
"Capacity building" and mutual learning for a more stable healthcare system in Tanzania
The USB supports projects in Tanzania so that people with HIV can get the treatment they need. Our infectiologist Prof. Maja Weisser Rohacek is right in the middle of it all. She admires the inventive spirit shown by the people in the East African country.

Many people in Tanzania are very innovative and make the best of their situation.
What Weisser Rohacek has learned in Tanzania is the flexibility to adapt to situations. Especially in rural areas, where supply and funding are a problem, this ability to innovate - independently of government programs - often leads to creative solutions. "My takeaway from this is that changes can also be supported by society. That's something we can also learn for our healthcare system."
Many people in Tanzania are very innovative and make the best of their situation.
What Weisser Rohacek has learned in Tanzania is the flexibility to adapt to situations. Especially in rural areas, where supply and funding are a problem, this ability to innovate - independently of government programs - often leads to creative solutions. "My takeaway from this is that changes can also be supported by society. That's something we can also learn for our healthcare system."
Many people in Tanzania are very innovative and make the best of their situation.
What Weisser Rohacek has learned in Tanzania is the flexibility to adapt to situations. Especially in rural areas, where supply and funding are a problem, this ability to innovate - independently of government programs - often leads to creative solutions. "My takeaway from this is that changes can also be supported by society. That's something we can also learn for our healthcare system."


Many people in Tanzania are very innovative and make the best of their situation.
What Weisser Rohacek has learned in Tanzania is the flexibility to adapt to situations. Especially in rural areas, where supply and funding are a problem, this ability to innovate - independently of government programs - often leads to creative solutions. "My takeaway from this is that changes can also be supported by society. That's something we can also learn for our healthcare system."