Faith-based organizations Lutheran World Relief and IMA World Health join forces

International faith-based NGOs’ complementary work in public health, rural livelihoods and emergency relief expands global reach and impact BALTIMORE — International faith-based humanitarian organizations Lutheran World Relief and IMA World Health today announced they are combining operations to dramatically increase their impact on breaking the cycle of poverty and promoting healthier families and communities throughout […]

International faith-based NGOs’ complementary work in public health, rural livelihoods and emergency relief expands global reach and impact

BALTIMORE — International faith-based humanitarian organizations Lutheran World Relief and IMA World Health today announced they are combining operations to dramatically increase their impact on breaking the cycle of poverty and promoting healthier families and communities throughout the world.

Lutheran World Relief, based in Baltimore, and IMA World Health, a faith-based public health agency headquartered in Washington, D.C., integrated January 1 with a single CEO, leadership team and staff, and identical boards of directors.


The combined organization mobilizes a joint staff of 550 people in 21 countries around the world.

Ambassador Daniel V. Speckhard, president and CEO of Lutheran World Relief, will lead the unified organization. Rick Santos, who served as CEO at IMA World Health for the past nine years, will serve as a senior advisor for the transition.

The move is a natural evolution for Lutheran World Relief and IMA World Health, which have worked together for more than half a century. IMA World Health was founded in 1960 by a coalition of faith-based organizations, including Lutheran World Relief, to provide medical supplies to the world’s poorest populations. Over the years, IMA World Health has provided $75 million in medical-related materials to various Lutheran organizations and has evolved to become a comprehensive public health agency.

In addition to our ongoing work serving more than 35 million people around the world, the combined agency is expanding programs to improve water and sanitation and thwart cholera in Haiti, prevent the spread of Ebola along the Ugandan-Congolese border, and provide treatment for pediatric and cervical cancer in Tanzania.

The two organizations’ financial strength and complementary work in public health, rural livelihoods and emergency relief greatly extends the unified agency’s reach throughout the world, Speckhard said.

“We’re making this historic move to better serve the world’s most vulnerable communities,” he said. “We will have a much greater impact together than we ever could have apart in the goal of ending extreme poverty and hunger and building healthy communities.”


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Contact

John Rivera
[email protected]
(443) 604-2918

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