Exactly one year since a sharp drop in international funding, Malawi’s public health system is in severe decline. The reduction has reversed years of progress against HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis, leaving millions at risk.
Rural Clinics Shut Down
The Family Planning Association of Malawi (FPAM) has closed its mobile outreach services that once reached remote villages. These units were the only medical access for many communities.
Without these services:
- Early and unplanned pregnancies have risen sharply
- Teenage girls are dropping out of school in large numbers
Local resident Maureen Maseko said: “In my village alone, I know 25 girls who got pregnant once the clinics disappeared.”
HIV Treatment at Breaking Point
Malawi has over one million people living with HIV. International programs like PEPFAR used to cover 60% of treatment costs. Now, patients are flooding under-resourced public hospitals, where:
- Stigma and verbal abuse are common
- Antiretroviral drugs are often unavailable
- Patients feel abandoned and hopeless
One person from Mzuzu described the change as a “death sentence” after facing humiliation at a government clinic.
Global Pattern of Regression
The situation in Malawi reflects a worldwide trend. Experts warn that cutting major aid programs has already led to hundreds of thousands of preventable deaths globally, with children hit hardest.
Without urgent new funding and support, health gains made over the past two decades could be lost, returning to levels last seen 20 years ago.