What We Have Achieved

Our Impact

From hard-to-reach communities in Nimba County to medical oxygen plants in Bong County, CHAL's work is measured in lives changed, facilities strengthened, and systems improved. Here is a snapshot of our 2025 impact across programmes, the Drugs Supply Unit, and our national network.

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Member Facilities
0
Counties with Active Presence
0
Facilities Reached in 2025
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Communities in Catchment
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Catchment Population
0
Years of Service

Programme Impact

CHAL delivered results across four active programmes in 2025. Select a programme to explore the detail.

Rotary Club of Sinkor & CCIH-USA
Medical Grade Oxygen Refilling Plant — Bong County

In May 2025, CHAL officially launched Liberia's first faith-based-operated medical grade oxygen refilling plant in Meleke Town, Bong County. The facility provides life-saving oxygen to hospitals and health centres across the region at cost-effective rates, operating daily from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM.

Meleke Town, Bong County May – December 2025 5 Customer Hospitals
  • 337 oxygen cylinders produced (May–Dec 2025)
  • 336 cylinders sold — $5,040 USD revenue generated
  • Ganta United Methodist Hospital — primary customer (70% of revenue)
  • 5 hospitals served: Ganta UMH, Phebe, Curran Lutheran, C.B. Dunbar, Yenglee Memorial
  • Peak production: 72 cylinders in October 2025
337
Cylinders Produced
5
Hospitals Served
$5,040
Revenue (USD)
8
Months of Operation
MMV — Medicines for Malaria Venture
IPTp-SP Advocacy Pilot — Buu-Yao District, Nimba County

This programme aimed to increase uptake of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp-SP) and improve antenatal care (ANC) attendance among pregnant women in Buu-Yao District, Nimba County — a population of 44,447 with an estimated 10,230 pregnant women.

Buu-Yao District, Nimba County 44,447 District Population
  • ANC visits increased from 1,258 to 2,276 — an 80.9% improvement
  • Average gestational age at first ANC reduced from 14 weeks to under 10 weeks (30% improvement)
  • Women completing ≥4 ANC visits increased from 6% to 16%
  • Indirect reach: 146,103 women of childbearing age across Nimba County
80.9%
Increase in ANC Visits
2,276
Total ANC Visits
30%
Earlier First Visit
146K
Women Reached in Nimba
Amref Health Africa / Africa CDC / Mastercard Foundation
Saving Lives & Livelihoods Phase II — Immunisation Strengthening

Phase II of the SLL programme strengthened Liberia's immunisation and primary healthcare system by improving service delivery, building the capacity of health and community workers, and supporting preparedness for vaccine-preventable diseases. Implementation covered four counties in collaboration with MOH/EPI.

Bomi, Gbarpolu, Grand Cape Mount, Grand Gedeh Phase II Closure: Oct 2025
  • 85,600+ people vaccinated with COVID-19 vaccine across four counties
  • 257 health workers trained in the revised EPI training manual
  • Co-sponsored development of Liberia's Life-Course Immunisation Policy
  • Programme closure visit conducted September–October 2025 with Amref team
85,600+
People Vaccinated
257
Health Workers Trained
4
Counties Covered
1
National Policy Co-Sponsored
Brot für die Welt (Bread for the World)
RMNCH Quality of Care — 5 Counties, 20 Facilities

Supporting quality healthcare with a specific focus on reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health (RMNCH) through improved clinical services, infection prevention and control (IPC), supportive supervision and community outreach — implemented across 20 faith-based facilities in five counties.

Bong, Grand Bassa, Lofa, Montserrado, Nimba 100 Catchment Communities
  • 25 health workers trained in Emergency Obstetric & Newborn Care (EmNOC)
  • 185 health workers trained in Infection Prevention, Control & Customer Care
  • 5 incinerators constructed across 5 facilities
  • MCH delivery room extended at CEM Clinic, Grand Bassa County
  • 5-bedroom MCH building under construction at Doris Medical, Nimba County
  • 100 communities supported with family planning and immunisation outreach
20
Facilities Supported
185
IPC Workers Trained
5
Incinerators Built
100
Communities Reached

Drugs Supply Unit (DSU) — 2025

The DSU operates from two depots — Monrovia and Gbarnga — supplying quality-assured essential medicines and medical supplies to faith-based facilities, NGOs and individual health professionals across Liberia.

2
Active Depots (Monrovia & Gbarnga)
$41,377
Monrovia Sales (USD)
$25,872
Gbarnga Sales (USD)
15
Dispensers Trained (Pharma 750)
6
Counties in Pharma 750 Training
50+
Clients Served (Clinics, Hospitals, Pharmacies)

Challenges & Lessons Learned

Honest reflection on what held us back and what we are taking forward in 2026.

Key Challenges
  • Difficulty retaining community volunteers due to lack of financial incentives
  • Limited internet connectivity in remote counties affecting M&E and communication
  • Dependency on short-term external donor funding affects programme sustainability
  • Inadequate vehicle fleet limiting access and timely delivery in hard-to-reach areas
  • Low uptake of DSU warehouse services among member facilities in both Gbarnga and Monrovia
Lessons Learned & Impact
  • ANC visits in Bong County declined after community delivery reduction — community-level engagement is essential
  • Peer-to-peer M&E sessions with Amref significantly improved grant management quality
  • The oxygen plant demonstrates that income-generating infrastructure can build CHAL's self-sufficiency
  • Faith-community partnerships remain the strongest channel for reaching pregnant women in rural Nimba
  • EPI Life-Course Policy co-sponsorship positions CHAL as a national health systems actor, not just a service deliverer

Partner With CHAL to Expand Our Impact

Our work is only possible through the commitment of donors, government partners, and faith communities. If you would like to support CHAL's programmes or learn more about collaboration opportunities, we would love to hear from you.

Get in Touch