WFH Twinning Program partnerships have improved diagnosis and treatment, enriched the knowledge of healthcare professionals (HCPs) caring for patients with bleeding disorders, enhanced outreach initiatives, facilitated resource sharing, increased government support for bleeding disorders through advocacy initiatives, and strengthened patient organizations through capability building.
Hemophilia Organization Twinning (HOT) strengthens emerging patient organizations and promotes organizational sustainability and capacity-building to improve services for people living with bleeding disorders. The new HOT twins—the Associação Liga dos Amigos de Doentes Hematológicos de Angola (Angola) with the Federação Brasileira de Hemofilia (Brazil)—have committed to strengthening organizational capacities of the national member organization (NMO) in Angola, advocating for prophylaxis, educating patients and families, and increasing the national registry.
Hemophilia Treatment Centre (HTC) Twinning helps healthcare professionals (HCP) provide adequate diagnosis, treatment and care for people living with bleeding disorders. This year, the program welcomed two new HTC partnerships:
- Hemophilia Treatment Center, Kasturba Hospital, Manipal Academy of Higher Education, Manipal (Manipal, India) with the Utah Center for Bleeding and Clotting Disorders at Primary Children’s Hospital and the University of Utah (Utah, U.S.A)
- Republican Specialized Scientific Practical Medical Center of Hematology, Uzbekistan Hemophilia Centre (Tashkent, Uzbekistan) with the National Medical Research Centre for Hematology under Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation (Moscow, Russia)
These twins have committed to several key goals during their partnerships, including training HCPs and strengthening comprehensive hemophilia care, improving care for women and girls with bleeding disorders, conducting epidemiological and clinical studies, and developing health literacy and education programs for HCPs and patients.
The youth component of the WFH Twinning Program—the Youth Group Twinning—helps youth groups strengthen their membership and empowers young NMO members. The new 2025 Youth Twins—the Haemophilia Foundation Pakistan (Pakistan) and Haemophilia New Zealand (New Zealand)—aim to build advocacy skills and organizational capacity and provide education on psychosocial support and the role of physiotherapy in improving care for young people living with bleeding disorders.
The WFH looks forward to supporting these new partnerships and collaborating effectively to make a positive impact on people living with bleeding disorders worldwide.
To find out more about the WFH Twinning Program, click here.
The WFH Twinning Program is supported by exclusive funding from Pfizer.