Organizations Filed Purposes:
The Ihangane Project achieves lasting improvements in health outcomes, beginning in Rwanda, by promoting community-driven solutions that strengthen national health systems. The successful solutions we co-create with local communities are shared with the national government.
Clinical Care Innovation: The Ihangane Project works with local healthcare workers and the Rwanda Ministry of Health to improve the quality of direct patient care services by ensuring that frontline healthcare workers have the tools they need to successfully deliver primary healthcare. We have co-created tools such as E-Heza Data Solutions, the TIP Education Model and the 5 Pillars of Quality Improvement Framework alongside frontline healthcare workers to overcome barriers and celebrate improvements in processes and health outcomes. E-Heza is a point of care digital health record designed by and for the health care worker, used to improve quality of maternal-child care by making it easier for nurses to do their jobs, for mothers to track the wellbeing of their children, and for ministry officials to receive data in real-time.
NBA Program, Womens Association, Solar Power Project and Hope Initiative.Hope Initiative: The Ihangane Project is conducting research on the influence of hope on health outcomes. We began by identifying an objective tool for measurement, called the Herth Hope index. We worked with healthcare workers and healthcare recipients to ensure that this index- originally established in the United States- would be valid and reliable in the Rwandan context. We are conducting an in depth analysis of influencers of hopelessness and hopefulness in health care systems and will identify interventions based upon this analysis. Our first objective is to demonstrate the ability to increase hopefulness among healthcare workers and healthcare recipients. Ultimately, we will demonstrate that hopefulness is critical to improvements in health outcomes and that it must be considered in the design of effective health systems.
Aheza Fortified Food (AFF): provides consistent, affordable fortified porridge to hospitals, nongovernmental orgs, and community members while subsidizing the cost of free distribution to the highest risk children. Nutrition is an essential component of adequate primary care; health centers have long struggled with stock outs of fortified porridge and commercial products are often too expensive for rural families to access. AFF is a social enterprise established by TIP in 2015 to address stock outs of porridge needed to treat childhood malnutrition. Porridge is sold in bulk to NGOs, governments and social enterprises who then provide the porridge to their beneficiaries for free or low cost. Profits from Aheza sales subsidize the cost of free distribution of porridge to high risk children in Ruli. Since its launch in 2015, TIPs Aheza program has provided over 2.4 million servings of porridge to over 42,000 Rwandans, 92% of whom are high-risk for malnutrition.
Executives Listed on Filing
Total Salary includes financial earnings, benefits, and all related organization earnings listed on tax filing
| Name | Title | Hours Per Week | Total Salary |
| Wendy Leonard Md | Executive Director | 40 | $55,208 |
| Susan Stenovec | Director | 2 | $0 |
| Zachary Langway | Director | 2 | $0 |
| Kelly Mckenna | Director | 2 | $0 |
| Johans Rubens | Director | 2 | $0 |
| Jon Freeman | Director | 2 | $0 |
| Jean De Dieu Ngirabega | Director | 2 | $0 |
| Blakeley Lowry | Chair | 4 | $0 |
| Lindsey Struck | Secretary | 2 | $0 |
Data for this page was sourced from XML published by IRS (
public 990 form dataset) from:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/irs-form-990/202041789349301014_public.xml