Community Health Visits
Trained local health workers visit children where they live, checking on growth, nutrition, and chronic conditions, and connecting families to clinics for anything beyond primary care.
Gondar, Ethiopia · Est. 2008
The Ethiopian Orphan Health Foundation provides community-based health care and education to orphans near Gondar, Ethiopia, helping children grow into healthy adults and strong members of their communities.
Our Mission
We believe every child deserves the chance to grow up healthy, learn to read, and live in a community that supports them. Orphaned children near Gondar face overlapping barriers: gaps in primary care, food insecurity, and interrupted schooling. Our work addresses all three at once.
Working hand-in-hand with local caregivers, teachers, and clinicians, we provide preventive health screenings, basic medical care, nutrition support, and school resources, designed to fit the realities of the children and families we serve.
Preventive care, screenings, immunizations, and treatment for common childhood illnesses.
School fees, supplies, tutoring, and mentorship so kids can stay in school and thrive.
Caregiver workshops, local partnerships, and family-style support networks.
Programs
Trained local health workers visit children where they live, checking on growth, nutrition, and chronic conditions, and connecting families to clinics for anything beyond primary care.
We cover the cost of school enrollment, uniforms, and supplies, and pair children with mentors who help them navigate their education.
Regular nutritional assessments and targeted food support for children identified as at-risk, in partnership with local providers.
Workshops for the guardians and community members who care for orphaned children every day, on first aid, hygiene, and child development.
Our Story
The Ethiopian Orphan Health Foundation was founded by Rishi Mediratta, then a Johns Hopkins undergraduate in Public Health, today a Clinical Professor of Pediatrics at Stanford. Rishi first traveled to Ethiopia in 2005, and what began as a community-based research project grew, over college and a gap year, into a nonprofit serving 91 orphans near Gondar.
The foundation has been shaped from day one by the people of Gondar. Local caregivers, teachers, and clinicians decide what the children need most; the foundation’s role is to make sure those needs are met.
Today the foundation continues to train health practitioners to care for vulnerable children in Ethiopia. In parallel, Dr. Mediratta continues to conduct research at the University of Gondar to improve child health outcomes, with the foundation and its research arm informing one another year after year.
“Throughout college and during my first gap year before medical school, I founded the Ethiopian Orphan Health Foundation, a nonprofit organization that provided community-based health care and education to 91 orphans near Gondar, Ethiopia.” Rishi Mediratta, Founder
Impact
Orphaned children served by the foundation since its founding.
The year Rishi’s work in Ethiopia began and the foundation’s roots were planted.
Years of continuous community-based pediatrics and public-health work in Gondar.
Our commitment to the children and families we serve.
Contact
For partnerships, press, research collaborations, or to learn more about the foundation’s work, the best path is through Dr. Mediratta directly.
Dr. Rishi Mediratta’s personal website. Bio, research, publications, and the story behind the foundation.
For media inquiries, speaking, or partnership opportunities, please reach out via the contact channels on the founder’s site.
Clinicians, researchers, and institutions interested in global child health, neonatal mortality, or provider training in low-resource settings.
About the mark
Two cupped hands form a heart, holding a small radiant sun above. The hands read as caregivers holding a child. The sun references the gold sunburst on Ethiopia’s flag, and the outer ring nods to the Meskel cross of Ethiopian Orthodox tradition.
The cardinal red carries forward the through-line between the foundation and Dr. Mediratta’s clinical and research home at Stanford.