"Students for Malawi: Learn, Lead, Heal."
Registered Charity Number: CHY1277.
Help Launch the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland's (RCSI's) First Student-Led Global Health Initiative in Malawi
In the southern lakeside district of Mangochi, Malawi, access to health care and HIV prevention is beginning to shrink. Following the shutdown of USAID, Malawi, a country where USAID previously covered ~13% of the national budget (1), is facing a public health crisis. Clinics are understaffed, supplies have run dry, and vital HIV prevention programs like PrEP have been slowed. For communities like Mangochi, this will have devastating consequences. As it stands children are diagnosed with HIV without proper support, teenagers go without proper medication and some community members must travel to the capital to learn about basic sexual health information.
In the words of Mona Lisa, a resident of Malawi:
"Just a few days ago, I had a conversation with a 7-year-old girl who lives down the road. She has HIV, but she doesn’t want to take her HIV medications anymore. I didn’t know how to tell her she needs to keep taking her medications."
This is where you can help us make a difference....
2023 Prevalence of HIV in Malawi (2)
9th highest adult prevalence of HIV, prior to USAID cuts
7.6% of the population @ 980,000 people
Our Vision
We are a group of passionate student leaders at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI), working to establish RCSI’s first-ever student-led global health initiative. This work is supported by Ann Piercy, a native of Malawi and coordinator for HIV Ireland, in addition to global health experts Dr. Pittalis and Dr. Gajewski, who have experience leading groups such as SURG-Africa, COST-Africa, kidSURG and Akazi. Together we aim to support communities in Malawi while empowering students with ethical and immersive experiences in global health.
With your support, we are sending a group of RCSI students to Malawi this summer, 2026. These students will work closely with local hospitals, universities and community leaders. They will work with Malawi's most urgent public health challenges and maintain a foundation for for long-term collaboration.
This is just the beginning. Over the coming years we hope to develop a longterm program open to all RCSI students (medical, dental, physiotherapy, pharmacy and physician associates) offering education, fieldwork, and sustainable partnerships with Malawi-based institutions.
Why This Matters For Malawi
Students will assist operations at Mulibwanji Hospital by:
Supporting clinical tasks
Reducing staff workload
Assisting with hospital maintenance
Engaging in community outreach efforts
RCSI students will contribute to health universities in Malawi. This may include RCSI students...
Exchanging medical knowledge such as mental health first aid
Students may support projects including
Under-five clinics, providing preventative and curative care for children under the age of five.
Sustainable nutrition financing, targeting Malawi's triple burden of malnutrition (3)
Stunting affects 36% of children under five in Malawi
Micronutrient deficiencies, especially anemia, affect 30–33% of children, adolescents and women
Undernutrition and nutrition-related non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are rising and increasing mortality
Students will raise funds to support local medical needs, including:
General hospital supplies
Medications such as HIV PreP
Menstrual hygiene kits
Nutritional supplements (e.g., oral rehydration solutions)
Students may assist Dr. Jakub Gajewski and Dr. Chiara Pittalis with future iterations of the project and research, by collecting data to support public health efforts in Malawi.
Why This Matters For Students
Students will gain real-world global health experience through direct involvement in care and education
Students will collaborate with local medical students and professionals, fostering cross-cultural exchange
Students will participate in:
Project design
Data collection
Fundraising initiatives
On-the-ground implementation of health projects
Students will attend academic courses in Malawi to...
Learn about healthcare in Malawi
Develop an understanding of Malawi’s healthcare system
Students will learn essential skills in:
Ethical global health engagement
Cultural competency
Health system navigation in low-resource settings
Project Supervisors
Dr. Jakub Gajewski is the Director of the Research Programme of the RCSI Institute of Global Surgery. Recent work includes leading the COST-Africa study (2011-2016), which implemented on the-job-training of non-physician clinicians in Malawi and tested the supervision model for this cadre in Zambia.
Dr. Chiara Pittalis is a Senior Researcher at the RCSI Institute of Global Surgery. Dr. Pittalis is currently, the lead researcher in several projects covering a broad spectrum of issues - from breast cancer care (Akazi project, IRC-funded, €350k) to innovative ways to help rural health facilities adapt to the challenges posed by climate change (SURG-Water project, SFI-funded, €1.2m).
Ann Nyandovi Piercy is a Malawi native, CEO of the Unity and Trust Foundation, and a Project Manager for HIV Ireland's mobile testing unit. Previously, Ann served as a protection officer in UNHCR in Malawi. She is an active member of EATG and chairs in EATGs development and membership advisory group (DMAG) and sits in ID-CTNI CAB Ireland as a PPI contributor.
Contact rcsigmimalawi@gmail.com to get more information about the project