Strengthening primary healthcare

Delivering last-mile healthcare in Bangladesh through trusted community networks

The world’s biggest non-government community health provider

BRAC ensures millions of people living in poverty can access primary healthcare services, through a network of 100,000 women trained as community health workers. These women provide basic information and services in their own communities, and bridge the gap between people and facilities. The interventions span maternal and child health, communicable and non-communicable diseases, eye care, mental health, disability care, climate-responsive health services, and emergency response.


Advancing health

8M

accessed door to door health services

350,000+

women received antenatal care (ANC) in 2024

500,000+

people screened for non-communicable diseases (NCDs) including diabetes and hypertension in 2024

How can we tackle the world’s number one killer?

Impact at scale

In 2024, one in every four safe deliveries nationwide was supported by BRAC. 350,000 new mothers received antenatal care through 1.5 million services. Over 8 million people accessed health services and awareness initiatives. More than 313,000 TB cases were identified with a treatment success rate of 95% and 1.1 million people were screened for malaria with 100% treatment coverage. We also screened 500,000 people for non-communicable diseases, provided 2.2 million reading glasses for presbyopia, and supported over 13,000 people to receive cataract surgery.

Our community health workers are supported by a broader network of health professionals, such as midwives, paramedics and scientists, as well as an extensive system of health facilities, such as primary healthcare centres, maternity clinics in hard-to-reach areas and tuberculosis diagnostic centres. We create scalable solutions and work with the government and private providers to scale them up to achieve national and global health targets. Our approach focuses primarily on health promotion and prevention, but also works to create a culture of accessing healthcare support, and strengthens community capacity for long-term healthier lives.

A community health worker in the Rohingya refugee camp holds a happy refugee baby
My country, Bangladesh, has seen a health revolution in my lifetime. Maternal mortality has decreased by 75 percent since 1980, infant mortality has more than halved since 1990. Such rapid changes have almost no historical precedent.”

Sir Fazle Hasan Abed

Founder, BRAC