
45 Years of Mercy Ships: Looking Back and Dreaming of the Future
Blog, BlogForty-five years ago, Don and Deyon Stephens had a dream. They wanted to convert a ship into a floating hospital, to bring safe, free surgical care to those who needed it most.
They left their home in the United States, setting out into unfamiliar waters. There were six of them: Don, Deyon, and their four children. A small team of people who shared their vision began to grow around them.
Today, four and a half decades later, Mercy Ships has impacted more than 1.2 million medical and programmatic beneficiaries and performed more than 110,000 life-changing surgeries. In the first half of 2023, more than 1,100 volunteers served on board the brand-new Global Mercy®.
“What started as a vision or a dream with Deyon and me, now it belongs to hundreds, thousands of people,” Don said.

Bridging the Gap of Anesthesia Care in Guinea
Blog, BlogFor Marthe Lamah, becoming an anesthetist was a life-long dream.
“Since I was little, I always liked to help vulnerable people,” she says – and she believed patients receiving surgery in the operating room were among the most vulnerable of all. “I understood immediately that there is a specialty where you could take care of this type of vulnerable people with proper training in place.”
Right now, Marthe is one of more than 20 students studying to become a nurse anesthetist in Guinea’s Gamal Abdel Nasser University. At the front of the classroom is Professor Joseph Donamou, the catalyst behind the program.

One Port Visited, Two Nations Served: Mercy Ships Ends an Impactful Season in Senegal
Blog, BlogOn June 20, the Global Mercy™ held one last event before preparing to leave Senegal, welcoming partners from across Senegal and The Gambia to thank them for their support throughout this field service.
After years of planning, prayer, and partnership, the Global Mercy has been serving patients in Senegal. It all started in one special moment, as 4-year-old Amadou walked up the gangway of the hospital ship on his way to healing. Weeks later, Amadou departed down the same gangway. This time, he was walking on straight legs for the first time in his life. Now, he’ll be free to grow up healthy and tall, able to attend school and become independent one day.

Returning to Serve His People: Talla’s Story
Blog, BlogTwenty-nine-year-old Talla Gueye, from Senegal, ventured into entrepreneurship hoping to find solutions to youth unemployment in his community. He has always been a take-things-into-your-own-hands kind of person: “Taking charge and seeking change to problems motivates me,” he says.
So, he started a clothing brand that would inspire and empower young people in Senegal. He named it Sigui Doxx, a term in his native Wolof language that translates to “keep your head up.”
His mother inspired the deep care for community that drove him to social entrepreneurship, as he grew up watching her exemplify compassion.
“Whenever she cooked, she put out a huge plate of food for anyone in the neighborhood. She also invited relatives who were struggling to stay with us.”
Now, Talla brings that empathetic approach and entrepreneurial attitude to his work with Mercy Ships, where he started off translating for volunteer medical crew providing free surgical care in Senegal.

Mariama, six, starts school after life-changing surgery
Blog, Blog, Press releaseAs Awa grew up in her village, she encountered the hardships of living with a cleft lip. “People in my village did not cast her out, but they laughed at her, and she was ashamed. They would say ‘look at how your mouth and lip are’, which made her embarrassed. She used to hide her mouth with her hand,” said Rougui.
Both Awa’s parents and her uncle kept looking for an answer to their prayers, but they couldn’t see any solution in their future.

Meet Amadou, the First Patient to Receive Surgery on the Global Mercy™
Blog, Blog, NewsThe world’s largest purpose-built civilian hospital ship, the Global Mercy, is projected to serve 150,000 patients over the next five decades – and it all begins with Amadou, a 4-year-old with a windswept leg and bowed leg from southern Senegal. With an orthopedic surgery on March 6, Amadou was the first patient to ever receive surgery on board the new ship.

One Port, Two Nations: The Global Mercy™ Arrives in Dakar
Blog, Blog, NewsOn February 14, a special day of celebration took place in the Port of Dakar, Senegal. A long-awaited sight was on the horizon as the newly built Mercy Ship, the Global Mercy™, sailed into view.
Designed to deliver hope and healing to nations with limited surgical capacity, the Global Mercy is now ready to live her purpose. This year marks the first in an expected 50-year lifespan of specialized free surgeries taking place on board.

‘Giving Back’: Senegalese Mercy Ships Volunteers Ready to Meet the Need at Home
Blog, Blog“Serving my own country, it’s a blessing for me,” David said. “When I’m giving back to my own people, it boosts my happiness, my health, and my sense of wellbeing.”
In February, as the Africa Mercy heads to South Africa for a period of maintenance, David and the crew of the new Global Mercy will set sail for Dakar. This time they’ll be serving not only the people of Senegal, but their neighbors in The Gambia as well. For Senegalese crewmembers, this field service is a powerful opportunity to make an impact not abroad, but at home.
After all, home is where they’ve seen the need firsthand.

Mercy Ships’ Newest Hospital Ship Prepares to Serve First Patients
Blog, BlogOn board the Global Mercy, docked in Spain’s Canary Islands, there is an atmosphere of expectation.
Ever since the new ship's construction was completed in mid-2021, she’s been getting ready to serve her very first patients. Day after day, her crew has been patiently preparing for a moment that’s finally about to arrive.
Soon, the newest ship in the Mercy Ships fleet will lower her gangway in Dakar, Senegal, and welcome patients on board to receive life-changing surgery.

Health in Africa: the tree that hides the forest
Blog, BlogIn August, WHO's Monitoring Report on Universal Health Coverage in Africa revealed a 10-year rise in life expectancy between 2000 and 2019. This drastic increase is a consequence of the 37% drop in mortality between 2000 and 2015 following the implementation of the 2000-2015 Millennium Development Goals.
