Global Impact of 2022

At MAP International, we believe that everyone deserves access to quality healthcare, no matter where they live. That’s why we’re committed to providing life-changing patient treatments to people in need around the world.

Our efforts have enabled us to provide critical medicines and health supplies to millions of people in 86 countries around the world. We’re also pleased to report that we increased our medicine delivery by $119 million from the previous year, totaling $745,372,921. Additionally, we provided $37,549,164 in disaster relief – a $24 million increase from 2021. Our mission is simple yet impactful: to provide essential medicines and health supplies to those in need so they can live life to the fullest.

In the fiscal year 2022 alone, we delivered over 16 million prenatal vitamins to 49 countries to support maternal and fetal health. We also provided over 119,000 oral rehydration salts, totaling nearly 3 million sachets, to 45 countries to help prevent dehydration. Additionally, we administered over 1.8 million deworming medications to patients in 15 countries and provided over 800,000 antibiotics to individuals in 57 countries. Through our Bringing Children Health (BCH) Program, we were able to reach over 324,000 children – an increase of over 243,000 from the previous year. By targeting our efforts where they’re needed most, we can make a real impact and improve the health and wellbeing of children around the world.

Thanks to our dedicated team and generous supporters, we’re able to make a real difference in the lives of those who need it most. Join us in our mission to create a healthier, more equitable world today.

Read our Annual Report

Help rush medicine to those who need it most!

In the next 90 days, containers filled with 2.6 million treatments of lifesaving medicine will be shipped to 10 countries where vulnerable patients and families are in urgent need: the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Guatemala, Jamaica, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, Ukraine, the United States and Venezuela.

Our on-the-ground partners will ensure that this medicine gets to healthcare providers in local clinics, hospitals and other program sites so that they may care for patients and communities around the globe that are in desperate need, including:

Guatemala

More than 25% of the country’s total population requires humanitarian aid with emergency medicine being among those top needs, particularly for children under the age of 5.

Haiti

The poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, Haiti has struggled with poverty, armed conflicts and natural disasters, with an estimated 5.5 million people needing aid.

Sudan

Civil war has forced more than 11.8 million people from their homes, including 9.3 million internally displaced persons, many of whom are without access to food and medicine.

Your Leadership Gift in Action

By helping ensure that containers filled with critically needed essential medicine and health supplies get to those who need them most, you will affect the short and long-term health of entire communities, providing treatments such as:

Prenatal vitamins to help increase the number of healthy births and babies around the world

Oral rehydration solutions (ORS) to help malnourished, dehydrated children and adults

Lifesaving pediatric antibiotics to help children with life-threatening infections such as pneumonia

Chronic disease and pain management medications

Urgent!

Help Rush Essential Lifesaving
Medicine to Countries in Desperate Need

In places wracked by war, poverty, disease and disaster, millions die from what would have been either preventable or highly treatable diseases in the United States.

In Africa alone, one in five children will die before their fifth birthday, including 1.6 million children who will die this year from the lack of simple antibiotics that are used to treat acute respiratory infections. Just as alarming, according to the World Health Organization, chronic diseases — many of which can be prevented or controlled with common medicines that we here in the U.S. take for granted — are the leading cause of death worldwide.