PATH Program

Primary health care

With help from a broad range of global and local partners, PATH works with national and subnational governments to reimagine primary health care (PHC) through a multi-disciplinary, person-centered approach that improves health and well-being for all.

What we do

Advancing person-centered care

Recognizing PHC as the critical pathway to achieving universal health coverage, PATH's primary health care program accelerates the development of multidisciplinary, high-performing primary health care services. Strong PHC is not only essential to accelerating progress toward health for all, it is also the world’s first and best line of defense against epidemics, pandemics, and health threats like antimicrobial resistance and climate change.

Partner with us.

Let's advance primary health care around the world.

By the numbers
A few results from 95 PHC projects that PATH has conducted across 50 countries:
12 k
displaced Ukrainians received medical examinations.
13 k
Vietnamese gained access to essential health services.
20 k
Ghanaians screened for hypertension during COVID-19 vaccination.
  1. Kimberly Green

    Global Program Director, Primary Health Care

  2. Muyiwa Tegbe

    Deputy Director, Primary Health Care

  3. Katharine Shelley

    Deputy Director, Integration & Metrics

  4. Amy Heyden

    Global Program Administrator, Reproductive Health

  5. Ashley Jackson, MSPH

    Team Lead, Sexual and Reproductive Health

  6. Debjeet Sen

    Early Child Development Team Lead

  7. Elizabeth Rowley

    Senior Global Advisor, Gender Programs and Research

  8. Helen McGuire, MHA

    Program Leader, Noncommunicable Diseases

  9. Johannes van Dam, MD, MSc

    Program Leader, HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis and Health Systems Innovation and Delivery

  10. Kiersten Israel-Ballard

    Maternal, Newborn, Child Health & Nutrition, Acting Team Lead

  11. Amy Dempsey

    Communications Officer, Programs and Innovation

38 Article s
  1. PoP-hero-Allen-N copy.jpg
    July 19, 2021

    In Uganda and beyond, Allen Namagembe is advancing access to contraception

    This biostatistician and health care leader is on a mission to ensure all women can access family planning services.

  2. Community volunteers screen a Co.opMart customer for hypertension.  Photo: PATH/Hung Nguyen Manh.
    June 14, 2021

    Bringing health screenings closer to communities in Vietnam

    How PATH and a beloved grocery store chain are increasing access to screenings for hypertension and diabetes.

  3. Dr. Ali Kitoko provides information to an interested customer on an HIV self-test at Pharmacie Binamet in Lubumbashi, Haut-Katanga. PATH/Raphael Mwamba.
    June 8, 2021

    Breaking down silos for better health care

    How PATH addresses long-standing health challenges like HIV by centering the whole individual and whole society.

  4. Aida (left) and Mame Fama Male (right in blue) are community health educators in Pikine, Senegal, who educate women about their family planning options. PATH/Gabe Bienczycki
    February 11, 2021

    People at the center: PHC at PATH

    PATH’s new Primary Health Care (PHC) program links expertise across essential health areas.

  5. RG451934-edit-2000px.jpg Tanzania healthcare workers working on mobile digital devices. Photo: PATH (BID/digital health via Hallie)
    August 30, 2019

    The key to better primary health care? Human-centered design

    Human-centered design is an approach to problem-solving that puts people first. Their needs, their constraints, their contexts and their perspectives. It focuses on users—not necessarily what designers, researchers, or others think users need.

  6. 23713 (1).jpeg Healthcare worker looks at smartphone.
    August 29, 2019

    3 ways governments can use data to strengthen people-centered primary health care

    People-centered primary health care puts people at the heart of the design and delivery of health services. Its chief aim: better health for all. How do we get there? Better information—and use of that information—to reduce the causes of poor health, provide patients with targeted diagnoses, and support people to take charge of their own health.