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CURE has a comprehensive approach to providing surgical care for children with disabilities. We support their families and strengthen the capacity of local church and healthcare systems in the countries we serve.

CURE Children’s Hospitals

CURE International is a global nonprofit network of children’s hospitals providing surgical care in a compassionate, gospel-centered environment. Services are provided at no cost to families because of the generosity of donors and partners like you.

About CURE

Motivated by our Christian identity, CURE operates a global network of children’s hospitals that provides life-changing surgical care to children living with disabilities.

CURE Overview

CURE International is a global nonprofit network of children’s hospitals providing surgical care in a compassionate, gospel-centered environment. Services are provided at no cost to families because of the generosity of donors and partners like you.

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Dr. Moyo: A Congolese Clubfoot Champion

Change Makers | 10 November 2023

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Dr. Cyril Ilho Moyo understands the weight of living with a disability. He’s carried it.

Dr. Moyo grew up with a young cousin who had clubfoot. He carried his cousin to school because, in rural areas of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), a disability puts everything in jeopardy—education, livelihood, survival.

“In the village, running is life,” Dr. Moyo says. “Running to get water. Running to get food. Running to get to school. So, any deformity impairing your mobility is a problem.”

Dr. Moyo recalls his family’s fruitless search to find a mission hospital equipped to provide treatment. “I experienced with [my cousin] the stigma, the pain, and the desperation,” he says.

Perhaps this is why at school, Dr. Moyo became drawn to fixing—and restoring—broken things. He thought he might become a mechanic. “God has made me like a mechanic,” he says. “But instead of repairing metal, I am repairing bones.”

Generous donors to CURE make it possible for Dr. Moyo to help thousands of kids kick

 

From Congo to CURE

The path to becoming an orthopedic surgeon in one of the most under- resourced regions of the world is so limited that Zambia has only 1.1 surgical specialists per 100,000 people. (For comparison, the United States has 54.)

Dr. Moyo believes God orchestrated his footsteps, which led him to study orthopedics and trauma surgery at Uganda’s Makerere University, around the world for fellowships, and then to work with CURE.

Dr. Moyo changes lives for children like Dorcas. After successful surgery to treat her clubfoot, she is walking into a bright future!

After training and serving with CURE’s hospitals in Niger and Uganda, Dr. Moyo now serves as an orthopedic surgeon at CURE Zambia. Generous support from partners like you makes it possible for him to perform the orthopedic surgeries that restore mobility—and hope—to children with treatable disabilities like Dorcas.

She was born with clubfoot, a condition that kept her from school and made walking difficult and painful. After two successful surgeries, Dorcas’s feet are straight and she’s walking into a bright future.

Training to Multiply Impact

Because there are hundreds of thousands more children with treatable disabilities like Dorcas throughout Zambia, Dr. Moyo helps train approximately four orthopedic surgeons each year.

Dr. Moyo (right) performs hundreds of surgeries annually at CURE Zambia.

He says, “We train more people because as much as we try our best to cover the whole country, we can’t. So, empowering others to do the same work is a blessing to the whole nation.”

Dr. Moyo’s impact extends beyond Zambia— back to the DRC —where he eventually returned to surgically correct his cousin’s clubfoot. Today, that cousin is a successful lawyer.

Dr. Moyo now realizes that, from the beginning, God always intended for him to mend things, to model the gospel by redeeming what’s broken. He says, “When I look back, I say, ‘God knew who He wanted me to be, and I’m just a servant for His service.’”

CURE is grateful for the generous partners around the world who make it possible for surgeons like Dr. Moyo to provide surgeries that restore the mobility children need to run, walk, and play!

Learn how CURE provides surgical care to the most vulnerable children around the world.

 Surgical Specialist Workforce (per 100,000 population) – United States, Zambia,” The World Bank, October 9, 2023, https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SH.MED.SAOP.P5?locations=US-ZM

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