A decade ofÂ
results.
Every figure on this page comes from AFAA's own reports, verified against external data from WHO, UNICEF, and OCHA.
53,003
pEOPLE REACHED
PER YEAR
March 2023 - March 2024
31%
drop in maternal mortality
in nyal since 2023
2023 - June 2025
21,827
consultaTions inÂ
7 months (2024-25)
Panyijar County Dec 2024 - June 2025
23%
BETTER UNDER-5 SURVIVAL
THAN NATIONAL AVERAGE
Great Nyal: 76 vs 98.7 per 1,000
Health Outcomes
The figures below are drawn from AFAA's most recent health report, compared against the national baseline.
Source: AFAA Integrated Health Model Report, Dec 2024–June 2025, AFAA Annual Reports 2022-23 & 2023-24, WHO/UNICEF.
REACH: YEAR ON YEAR GROWTH
MATERNAL MORTALITY: NYAL
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AFAA's reach nearly doubled between 2022–23 and 2023–24, without a proportional increase in core staff.Â
A 31% reduction in maternal mortality in Nyal in under two years — driven by reopening the CEmONC centre and referral pathways. The national rate is world's highest.
Source: AFAA Annual Reports 2022–23 and 2023–24
Source: AFAA Integrated Health Model Report, Dec 2024–June 2025
UNDER-5 MORTALITY: GREATER NYAL
Under-five mortality in Greater Nyal is now below the national average, in a county absorbing thousands of displaced people each year. This is due to consistent health workers and case management.
Source: AFAA Integrated Health Model Report, Dec 2024–June 2025
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CHOLERA CASE FATALITY: PANYIJIAR VS NATIONAL
In flood-prone Panyijiar, AFAA managed 257 cases at its Treatment Unit with zero deaths recorded as of June 2025. Cholera has killed 1,581 nationwide across 55 counties.
Sources: AFAA health report 2025; OCHA October 2025
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- CHOLERA RESPONSE
How AFAA contained the outbreak
South Sudan's cholera outbreak, ongoing since September 2024, has spread across 55 of 78 counties. Panyijiar is one of the most at-risk counties in the country. It is annually flooded, hosting large numbers of displaced people, with contaminated water sources and limited sanitation infrastructure.
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AFAA's response combined a functioning Cholera Treatment Unit at Nyal PHCC, Boma Health Workers reaching 6,600 people with prevention messaging at markets and boreholes and an Oral Cholera Vaccine campaign that simultaneously promoted routine immunisation.
Panyijiar County
December 2024 - June 2025
The figures below cover a single seven-month period during which there were: a cholera epidemic, active flooding displacing over 40,000 people in Ganyiel alone, an ongoing security crisis and USAID funding cuts affecting the broader health system. AFAA's staff continued to deliver.Â
Documentation & Transparency
AFAA reports to its funders, the Ministry of Health, WHO, and the wider humanitarian community. The following documents are available on request or for download.