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We wrote and released this article on the: June 12, 2023. Have fun reading it...
Extract and Description of this News: As we mentioned in last week's newsletter, Fair Future Foundation, Kawan Baik Indonesia, and Sumba Volunteer are joining forces to launch a crucial health and medical operation to combat malaria in the Mahu region of East Sumba, Indonesia. The "Malaria Prevention Initiative 2023 - Sumba Timur 2023" aims to prevent, detect, and treat this devastating disease in one of the most affected regions. Malaria has become endemic in this area, establishing itself and finding a conducive environment for its spread, leading to an unprecedented increase in cases in recent months. - Thank you for your interest.

Update: Learn about the Malaria Detection, Treatment, and Prevention Project – our past, present, and future efforts.

Malaria has become endemic in this area, establishing itself and finding a conducive environment for its spread, leading to an unprecedented increase in cases in recent months.

As we mentioned in last week’s newsletter, Fair Future Foundation, Kawan Baik Indonesia, and Sumba Volunteer are joining forces to launch a crucial health and medical operation to combat malaria in the Mahu region of East Sumba, Indonesia.

The Mahu region faces serious challenges that promote the spread of malaria, such as malnutrition, extreme poverty, and lack of access to electricity, roads, clean water, and sanitation facilities. Unfortunately, in recent months, we have observed an alarming increase in malaria cases, putting the health of thousands of families at risk.

This initiative is a crucial component of our ongoing commitment to improve access to primary healthcare in the most remote regions. Thanks to the Primary Medical Care (PMC) program – Access to Primary Medical Care in Ultra-Rural Areas – many lives have been saved this year.

This is one of the most significant urgent health and medical operations organized and funded by the Swiss Fair Future Foundation.

This Malaria Prevention Initiative Sumba 2023, integrated into the PMC program, will begin in late June 2023 and conclude at the end of July 2023 with the first phase. An investment of over CHF 100,000 has been allocated to the PMC program, of which CHF 37,550 is specifically designated for this malaria prevention initiative. Over 150 people, including over a hundred volunteers, doctors, nurses, and laboratory technicians, will be mobilized for this operation. Two trucks and several tons of medical equipment will be deployed.

Using the “door-to-door” method, over 3,000 blood and 4,000 rapid tests will be conducted directly at the residents’ homes. This enables the distribution of insecticide-treated mosquito nets, indoor residual spraying (IRS) of insecticides, and specific medical treatments for those affected. We will also broadcast radio spots and display giant posters to raise awareness about malaria prevention.

In parallel, we will improve the Mahu medical centre, which currently lacks access to water, by repairing the deep well and installing a new pump and reservoirs. This medical centre (Puskesmas) will also serve as a decentralized base camp for the operation.

Furthermore, we have developed a personalized screening application called “Malaria Sumba”, which will allow our teams in the field to collect important medical and social data for mapping and monitoring purposes.

Fair Future sincerely thanks our friends at Sumba Volunteer and our sister foundation, Kawan Baik Indonesia, for their valuable practical and logistical contributions to this project. We encourage everyone who wishes to support this initiative to spread the word and financially donate on behalf of the Swiss Foundation.

INFO: We still need CHF 7,500.- to reach our goal and complete the medical operation for everyone. Indeed, we were too optimistic in our forecasts because more equipment to perform the thousands of blood and rapid tests is needed.

Fair Future, along with all our staff, volunteers, and partners, would like to express sincere gratitude to all those who join us in this vital cause. Your support and commitment make a tangible difference in communities affected by malaria in Sumba.

We understand the importance of your contribution, whether through a donation, sharing our initiative, or raising awareness about this cause. Every gesture matters, and we are deeply grateful to those who stand with us in the fight against malaria and improving the health of thousands of families.

For more details about our initiative or to donate, please get in touch with Fair Future. We will be delighted to provide all the necessary information and assist you in supporting this vital cause.

Thank you for your continued support and commitment to malaria prevention in the areas where we are involved.

UPDATE: Our operation is going smoothly, and we have already ordered equipment for more than ten thousand francs, including impregnated mosquito nets, insecticide spraying equipment (IRS), rapid tests, blood collection reagents, specific drugs, submersible pumps, cleaning tools and dirty water treatment products, a power unit and solar panels, two microscopes etc…

Two trucks carrying tons of materials will arrive at our Sumba base camp on June 22, ensuring that all items needed for malaria prevention and patient care will be available on time. We will keep you informed of the operation’s progress and the results we obtain.

Malaria – Images taken by the Foundation socio-medical teams on the field

Give - Make them a gift

Your generosity transforms lives. By donating to Fair Future, you support initiatives that bring joy and hope to remote communities.

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.

Rainwater tank connected in Laindatang East Sumba

The 114.7 m³ rainwater tank in Laindatang, named Matawai Urang, is now fully connected to gutters and filtration, ready to collect clean water for 300 residents. This rainwater tank Laindatang project also features an information panel, sharing the story of safe water access for the community.

Malaria mosquito nets distributed in East Sumba villages

We distributed 450 malaria mosquito nets across East Sumba villages. Each family received a net, printed guidance, and a sewing kit for repairs. By combining distribution with education, families learned why correct use matters for preventing deadly malaria infections.

Malaria education sessions in Umalulu East Sumba

In four villages of East Sumba, Fair Future led days of malaria education and screening. Communities learned, played, asked questions, and discovered how to protect their families. Hundreds were tested, treated, and equipped with mosquito nets. Together, knowledge saves lives.

Medical equipment donation to RSUD Waingapu hospital

Fair Future delivered CHF 12000 in essential medical equipment to RSUD Waingapu, Sumba’s sole public hospital serving nearly 1’000’000 people. This medical equipment donation was based on the real needs expressed by doctors and nurses, ensuring frontline teams receive the tools they truly require.

Malaria education billboards installed in East Sumba

As part of the East Sumba Malaria Prevention Project 2025, Fair Future and partners installed 20 large billboards across rural communities. These visuals teach families how to recognize malaria symptoms and protect themselves. A vital step to reduce infections in one of Indonesia’s hardest-hit regions.

Malaria rapid tests reveal cases in Umalulu

During our fieldwork in Umalulu for the East Sumba Malaria Prevention Project, rapid diagnostic tests confirmed new positive malaria cases—children, women, and adolescents—despite being outside peak season. Without testing, cases remain invisible. Testing saves lives.

Malaria prevention project East Sumba progresses in 2025

Three weeks into the malaria prevention project, East Sumba has seen real progress. The IRS campaign is complete, 20 prevention billboards are in place, and the education phase now begins. This malaria prevention project strengthens awareness, treatment, and long-term protection.

Malaria lab training strengthens diagnostics in East Sumba

Malaria lab training in East Sumba brought together 28 analysts from all health centres and the RSUD hospital. Under WHO-certified mentors, they refined slide reading and microscopy skills, strengthening diagnostic accuracy and treatment speed in rural Indonesia.

Indoor Residual Spraying malaria – Fair Future Foundation

The Kawan Against Malaria program delivers Indoor Residual Spraying malaria operations in East Sumba. Trained teams spray bamboo and wooden homes, surface by surface, to kill mosquitoes and reduce transmission. Each treated house becomes a safer place for children and families.

Primary Medical Care (PMC)

Life‑saving care where no doctors are available

In villages without clinics, our Kawan Sehat health agents—mostly women—provide first aid, wound treatment, antimalarials, antibiotics, fever management, and referrals. They see 700–1,000 patients each month across East Sumba. Ongoing training and resupply—guided by a 150‑page manual and regular intensive sessions—ensure care remains safe and consistent. Your support funds medicines, diagnostics, and supervision that save lives.

Clean Water Connections

Every drop collected is a life protected.

Since 2019, we have constructed dozens of ferro-cement tanks ranging from 5,000 to 5,350 litres, working alongside families, and a 115 m³ reservoir in Laindatang to ensure access to clean water. New projects in Lapinu add more tanks and sanitation blocks. Access to water reduces diarrheal diseases, improves nutrition, and enables girls to remain in school. Simple tools, local labour, and durable designs enable communities to maintain these systems independently.

Kawan Against Malaria

Prevention, diagnosis, treatment—village by village

Malaria remains endemic in East Sumba. We deploy long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs), rapid blood tests, treatment, and IRS planning where needed. Our Umalulu baseline study maps hotspots and practices to guide action. Health agents educate families on night protection, early testing, and correct dosing. With consistent nets, diagnostics, and training, we reduce cases—and save lives.

Light for Education – SolarBuddy

When night falls, learning continues.

In 2025, we gained tax-free approval to distribute 2,224 SolarBuddy lamps for children and schools without electricity. The lamps charge during the day and provide light for homework, safety, and community study at night. Larger units support classrooms; smaller units are given to students. A yearly pipeline now helps us reach more villages. Light improves attendance, reading time, and learning outcomes.

Women’s Empowerment & Training

From caregivers to certified community health leaders

Most Kawan Sehat are women. Through intensive training, field coaching, and a modular 15-chapter curriculum, they gain clinical skills, triage methods, prevention tools, and record-keeping. Certification boosts confidence, income opportunities, and community respect. When women lead care locally, families seek help earlier, and health indicators improve for everyone—especially children.

Prevention & Health Education

Posters, school sessions, community talks

We run an expanding range of prevention campaigns: tobacco harms, waste & water safety, alcohol risks, and sexual health/STIs. Materials are designed for all literacy levels, printed on fabric for durability, and delivered by health agents in homes and schools. Clear visuals plus simple steps = real behaviour change that prevents illness before it begins.

Support Logistics – The Trucks of Life

If supplies don’t move, care doesn’t happen

Our medical truck and the Truck n’ Load carry up to four tonnes of medicines, solar gear, and water-system materials across ferries and off-road tracks. Logistics also enables emergency runs, resupply for agents, and equipment installations. This backbone turns donations into delivered care—on time, in the hardest places. Fuel, tyres, maintenance: all mission-critical.

Volunteer With Us

Field, workshop, or remote—there’s a role for you

Join on the ground in Sumba, lend skills in Bali or Switzerland, or help remotely with medical logistics, translation, mapping, media, grants or education content. We prioritise practical impact, safety, and clear tasks. Short missions and long commitments are both welcome. Your time can build a reservoir, train a health agent—or light a classroom.

Transparency & Swiss Expertise

Trust earned through experience and integrity

Since 2008, +/- 93% of every franc has directly funded fieldwork. Accounts are approved annually by the Foundation Board, certified auditors, and Swiss authorities. We operate with minimal overhead and only local salaries, depending on volunteer efforts and strict controls. Precision, accountability, Swiss Expertise and results drive every franc we allocate.

In‑Kind & Medical Donations

From a bandage to a solar panel—everything counts

We accept medical supplies (bandages, infusion sets, RDTs, malaria medication), water system materials, and educational and solar equipment. Thanks to our customs approvals, large humanitarian shipments can arrive tax‑free and be tracked to their destination. Donate items in Sumba, Denpasar, or Switzerland—our team ensures they reach those where they can save the most lives.

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