“What keeps me going now is the excitement of the clients who receive the service and the sad faces of those clients who need the services and cannot get them.” Joseph Mbari Ngugi shared these words on May 30, 2023, capturing the profound empathy and dedication that defined his life’s work. This commitment to serving those most in need—and his deep awareness of those still unreached—characterized not only his career as a senior community health officer and public health specialist in Kenya’s Murang’a County, but also his extraordinary five-year journey through the Geneva Learning Foundation’s most rigorous learning programmes.
It was the morning of the first day of August, 2025. The message from his daughter was simple and devastating: “Hello this is Wanjiru Mbari Ngugi’s Daughter. I am the one currently with his phone. This is to inform you that Dad passed away this morning.”
Joseph’s passing represents more than the loss of a dedicated health worker in Kenya’s Murang’a County. It marks the end of an extraordinary journey that saw him evolve from participant to peer mentor within the Geneva Learning Foundation’s learning networks—a community where over 60,000 practitioners now connect across country borders and between continents to learn from and support each other to solve problems and drive change from the ground up.
Joseph Ngugi: The making of a global health scholar
Over the years, Joseph shared his personal story. His path to leadership in this global community began with family tragedy. “When I was young, my sister contracted malaria number of times, leading to numerous hospital visits and long periods of missed school,” he told us. “These experiences were not only distressing but also financially draining for my family, as medical costs piled up and my parents had to take time off work to care for her.” That childhood experience of watching illness devastate a family became the foundation for his professional mission.
In November 2020, when the world was grappling with the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic, Joseph joined the Foundation’s COVID-19 Peer Hub—a groundbreaking initiative launched in April 2020 that connected over 6,000 health professionals from 86 countries to face the early consequences of the pandemic. Unlike traditional training programmes that positioned experts as sole knowledge sources, the Peer Hub recognized that frontline workers like Joseph possessed crucial insights about overcoming vaccine hesitancy that needed to be shared across borders.
The timing was significant. When news of the first vaccines came, participants decided to examine how they had previously helped communities move “from hesitancy to acceptance of a vaccine.” Joseph’s case study, developed through peer collaboration between November and December 2020, drew on his extensive experience with routine immunization programs in Murang’a County. His documented approach to building trust with communities became a teaching resource for colleagues across Africa and beyond—knowledge that would prove invaluable when COVID-19 vaccines began arriving in Africa months later, starting with Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire in March 2021.
Joseph Ngugi: The Scholar’s progression
Joseph’s engagement with what would become the Movement for Immunization Agenda 2030 (IA2030) reflected his deepening sophistication as both learner and teacher. The Movement initiative, launched globally in support of the ambitious aims of the world’s immunization strategy to leave no one behind, required more than technical knowledge—it demanded practitioners who could analyze complex local challenges and adapt global strategies to diverse contexts.
Starting with the WHO Scholar Level 1 certification in 2021, Joseph mastered the Foundation’s approach to structured problem-solving. But it was his progression to the 2022 Full Learning Cycle, where he earned certification with distinction, that revealed his true analytical capabilities. His systematic deconstruction of vaccine storage challenges in Murang’a County exemplified this growth.
Rather than accepting equipment failures as inevitable, Joseph deployed rigorous root cause analysis: “Why are vaccines not stored properly? Because the refrigeration units are often outdated or malfunctioning.” But he didn’t stop there. Through five levels of inquiry, he traced the problem to its fundamental source: “The most important root cause: inadequate training and information dissemination among healthcare workers and administrators.”
This insight—that knowledge gaps, not resource constraints, lay at the heart of vaccine storage failures—helped colleagues in other countries to address similar challenges in very different contexts.
Joseph Ngugi: From local practice to global knowledge
Joseph’s work exemplified how the Foundation’s network transforms individual insights into collective wisdom. His malaria prevention campaigns in Murang’a County carried particular personal significance—having witnessed his sister’s repeated malaria infections as a child, he understood intimately how the disease devastated families. Now, as a health professional, he could take systematic action to prevent other families from experiencing similar suffering.
“Local leaders, health workers, and volunteers went door-to-door distributing nets and educating families about their importance,” he shared. “The project was successful due to the collaborative effort and the support of local influencers who championed the cause. This grassroots approach helped build trust and ensured widespread adoption of bed nets.” The boy who had watched helplessly as his sister endured “numerous hospital visits and long periods of missed school” had become the health worker who could mobilize entire communities for prevention.
Meanwhile, his immunization work achieved impressive results by using lessons learned and shared across the network. His measurable success spoke to the power of peer-tested approaches: “My county was listed in 2nd position with 95% with the highest percentage of children (aged 12-23 months) who are fully vaccinated for basic antigens as per basic schedule compared with the leading at 96% and the lowest with 23%.”
Through peer learning that he helped facilitate – giving and receiving feedback– both his malaria prevention methods and immunization strategies became available to thousands of colleagues facing similar challenges. When global immunization leaders engaged with TGLF’s network, asking for feedback on a new framework to support integration of immunization into primary health care, Joseph’s feedback illustrated this knowledge multiplication effect. “I have referred to [the] framework more than once and shared with my colleagues and supervisors and it has been very useful,” he reported. “My colleagues were excited to know such a tool existed and were ready to use it. The framework made a difference in solving the vaccine advocacy as it has the solutions to most of my challenges.”
Joseph Ngugi: Crisis leadership in a changing climate
When Kenya’s devastating 2019 floods tested every assumption about health service delivery, Joseph emerged as an innovative crisis leader whose documented responses became learning resources for the Foundation’s growing focus on climate change and health. His detailed accounts revealed both the scale of climate disruption and the ingenuity required to maintain health services under extreme conditions.
Working with local government and humanitarian agencies, Joseph helped coordinate emergency airlifts using helicopters to deliver essential medical supplies to isolated communities, with the Kenya Red Cross playing a critical coordination role. When helicopter transport was unavailable, his team improvised: “We resorted to unconventional means, such as using motorbikes and porters to deliver medicines to stranded populations.”
His documentation captured both community solidarity and the chaos of disaster response: “People were incredibly supportive, offering shelter and food to those displaced. Local youth groups helped clear debris from roads, making some areas passable. On the other hand, there were instances of looting of medical supplies during the chaos, which slowed down our efforts.”
Joseph’s prescient observations about the health impact of climate patterns became increasingly relevant: “Over the years, I’ve noticed that such weather-related disruptions have become more frequent and severe, a clear sign of climate change. The rainy seasons are no longer predictable, and their intensity often overwhelms existing infrastructure.” His first-hand accounts became part of a growing body of evidence showing how health workers worldwide are witnessing climate change impacts firsthand—knowledge that often precedes formal scientific documentation by years.
Joseph Ngugi, the equity advocate
Perhaps nowhere was Joseph’s moral clarity more evident than in his systematic approach to health equity challenges. When he witnessed an elderly rural woman being ignored at a hospital registration desk while younger, well-dressed patients received immediate attention, he documented both his direct intervention and his proposed systemic solutions.
“I later engaged hospital staff in a discussion about unconscious bias and the need to treat all patients with dignity,” he explained. His characteristically systematic solution—implementing a token system for patient queuing that would ensure first-come, first-served service regardless of appearance or language—provided concrete guidance that colleagues could adapt to their own contexts.
Joseph’s approach to neglected tropical diseases demonstrated similar principled persistence. Working on lymphatic filariasis in Murang’a County, he documented comprehensive community intervention approaches that included support groups for affected patients and collaboration with traditional healers to address cultural misconceptions. “Building partnerships and fostering ownership within the community were crucial in sustaining our efforts and driving positive change,” he noted—an insight that resonated across the Foundation’s network of practitioners facing similar challenges with stigmatized conditions.
A family committed to learning
Joseph’s commitment to collaborative learning extended to his household. His wife Caroline participated alongside him in Foundation activities, making their home a center of both local health advocacy and global knowledge sharing. Caroline documented her own community engagement successes: “Positive response from the community on the importance of taking their children for immunization. Able to reach pregnant mothers and sensitized them the importance of starting antenatal care clinic early.”
Their partnership embodied the Foundation’s philosophy that effective global health work requires both deep local engagement and broad network connections. Joseph’s honest assessment of community health work captured both its frustrations and profound rewards: “The worst part of my job is when you reach out to the community for services and [they] are not willing. The best part is when you reach the community members and they listen to you and hear what you have brought in the ground.”
The pioneer’s final exploration
Even in his final months, Joseph continued pushing boundaries in ways that reflected his lifelong commitment to innovation. His recent exploration of artificial intelligence tools as potential aids to health work represented not disengagement from human learning but rather his latest attempt to incorporate emerging capabilities into community health practice—a continuation of the innovative thinking that had characterized his entire journey with the Foundation.
For The Geneva Learning Foundation’s Executive Director Reda Sadki, Joseph was “a pioneer exploring the use of artificial intelligence” within global health contexts, demonstrating how practitioners could thoughtfully experiment with new technologies while maintaining focus on community needs.
A voice that bridged worlds
From November 2020 through August 2025, Joseph Ngugi completed an extraordinary progression through the Foundation’s most demanding programmes: the COVID-19 Peer Hub, WHO Scholar Level 1 certification, the Movement for Immunization Agenda 2030’s first Full Learning Cycle with distinction, Impact Accelerator certifications, and advanced collaborative work with the Nigeria Movement for Immunization Agenda 2030, which connected over 4,000 participants across Nigeria’s diverse health system.
His Nigeria collaborative work, completed in July 2024, demonstrated his evolution into a mentor for colleagues in countries other than his own, facing similar challenges. Through structured peer review processes and collaborative root cause analyses, Joseph helped dozens of Nigerian health workers develop their own systematic approaches to immunization challenges—knowledge that will continue influencing practice long after his passing.
“What I have learned from sharing photos and seeing photos from colleagues: we share common challenges, challenges are everywhere, love for human being is universal, health is wealth, immunization is the best investment in the world,” he wrote, capturing the spirit of global solidarity that sustained his work and connected him to practitioners worldwide.
A legacy of networked learning
Joseph Mbari Ngugi’s death leaves a profound void in a global learning network where his thoughtful analyses, generous mentorship, and systematic documentation created lasting value for thousands of colleagues. His comprehensive body of work—from detailed root cause analyses to innovative crisis responses, from equity advocacy to climate adaptation strategies—represents one of the most complete records of how a dedicated practitioner can evolve into a sophisticated analyst and effective advocate through structured peer learning.
His progression from childhood dreams inspired by witnessing healthcare compassion to becoming a leader in global health networks demonstrates the transformative potential of connecting local practice with worldwide learning communities. In an era of unprecedented health challenges—from climate change to emerging diseases to persistent inequities—Joseph’s documented approach offers a roadmap for practitioners worldwide seeking to make systematic change while remaining deeply rooted in their communities.
Joseph Ngugi’s voice may now be silent, but his contributions continue speaking through the colleagues he mentored, the frameworks he helped refine, and the thousands of health workers who will encounter his insights through the Foundation’s ongoing work. His legacy reminds us that the most effective global health leadership often emerges not from traditional hierarchies but from practitioners who combine deep local knowledge with the courage to share their experiences across borders, creating networks of learning that can respond to our world’s most pressing challenges with both precision and compassion.
Photo credit: Matiba Eye and Dental Hospital, Murang’a County Kenya. Joseph Mbari Ngugi submitted this photo for World Immunization Week in 2023. Here is what he told us about the image: “This is me, and Grace M Kihara, nursing officer, on the 15th of March 2023 at the Kenneth Matiba Eye and Dental Hospital in Murang’a County, Kenya. My work includes explaining to clients the importance of measles immunization and other vaccines, and advocating for immunization.”