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Two decade partnership has 'transformed healthcare' in Zambia and Malawi, says Swinney
First Minister of Scotland John Swinney, delivers his speech at the SNP annual conference at the Event Complex Aberdeen, October 15, 2025

SCOTLAND’S health partnerships with Zambia and Malawi have “transformed healthcare” in those countries, according to John Swinney.

The First Minister visited the Blantyre-Blantyre research lab in Lusaka which has been supported by Scottish government funding to improve health outcomes in Zambia and Malawi.

He announced £125,000 for charity Kids Operating Room to support adapting Nasa technology to generate oxygen in low-resourced health settings during his visit.

Announcing a further £4m to tackle conditions such as diabetes, heart disease and sickle cell disease ahead of his visit to Malawi, he said: “Scotland has a strong history of supporting health systems in our partner countries.

“These partnerships have transformed healthcare in many ways, such as launching Malawi’s first dental school and supporting a programme which has trained psychiatrists, established the first dedicated A&E centre, and supported on cancer.”

Welcoming the support, Kids Operating Room’s chief medical officer Dr Maija Cheung said: “Oxygen is a vital medicine, yet in many low-resource settings it is unreliable or unavailable – and that makes surgery far more dangerous for children. 

“That’s why this project is so important.”

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