Transform Health Fund (THF), a blended-finance fund targeting healthcare systems in Africa, has raised $111 million, through commercial, public, and private donor investments.
Notable fund investors include Royal Philips, the International Finance Corporation (IFC), Swedfund, the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), Proparco, Merck & Co., Inc., known as MSD outside of the United States and Canada, FSD Africa Investments, Grand Challenges Canada (with funding from Global Affairs Canada), Impact Assets Inc and the Global Health Investment Corporation (GHIC).
“Financing companies in Africa’s health sector through innovative financing models such as the Transform Health Fund is critical to address Africa’s health financing and capacity gaps,” said Ziad Oueslati, Founding Partner, AfricInvest. “By teaming up with private sector leaders, the Transform Health Fund has become a proven model for scaling locally led healthcare solutions across the continent.”
Ceniarth (the family office of Diane Isenberg), UBS Optimus Foundation, Skoll Foundation, Chemonics International, Anesvad Foundation, Netri Foundation and USAID also invested.
AfricInvest and The Health Finance Coalition (HFC) which manage THF said the $111 million exceeded its initial target of $100 million to expand its investment into locally led health supply chains, care delivery, and digital solutions in Africa, providing debt and mezzanine financing to scale proven high impact health enterprises serving vulnerable communities while offering risk-adjusted returns to investors.
The Transform Health Fund has already committed $20m in financing to Africa Healthcare Network (AHN), the largest dialysis chain across Sub-Saharan Africa, Lapaire Glasses, a network of more than 60 optical shops and Insta Products, a producer of ready-to-use therapeutic food for millions of malnourished children and mothers across sub-Saharan Africa.
The Transform Health Fund, publicly highlighted in December 2022 at the U.S.-Africa Leaders’ Summit in Washington, D.C., was established to address Africa’s massive health financing and capacity gaps.
While Sub-Saharan Africa is home to 14 percent of the global population and 20 percent of the global disease burden, just 1.6 percent of annual impact investments target the healthcare sector in Africa.
“The Transform Health Fund demonstrates that health enterprises serving the most vulnerable communities are in fact investible,” said Martin Edlund, CEO, Malaria No More and Executive Director of the Health Finance Coalition. “The context of static donor funding for health and unsustainable debt for African countries makes private investment in high-impact healthcare more important than ever.”