily reality in ultra-rural Indonesia. Every photo is taken by us. Every word comes from those who act. From emergency responses and clean water to child health and malaria cases, these stories reflect both the daily struggles and the incredible strength of those we serve.
Our News page is more than just updates. It’s a record of direct action. A collection of emotions, medical cases, construction progress, and social encounters. We don’t write for clicks—we write for those who care, those who want to know, and those who support our mission.
It’s raw, human, sometimes difficult, but always true. Read them, share them, let them move you. This is how change begins—with knowledge, emotion, and connection.
Alex Wettstein – Fair Future Foundation – Updated in June 2025

Your donation becomes real medical care
Help us reach the unreachable. Every franc you give funds medicines, dressings, tests, and clean water to prevent sickness. It powers solar lights for cold vaccines and night care. It keeps Kawan Sehat agents and Fair Future teams travelling hours to remote villages without doctors or clinics.
Our latest articles
Self-Medication Rural Indonesia | Safe Medicine
In rural Indonesia, antibiotics and injections are often easier to access than trained medical care. This article explains how unsafe self-medication fuels antimicrobial resistance, delayed diagnosis, sepsis and preventable complications.
Preventable Diseases in Children | Rural Vaccination
In remote Indonesia, children still grow up without reliable vaccination. Preventable diseases return not because medicine has failed, but because health systems stop too early, leaving families exposed to infections we already know how to prevent.
Rumah Kambera 2.0 Drilling Begins | Fair Future
Rumah Kambera 2.0 drilling marks the first physical step toward Fair Future Foundation’s new socio-medical base in East Sumba. After two days of work, fresh water was found, making future construction, field life, and patient care possible on the site.
East Sumba Sepsis Study | Fatal Infection Pathways
Fair Future Foundation and Kawan Baik Indonesia launch the East Sumba Sepsis Study in May 2026. Nearly 500 household interviews and healthcare worker questionnaires will document why severe infections become fatal in ultra-rural villages, before better detection and care can be built.
Preventable Suffering | Rural Health Failure
Preventable suffering in ultra-rural villages is not destiny. Untreated wounds, fever, pain, malnutrition and unsafe water become normal only when care, prevention and health education fail to reach families. Fair Future Foundation works where these failures cost lives.
Third-Degree Burns Indonesia | Umbu Needs Burn Care
Umbu, 14, has lived for eight months with third-degree burns Indonesia should never leave untreated. In East Sumba, delayed care means chronic wounds, severe pain, malnutrition and lost mobility. He needs food, dressings, medicine, physiotherapy, reconstructive surgery and safe transfer now.
Leptospirosis Rural Indonesia | Water and Infection
Leptospirosis in rural Indonesia remains dangerously underdiagnosed. In East Sumba and across NTT, unsafe water, rodent exposure, poor sanitation, and delayed care still turn a preventable bacterial infection into severe disease. Clean water, wound care, and early treatment save lives.
Untreated Pain Rural Medicine | Invisible Burden
Untreated pain in rural medicine defines daily life in remote regions. Patients live with wounds, infections, and fractures without relief. This is not a marginal issue. It directly affects survival, recovery, and dignity. Addressing pain is not complex, but it requires access, structure, and commitment.
Global Health Funding Corruption | Rural Care
Global health funding should save lives. In ultra-rural Eastern Indonesia, too much of it is lost to corruption, inflated administrative costs, and weak delivery systems. The result is clinical and brutal: delayed care, missing medicines, failed referrals, and preventable deaths.
Sepsis in Rural Indonesia | Fatal Delays
Sepsis in rural Indonesia often begins with a treatable infection and ends in preventable death. This article presents a new East Sumba field study to understand delays, danger signs, referral barriers, and the role of community-based care.
Sexually transmitted infections rural Indonesia | Silent epidemic
Sexually transmitted infections in rural Indonesia remain largely undiagnosed due to lack of testing, education, and access to care. Untreated, they lead to infertility, chronic complications, and preventable transmission, reflecting deep gaps in public health systems.
Child Marriage Indonesia | Adolescent Pregnancy Crisis
Child marriage adolescent pregnancy in rural Indonesia exposes young girls to severe medical risks including prematurity, anemia and maternal mortality. In East Sumba, lack of prevention and limited healthcare access turn early pregnancy into a daily clinical emergency.
















