Riders for Health
CONTINENT
Africa

COUNTRY
Lesotho
Location
Africa
Country
Lesotho, Liberia, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi, the Gambia, Nigeria
Website
www.riders.org
Founding year
1990
Organizational structure
Mostly registered in countries of operation as a not-for-profit or nongovernmental organization
Health Focus
Primary health care
Areas of Interests
Transport and logistics, Last mile distribution
Health System Focus
Medical products and technologies, Service delivery
CHALLENGE
For millions of people across Africa, access to health care services remains a challenge. In sub-Saharan Africa, over 70% of people live in rural areas, where the best roads are often little more than dirt tracks (World Bank, 2015). This poses significant challenges both for patients trying to access health facilities, and for health workers conducting outreach work in rural areas. Although experts advocate for transport to be the third largest resource requirement for a ministry of health, after personnel and drugs, it is frequently neglected. The investment in trained health workers, drugs, vaccines and other medical supplies often fails to reach the people who need it most.

“No wonder nobody is getting any health care. No wonder people are dying of things they shouldn’t be dying of, not getting the right nutrition and stuff, because they are out there neglected. There are no roads, there are no service stations, no petrol stations, there is nothing out there, no infrastructure. Nobody is being trained. It’s very, very undervalued, the mobility issue. This is what we are going to do.”
– Andrea Coleman, Co-founder, Riders for Health

INTERVENTION
“I do the vaccinations in the community. The motorbike helps me to go to those villages where the car cannot reach, so I go by motorbike.
– Registered nurse and rider
Across all eight countries of operation, Riders serves 21.49 million people and manages 1 700 vehicles, which collectively travelled just under 13 million kilometres in 2014. Annually, the mobilized outreach health workers in Lesotho have over 45 000 extra health service interactions, and can typically reach four times further on a motorcycle and see six times more patients.


CASE INSIGHTS
“With a bike, you can go anywhere you want to. It helps me do my job because, before Riders, I would just sit in the clinic or go to the nearer villages, but now I can go to the furthest places.”
– Environmental Health Officer, rider and trainer