About Us

About Us

There is an appalling lack of cardiac care in Africa. Some of the poorest countries have no medical services for heart disease, while others may only have one national cardiac center in the entire country.

Understanding the Need for Care

Children and young adults are hardest hit by this lack of care, as they are the populations most affected by heart disease in low-income countries. They suffer mainly from congenital heart disease, and from rheumatic heart disease caused by untreated strep throat.

Many live with heart failure for years, too disabled to attend school or help their families with work at home. Many die young.

Thousands of these early deaths could be prevented. Today, treatment strategies exist that make cardiac care both accessible and affordable in developing countries. The will and expertise from developed countries are currently lacking, and fulfilling this need will help colleagues in Africa to begin this care and save countless lives.

What We Do

We were founded in 2021, with the mission of developing cardiovascular care systems in Africa, starting with the Northern Zone of Tanzania. We are currently supporting the planning and construction of a 125 bed cardiovascular center in this region.

We save lives by developing comprehensive heart programs in Africa, particularly for children and young adults living in poverty. We also join governments and global health leaders to advocate for measures that prevent rheumatic heart disease in children.

We support the development of plans to build, equip and operate cardiovascular facilities, including those required for patients who need complex treatment, such as open-heart surgery or treatment in a cath lab. We also support training for hospital administrators, allowing them to lead these cardiac centers at a professional level and plan for the future expansion of programs and facilities.

Key barriers to accessing cardiac care in Africa include a lack of local expertise required for planning the construction, financing and operation of a cardiac center, as well as a lack of training centers needed for cardiac clinical teams, including surgeons, cardiologists, interventional cardiologists, perfusionists, anesthesiologists, intensivists and cardiac ICU nurses. As we develop an initial plan for a new cardiac center in Northern Tanzania, we work with partners who can bring in clinical training expertise.
We plan to establish a long-term relationship with this Tanzanian cardiac center and to support development of two others in Africa. Our goal is to help three new or expanded cardiac centers become training centers for a new generation of cardiac professionals in Africa.

Who We Are

We save lives by developing heart care in Africa, especially for children and young adults living in poverty.

KCMC Planning Team leaders

drgileardmasenga
Dr. Gileard Masenga
Executive Director, KCMC
drsarahurasa
Dr. Sarah Urasa
Director of Hospital Services
drkajirugadkilonzo
Dr. Kajiru Gad Kilonzo
Planning Coordinator

Board of Directors

Wendy Bennett copy
Wendy Bennett
Consultant to foundations, focused on developing grantmaking strategies (retired). 10-year advisor to medical NGOs working in developing countries (partnerships, fundraising, communications)
John Knoedler copy
Dr. John Knoedler
Radiologist, Midwest Radiology (retired). 30+ year advisor to KCMC School of Radiology and Cancer Center
Mike Nelson photo copy
Dr. Mike Nelson
Emeritus Professor, Dept. of Radiology, University of Minnesota. 30+ year advisor to KCMC School of Radiology and Cancer Center
matt-borchardt
Matt Borchardt
Principal, Data Analytics, CliftonLarsonAllen, concentration in health industry
Carmelo-Panetta photo copy
Dr. Carmelo Panetta
Interventional Cardiologist, M Health Fairview St. Joseph's Hospital, Member of the Minnesota Chapter of the American College of Cardiology

Get In Touch

Do you have questions or comments for our team? Submit an inquiry using our contact form. We look forward to hearing from you!