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Ozzy Osbourne ‘knew he was ready’ to die after having strange dreams

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Ozzy Osbourne died on July 22 at the age of 76 just two weeks after performing his last ever gig with his heavy metal band Black Sabbath in his beloved Birmingham

Ozzy Osbourne’s wife Sharon said he ‘knew he was ready’ before he died(Image: WireImage)

Ozzy Osbourne’s widow Sharon has revealed the telling sign which meant Ozzy ‘knew he was ready’ to die.

Speaking in a new interview on Piers Morgan Uncensored, former X Factor judge Sharon, opened up about the last few days of husband Ozzy’s life and revealed he knew he was ‘ready’ to go.

She said: “He had told me that he was ­having dreams in the last week of his life. He was seeing people that he never knew. I said, ‘Well, what kind of ­people?’ He goes, ‘All different people. And I just keep walking and walking, and I’m seeing all these different people every night, and I go back there and I’m looking at these people, and they’re looking at me, and nobody’s talking’. And he knew. He was ready.”

READ MORE: Sharon Osbourne recalls moment she found Ozzy dead and final words he said to her

Sharon Osbourne and Ozzy Osbourne
Ozzy sadly passed away in July 2025 at the age of 76(Image: WireImage)

Sadly Ozzy died on July 22, 2025 at the age of 76 just two weeks after he performed with his band Black Sabbath for the final time in a homecoming gig in his beloved Birmingham on July 6.

It has since emerged that doctors warned Ozzy that if he took to the stage again his body wouldn’t withstand it. But he was determined to perform with his band one last time and did it anyway.

Sharon revealed: “When we came to England and we were meeting with new doctors here, a new medical team for him, the main doctor said to him, ‘If you do this show, that’s it. You’re not going to get through it’. But we just sat there, and he said, ‘I’m doing it. I want to do it, and I’m doing it’.”

Piers clarified: “So he knew that if he went ahead with the show, it would probably kill him. I don’t know how you feel given how painful it has been to lose him.” Breaking down in tears, Sharon said: “The main doctor said to him that if he did the show, ‘that’s it, you’re not gonna get through it. … He didn’t want to die on stage, he didn’t.”

Detailing his health issues, Sharon – who married Ozzy in 1982 – continued: “He knew his body was failing him. He was in so much pain, so much pain. And I mean, you know, he had pneumonia three times this year. He’d had sepsis.

“That’s what really, really destroyed him. He was on these shots of antibiotics. It used to take 20 minutes for the shot to go in, and he had that twice a day, and it kills everything in you, the good, the bad, everything. So much antibiotics, and he just couldn’t get over that. He just couldn’t.”

In the same interview, Sharon heartbreakingly revealed that she considered “going with Ozzy”, her husband of 43 years – and may have ended it all had it not been for their children Aimee, 42, Kelly, 41, and 40-year-old Jack – who is about to become a father again for the fifth time. While Kelly has a three-year-old son called Sidney with Slip Knot star Sid Wilson, who proposed to Kelly in front of Ozzy at his farewell gig.

Jack was also proudly able to share his baby news with his late father before he died. It’s his second child with second wife Aree Gearhart. The couple already share three-year-old daughter Maple. He also has three children from his previous marriage to Lisa Stelly – Pearl, 13, Andy, 10, and seven-year-old Minnie.

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In a recent interview following his exit from I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here, Jack said: “It’s awesome. We’re super-excited. It was sort of planned, I should say. It was maybe a little earlier than expected. But it’s definitely something that we were wanting to pursue and somehow it happened, miraculously.”

“I think it’s been partly a healthy distraction, partly healing — probably in that kind of ‘full cycle’ category, in a weird way. It’s very much taken energy out of the grieving side of things and parked in a bit more hopefulness,” he told The Sun on Sunday.

READ MORE: Ted Baker necklace that’s an affordable alternative to Kate Middleton’s pearl jewellery is on sale

Heartbroken Holly Hagan shares new details about sister’s death and ‘weird’ twist

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Opening up about her tragic sisters death, Geordie Shore star Holly Hagan has shared the details of her death and the ‘brave’ decision her family made in the hospital

The star has opened up about what happened after her sister’s death(Image: We Need To Talk/Youtube)

Holly Hagan has shared new heartbreaking details about her sister’s death from an accidental drug overdose aged just 19.

Darci died after taking crystal MDMA in a Manchester nightclub. She was partying with friends when she poured the powdered MDMA into her drink – and was unaware of how much she had consumed. She then fell ill and was “apologising for ruining everyone’s night” but recovered enough to go back to the dance floor and take videos.

But Holly then said Darci started getting “really paranoid” and stopped recognising people before screaming and collapsing. She suffered a cardiac arrest followed by multiple organ failure.

Recalling the moment Darci passed away in hospital, the 33-year-old said it was the “worst day of our lives”.

READ MORE: Holly Hagan reveals text she wished she sent her sister on night of tragic drug deathREAD MORE: Heartbroken Holly Hagan says she’s plagued with guilt over sister Darci’s death at 19

Holly Hagan details seeing her sister in hospital hours before her death
Holly Hagan shared details of what happened after her sister Darci’s death(Image: hollyhaganblyth/Instagram)

However, she added that ‘something good’ came of their loss after they family donated her heart and helped save the life of a stranger. Speaking with Paul C. Brunson on his podcast We Need To Talk, the Geordie Shore star described it as a “selfish decision”, explaining that they wanted her life to “mean something” and say that she’d saved a life.

She said: “We wanted her to have achieved this, and for us to feel better because of it. I found out by letter, three weeks later, that she did save a life, and that she saved the life of a woman.”

The star said it was “such an honour” and added: “As awful as the situation was, I’m so proud of her and she’s achieved more in her short 19 years than many others will achieve. And I’m so happy that the day that that woman got that call will have been the happiest day of her life. And it was the worst day of ours. But something good came of it. And someone’s children didn’t have to lose their parent.”

Holly, who is pregnant with her second child, then shared the “weirdest” part about the organ donation. “Darci had a tattoo under her ribs here, so on her heart, and it said, ‘live where your heart finds life.’ And that’s such a strange tattoo for a 19-year-old to get. Live where your heart finds life. And that was the only organ that she was able to donate,” she said.

Darci died at the age of 19 in October this year
Darci died at the age of 19 in October this year(Image: hollyhaganblyth/Instagram)

She now hopes her younger sister is hopefully “living where her heart has found life” but still “cannot accept that she’s gone”. Calling the drug overdose a “silly mistake”, she said that her sister was not “reckless”. Recalling the fight to save her life, she previously said: “She [went] into cardiac arrest. They’ve got her back within a minute. Got straight in the ambulance and on the way to Manchester Royal Infirmary. She was there in probably less than seven minutes, very quick.

“She went into cardiac arrest again in A&E, but they got her back with chest compressions. And then at that point obviously they’re realising her temperature’s sky high, her muscles are all spasming, which releases potassium, sodium, all of the stuff. Her kidneys are being poisoned.

“So all of that stuff is happening behind the scenes while they’re just trying to keep her alive. So they’ve cooled her, they’ve put her on dialysis, she’s got all the tubes. And obviously at this point, I don’t know any of this.” She then said her phone had been on silent so hadn’t got to the hospital until the early hours of the morning but said: “I don’t think I will ever be able to wipe the screams of my mother from my brain.”

Holly was incredibly close to her sister and told her followers and opened up about a ‘red flag’ before Darci’s death. Saying she wished she had reached out to Darci before she went to clubbing at the Warehouse Project, she added: “For some reason that night and I don’t know why I didn’t, I wish I had messaged her, because we know what Warehouse Project is.

“I don’t know why I didn’t think to message her to say what you doing tonight, let me know what you’re doing tonight, let me help guide you. Because for some reason this night she decided to order, not a pill, but powdered MDMA. And as far as everyone knows and talking to her friends, this is the first time she’d ever taken it.

“She went out this night and she had one alcoholic drink and then from what her friends said she poured an amount from the bag into her drink.”

Praising the paramedics for getting Darci to Manchester Infirmary as quickly as possible, Holly revealed her heartbreaking last moments with her little sister.

“To see my sister, just 19, lying in that ward was absolutely horrendous,” the heartbroken sister told the Daily Mail. “I opened the curtain, and I have never seen anything like that in my life. I hope no parent or sibling ever has to see anything like that.

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“She had tubes in her nose, in her mouth, she had bruises everywhere from where they had cannulas wherever they could put a cannula, she had tubes, needles in her neck, she had blood pouring out of her nose.”

Royal Family LIVE: Meghan Markle contacts dad after ‘exceedingly difficult’ task

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After several days of attempting to get in contact with her seriously-ill father, as he remains in hospital in the Philippines after undergoing a major operation, Meghan Markle has successfully reached out to her dad.

A spokesperson for the Duchess of Sussex said: “With the support of reliable and trusted contacts, her correspondence is now safely in his hands,” adding: “It has been exceedingly difficult for the Duchess to contact her father privately, despite her efforts over the past several days.”

Meghan’s representative added that she found it difficult to get in touch with her dad, Thomas Markle Snr, due to publications “remaining at her father’s bedside”, as she hoped to keep their correspondence private.

The Duchess of Sussex was previously unable to confirm which hospital her father was being treated in, resulting in personally made phone calls to hospitals in the Philippines in an urgent bid to establish the hospital logo seen in photographs on her father’s hospital gown.

Meghan has not had any contact with her father since her wedding to Prince Harry in May 2018. Before the couple tied the knot in their fairytale wedding in Windsor, there was tension brewing between the Duchess and her father as he was caught staging paparazzi photos in the run-up to the big day. Mr Markle then suffered a heart attack and did not attend the wedding, with King Charles stepping in at the last minute to walk Meghan down the aisle.

Meghan’s 81-year-old father was reportedly rushed to hospital in early December after his foot “turned black” from a blood clot in his leg. According to Thomas’ younger son and Meghan’s half-brother Thomas Jnr, Mr Markle underwent a below the knee amputation of his left leg in a hospital in Cebu, Philippines.

‘King Charles hired me for royal event and I couldn’t believe what he told me’

A chef who was hired by King Charles for a huge royal event says he was “blown away” by one conversation with the monarch.

Francesco Mazzei worked alongside beloved actor Stanley Tucci to create the menu for an exclusive black-tie banquet, held at the King’s private residence at Highgrove. Guests included the Beckhams, Dame Helen Mirren, and Donatella Versace.

In a new interview, Francesco revealed the conversation with Charles which left him amazed.

Read the full story here

King Charles (Anadolu via Getty Images)

‘I met Prince William at homeless charity event – it’s clear he genuinely cares’

A young woman who met the Prince of Wales at a youth homelessness charity event has opened up about the special moment, saying: “He genuinely cares.”

Ellie, who became homeless aged 17, was pictured chatting to William during his visit to Centrepoint’s new east London offices on Tuesday. She told the Mirror: “It was an amazing experience meeting William. He was really kind and willing to have a conversation with everyone which was lovely.

William marked two decades as Centrepoint’s figurehead by paying a visit to the charity’s new offices in Whitechapel, east London. He added the finishing touches to a mural and praised staff for how much they’ve “achieved” in 20 years.

Read the full story here

Ellie (middle left) spoke to William at Centrepoint’s east London HQ (Eddie Mulholland for The Telegraph)

‘Living Nostradamus’ predicts what happens next in Prince Harry and William feud

Athos Salome, a psychic often dubbed the “Living Nostradamus” by UK press, has made a series of predictions earlier this year about the ongoing rift between Prince William and Prince Harry, as well as other future events concerning the Royal Family.

The 38 year old Brazilian clairvoyant claims to have successfully predicted significant global happenings, including the Covid-19 pandemic, the passing of Queen Elizabeth II, and Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter.

Now, he foresees a major event within the Royal Family – potentially related to the health of a prominent member – occurring between the end of 2025 and the start of 2026.

Read the full story here

Prince William and Prince Harry (In Pictures via Getty Images)

Royal news you might’ve missed

A royal expert has claimed that Prince Harry “deserves our protection” as his UK security entitlements are set to be reviewed, adding that police protection in his home country could pave the way to a reconciliation between the Sussexes and the Royal Family.

Prince William visited homelessness charity Centrepoint to mark 20 years of his patronage, which he was introduced to by his late mother, Princess Diana. The Prince of Wales met with staff and and young people who have been supported by the charity, before being presented with a huge cake.

Meghan Markle has been named “villain of the year” in a scathing attack by a luxury boutique in Los Angeles. The Duchess of Sussex was just one of many names who featured in a controversial window display, in which she was branded a ‘Montecito diva’.

Dame Barbara Windsor’s widower ‘really hurt’ by backlash over new EastEnders romance

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As Barbara Windsor’s widower, Scott Mitchell reflects on the incredible life and legacy of his late wife, he reveals sadly that not everyone was happy for him when he found love again

Scott found love again after losing Barbara – but will never forget her(Image: Getty Images)

On the fifth anniversary of the iconic star’s death, Barbara Windsor’s widower, acting agent Scott Mitchell, has revealed that sadly, when he found love again, not everyone was happy for him.

The 62-year-old dementia campaigner revealed during an exclusive chat with the Mirror that after going public last year on his romance with former EastEnders star Tanya Frank, 58, who played Rainie Cross in the soap, some nasty keyboard warriors just had to have their say.

He said, “There’s always that person that says, ‘That was quick’. It’s easy to sit on the sidelines and cast judgement – especially with social media. These people forget that their words can really hurt.”

READ MORE: ‘I tested Christmas dinner boxes from Aldi, Iceland, and Sainsbury’s – there’s one clear winner’

Scott mitchell and tanya franks
Scott admitted there’s always someone to comment ‘That was quick!’ when you move on(Image: Ken McKay/ITV/REX/Shutterstock)
Scott Mitchell and Tanya Franks with London Marathon medals in hand on Sunday April 28 2019
Scott and Tanya first became friends as they trained for the London marathon as part of ‘Bab’s Army’(Image: NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Opening up on his ‘wonderful’ relationship with Tanya, Scott said that she is very accepting of what a huge presence Barbara still is in his life – and has her own vested interest in dementia awareness, after her step-father Derek died of the devastating disease last year, following an 11-year battle.

Scott said: “Tanya allows me to talk about Barbara any time I need to. In the same way she can with me. I’m never second-guessing if the moment’s right. If I thought any of it hurt her, I wouldn’t do it.”

Tanya also often accompanies Scott to his regular talks about the lived experience of caring for someone with Alzheimer’s. He said, “The first thing I do is introduce Tanya and say, ‘Before we start I’d like to acknowledge my partner Tanya is here – and thank her for allowing me to share my story.”

He also confessed that, though their time on EastEnders didn’t cross, Barbara ‘liked’ Tanya when they met – as she knew her stuff when it came to the acting world. “The team used to come to our house,” explained Scott, “and Tanya and Barbara got on really well. Barbara liked Tanya – she’d say, ‘She asks sensible questions about acting!’

“Tanya wanted to know all about theatre director Joan Littlewood, she knew her stuff and that meant a lot to Barbara. It was lovely that they did meet.”

Scott and Tanya became friends as they worked together and ran the London Marathon, along with other EastEnders colleagues, later as part of ‘Bab’s Army’, before their friendship some years on, blossomed into love. He revealed that the pair will be spending Christmas together with their families – but won’t forget those that are missing, admitting, “There are always empty chairs at Christmas. And we will be remembering our loved ones – as it should be.”

Elsewhere, Scott praised the amazing legacy of his late wife, as he remembered her at her best. “Certain people truly earn the title of national treasure – Barbara was one of them. But for me, I’ll simply remember how she was, how loving she was with me. She made me laugh so much – she was true to herself, honest about her flaws and her past.

“She taught me a lot about getting rid of ego – I wasn’t as good at that in my younger days. People laughed when we first got together, but we lasted the course – it was unconditional love.”

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He added, “It took us forever to go anywhere, she’d talk to everyone. It was like walking down the street with Tinkerbell. She loved other people and their stories – she would sprinkle her special fairy dust on everyone.”

‘Possible rise in maternal deaths’: How USAID cuts strand Malawi’s mothers

Mulanje and Lilongwe, Malawi — Ireen Makata sits in her white nursing uniform on a weathered bench at a health post in Malawi’s southern Mulanje district.

The facility is one of 13 in the district, located within a seminomadic, predominantly agricultural community 65km (40 miles) east of Blantyre, Malawi’s commercial capital, near the Mulanje mountain range.

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The beige-painted facility stands out from the dozens of huts around it made of red bricks, with straw roofs. To the right of the main entrance is a supply room with diminishing medical supplies. On the other side is an ambulance that Makata says is now rarely used.

Health posts like this were set up to serve remote communities and alleviate pressure on district hospitals. They were crucial in providing communities with basic healthcare, antenatal care, family planning and vaccines.

The clinic in Mulanje used to see dozens of women a day, providing maternal care, including helping women give birth, dispensing medicines and, when needed, transport to the hospital. But now, since funds were cut, it is open only around once every two weeks, stretching its supplies for as long as it can and unable to regularly transport visiting healthcare workers.

Health posts like this are facing closure – 20 have already shuttered in the country – due to the Trump administration cutting United States Agency for International Development (USAID) funding in February. This is forcing the country’s health system to withdraw critical services, placing further stress on hospitals, and leaving thousands of women and children without needed care in a region burdened by poverty and long distances to hospitals.

Makata, a nursing officer specialising in maternal and newborn care, usually based at the district hospital, says she used to visit the post two or three times a week. Now she rarely comes and no longer sees most of the patients she used to care for.

“Most of the women who relied on this post now find the distance to access a district hospital too far,” she tells Al Jazeera.

It would take a large chunk of a day, travelling on the bumpy dirt roads of Mulanje district, to reach one. That long visit “takes them away from their day-to-day activities, which bring income or food to their table,” she explains.

Many cannot afford to do that and now go without care.

“They are failing to get the ideal treatment for antenatal care services, especially during the first trimester of pregnancy,” Makata says.

Ireen Makata, a nursing officer and safe motherhood coordinator at Musa Community Health Post in Mulanje [Imran-Ullah Khan/Al Jazeera]

‘Baby and mother in jeopardy’

USAID funding was all-encompassing. It funded remote medical outposts, covering everything from the training of new staff and the provision of drugs and supplies for pregnant women to petrol for ambulances.

The US government provided close to 32 percent of Malawi’s total health budget before the cuts.

USAID funded the health posts through a programme called MOMENTUM in 14 of Malawi’s 28 districts, starting in 2022, helping strengthen existing clinics and set up new ones. As of 2024, there were 249 posts. The programme also provided medical outreach to communities and equipment. About $80m was being invested in the programme by Washington.

Early this year, US President Donald Trump issued stop-work orders on USAID-funded programmes as part of an executive order to pause and re-evaluate foreign aid.

With that move, MOMENTUM was shelved, and the two dozen mobile posts were shuttered as a result. Medical trainees were left in limbo, and life-saving equipment was sold off in fire sales by Washington.

The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) still provides technical and financial support to several remote districts for maternal and newborn health, but the available resources are not enough to cover the sites funded by MOMENTUM. There are fears that the UNFPA sites will run out of resources and supplies in the coming months.

In the wake of Trump’s funding cuts, health experts in Malawi have raised urgent concerns that new mothers and children will face the greatest impact, with many lives potentially lost as a result.

Makata has set up a WhatsApp group for women to contact her with concerns and questions, but she is frustrated that she cannot work as she used to.

“We would go to where people resided and give them permanent and long-term care,” she says, referring to the posts. “It’s not easy for me to see this. We can’t help those who need the services the most.”

Massitive Matekenya, a community leader for the Musa community in Mulanje district, dressed in a black blazer and oversized chequered-green tie, is at the vacant Mulanje health post.

These days, he says, it is hard to put on a brave face for the people he represents.

“Women in our community are now giving birth on the way to the district hospital since it’s such a long distance away,” says Matekenya. “That puts baby and mother in jeopardy with the potential of the mother bleeding out.”

Matekenya struggles to boost morale as he is constantly faced with community anger over the fact that medical outreach has ended.

He says a 40-year-old woman from his community recently died from malaria. “She had no quick referral to the nearest health facility due to issues of transport,” Matekenya says, noting that the community reached out to a politician but that his assistance came too late.

“I’m worried,” he says. “With family planning services not being offered any more, we are expecting to see a spike in pregnancies, and we are anticipating a possible rise in maternal deaths.”

Malawi
Female patients recovering or awaiting treatment for obstetric fistula at the Bwaila Fistula Centre in Lilongwe [Imran-Ullah Khan/Al Jazeera]

Impact on fistula care

In a health clinic in Malawi’s capital, Lilongwe, a woman dressed in black with a golden brooch shuffles from hall to hall. Margaret Moyo is tending to her daily responsibilities as head coordinator at the Bwaila Fistula Centre.

Obstetric fistula occurs when a hole between the birth canal and bladder or rectum is formed during an obstructed and extended labour. Women who do not receive medical treatment can be left incontinent.

Beyond the physical pain, women suffering from obstetric fistula also face social stigma due to the constant leaking and are often ostracised from their communities.

The Bwaila Fistula Centre receives more than 400 patients a year from all over the country, as well as from districts in neighbouring Mozambique. It has 45 beds, one doctor and 14 specialised nurses, and some 30 patients were at the centre when Al Jazeera visited in August.

With fewer resources, individuals will not be seen as often during pregnancy, which could lead to undetected maternal health issues, including more cases of fistula, Moyo argues. She is also concerned that conversations around prevention and education will take a backseat.

“The focus should be on training midwives, access to care and education to delay pregnancy in younger women since they are often most at risk of fistula,” says Moyo.

Before the USAID cuts, Malawi’s government had already forecast a $23m shortfall for reproductive, maternal, and newborn health funding for 2025 owing to drops in foreign aid.

Malawi
Margaret Moyo, head coordinator at the Bwaila Fistula Centre in Lilongwe [Imran-Ullah Khan/Al Jazeera]

‘I am able to help them’

For the past five years, Moyo has been running what she calls an “ambassador” programme at her facility. Patients who undergo successful fistula repair and are reintegrated into their communities are trained and sent out into their communities.

So far, 120 fistula survivors have become patient ambassadors who educate through community outreach to bring in new patients for treatment.

One such ambassador is Alefa Jeffrey. Wearing a grey “Freedom from Fistula Foundation” T-shirt, the 36-year-old mother of four crosses her arms and gazes towards the floor as she talks about being ostracised after she gave birth and developed a fistula.

“I wasn’t allowed to go to church because the other girls made fun of me and said I smelled bad because I was leaking urine and stool,” she says. “My family told me to go to a traditional healer, but he wasn’t able to help.”

Jeffrey could deal with the physical pain, but she was tormented by the negative interactions with friends and family.

“I got used to dealing with fistula, but it was what people were saying that was giving me the most pain,” recounts Jeffrey, who says she even contemplated suicide.

But she also started looking for answers, asking the traditional healer and then eventually meeting an ambassador who came to her community to speak to women.

Having successfully undergone treatment, involving surgery and follow-up patient and educational care, Jeffrey now advocates for fistula education.

She has set up a WhatsApp group for people to chat with her for information about the condition. She has also brought in 39 mothers from her community to the clinic.

“I’m an expert now. I’m able to convince people to come, which isn’t easy,” says Jeffrey. “Some women have lived with a fistula for so long they don’t believe they can be repaired, and they have already given up, but I am able to help them.”

Malawi
Patients await treatment for various ailments at the Nsanje District Hospital [Imran-Ullah Khan/Al Jazeera]

Lessons from the past: ‘We didn’t panic’

Although health experts are worried about the future of a system without USAID in a country where more than 70 percent of the population lives below the poverty line, government leaders say they have been there before.

Back in 2017, during his first presidency, Trump halted funding for the UNFPA and several groups that provided family planning. Malawi’s government approached NGOs and other countries to alleviate the gaps in funding.

Through community and grassroots innovations, they believe they can weather the storm again.

“We didn’t panic when we heard about the USAID cuts,” says Dr Samson Mndolo, Malawi’s secretary of health. “Instead, we looked at how to be more efficient and get more services for our money.

“We looked at areas where we could maximise resources, so for example if an officer goes to a community to do immunisations, they can now provide family planning services in the same trip too.”

Sitting in his office in the Lilongwe City Council building behind an organised desk, Mndolo discusses the challenges.

“As soon as the stop-work orders came out, we lost close to 5,000 health workers. The majority of these are what we call HIV diagnostic assistants,” he says, referring to the fallout from the USAID cuts. “We are looking now to push towards a health system that is more community-based and not necessarily hospital-based.” In such a system, doctors and health workers from central hospitals would be dispatched more to remote communities, and regular community outreach would become part of their remit, requiring them to perform a wider array of services.

Mndolo and his colleagues are setting up online initiatives and WhatsApp chat groups to field questions from remote patients. He remains optimistic about Malawi’s health system and says the worst thing the country can do now is to lose hope.

“Each crisis is an opportunity. This gives us a chance to strengthen the system and retrain our workforce and digital health systems,” he says.

“We are not naive. This will take some time, but once we get a hold of that as a nation, we can be better with time; that is the opportunity that is there for us.”

Despite such reassurance, those in remote communities say they feel isolated.

Tendai Kausi, a 22-year-old mother from the Musa community in the Mulanje district, still goes to the remote health post for help with her four-year-old son, Saxton. But because of the cuts and closures, many women from her community do not, and she has seen new mothers carry pregnancies in their isolated villages – far from healthcare and without routine checks.

“This is not good for the development of our country,” she says.

“My child will be affected because the services here will not get better,” Kausi says. “I feel very sad for my community.”

Malawi
Patients at the Bwaila Fistula Centre [Imran-Ullah Khan/Al Jazeera]