What does it mean to save a life?
This year, as global health funding shrank and conflict spread, millions were pushed into danger. At Muso, we stood firm for a simple truth: everyone deserves the right care at the right time.
In 2025 alone, In 2025, our team delivered life-saving care during more than 4.2 million visits across homes, clinics, and hospitals in Mali and Côte d’Ivoire. Every day, frontline health workers supported by Muso met mothers, children, and families whose resilience drives our mission and whose futures depend on access to care.
When you save a life, you don’t just save a moment - you unlock decades of possibility. Children grow into teachers, engineers, farmers, parents, leaders - even the next generation of health workers.
Now more than ever, we must ensure timely, quality care for all. Your support makes that possible.

Health is a human right.
Saving a life is only the beginning. When someone gets the care they need, they gain a lifetime of possibility.
Together, we must reignite and accelerate progress toward universal health care for all.
Right care. Right time. Right now.
Founded in 2005, Muso doesn’t just strengthen health systems, we transform them to end preventable deaths. 


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Muso champions equitable healthcare by providing quality, timely care, supporting national governments, and influencing policy and practice.
Our 1000+ team members across Mali, Côte d’Ivoire, Zambia, and the United States are united by the shared belief that no one should die waiting for healthcare. Research and decades of experience have taught us that these deaths aren’t caused by a lack of solutions – they happen because solutions are not reaching patients fast enough.
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BUILDING INCLUSIVE SYSTEMS THAT WORK FOR PATIENTS AND ACHIEVING RAPID RESULTS IS POSSIBLE, PRACTICAL AND PRESSING.
In communities where Muso works, we have witnessed:
69%
reduced odds of malnutrition in children under 5
Nearly 2/3
reduction in child mortality rates
5x
more likely for women to adopt a modern method of contraception
54%
increase in the likelihood of mothers giving birth in health facilities
90%
reduction in child mortality in our Malian flagship site
HOW DO WE WORK?
Support Professional Community Health Workers
Redesign and upgrade primary care clinics
through training, supervision and equipment – who conduct daily home visits, screening for sick children and women of reproductive age and treating patients in the community.
Extreme cases are referred to primary care clinics, where they receive care without paying out-of-pocket fees.
and provide training and mentorship to medical personnel to ensure the provision of quality care.
Conduct rigorous research
to find global solutions to global injustices - to identify what strategies work and how we can support government partners to scale them.
Collaborate with national government partners and local authorities
to implement Muso evidence-based recommendations and achieve changes in national policy and practices to advance towards universal health coverage.







