Center for Clinical Care and Clinical Research is a non-profit organization that promotes best practices in health care delivery, medical training and research using locally-adapted models of health systems strengthening.
We are a non-profit organization that promotes best practices in healthcare service delivery, medical training, and research using locally adapted models of health systems strengthening. The various projects that we have successfully implemented across the country, including the 5 that are ongoing in 11 states, have made us a leading organization in clinical care and clinical research since our establishment in 2010.
We exist to address health and social service needs through partnership and innovations that improve quality of life across borders.
To achieve health equity for all.
Our guiding philosophy is to provide best possible care solutions for each client, magnifying same approach to reach many more in reaching public health goals.
We offer a wide ranges of services that cut across various aspects of
health service delivery. Some of these services include:
HIV Testing and Counseling, HIV Care and Treatment, Orphans and Vulnerable Children's (OVC) Program.
Through its capacity building project awards, CCCRN has established a web based platform to provide virtual capacity building opportunities for health care work force.
Capacity Building for frontline Health workers, Laboratories and broad diagnostic strengthening.
Vaccine Management, Tuberculosis and Antiretroviral commodity Management, Product and Supply Management Technical Working Group (PSM TWG), Maturity Model Assessment.
Technology Applications for Strategic Information, Monitoring and Evaluation, Quality Improvement.
CCCRN has implemented clinical and operational research activities funded through CDC, NIH, Clinton Health Access Initiatives, GEANCO and other private streams.
Our Core Values embody who we are as an organization, and guide our thinking and
activities as we strive to impact the communities we work.
Our core values embody who we are as an organization, and guide our thinking and
activities as we strive to impact the communities we work.
There was something special about Hadiza, something that’s not easily found in most people. As a little girl, she was enrolled in a program for HIV patients after her both parents were confirmed positive. She was given the necessary treatment to help her stay strong and healthy.
Rosemary Ahamefule, a widow and a mother of two whose source of livelihood is majorly petty trading. She owns a small table-top shop sited in front of her home where she sells provisions; she also owns a small farm at the back of her house where she plants vegetables, potatoes and cassava.
Ramota has been through more than most people could ever imagine. She fought against depression after she was identified to be positive with HIV, a disease that seemed impossible to beat. But it was her strength and determination that makes her a force to be reckoned with.
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