World Reach

kenya medical clinic

Welcome to the Kenya Medical Clinic!

World Reach’s Medical Clinic in Muthetheni, Kenya, serves the rural community approximately two hours east of Nairobi. Established in 1993 on two acres of donated land, the clinic embodies World Reach’s five core values: evangelism, discipleship, church planting, leadership development, and medical/physical relief. It provides basic health services, including rudimentary diagnostics, treatment (first aid, IV drips, suturing, and immunizations), and medications for common ailments like fungal infections, malaria, typhoid, and intestinal parasites. The clinic also addresses health concerns related to malnutrition, sanitation, water contamination, AIDS, STIs, and prenatal/post-natal care. Beyond medical services, the clinic supports a Bible correspondence program for local schoolchildren and hosts evangelism, discipleship, and leadership development seminars. Staffed by local medical personnel, the clinic’s operation is subsidized due to the community’s limited income, which fluctuates with crop yields. The clinic compound includes a 4,000 square foot clinic/multi-purpose building, a guest apartment, a general purpose building, and a 60,000-gallon cistern.

Our Goals

Physical Healing

The Muthetheni clinic delivers essential healthcare, including diagnostics, treatment, and preventative care, directly improving the physical health of the community it serves.

Spiritual Healing

Through evangelism, discipleship programs, and leadership development seminars, the Muthetheni clinic fosters spiritual healing by sharing the Gospel and nurturing faith within the community.

Meet Our Medical Clinic Director, Ken Sometin!

Located on the slopes of Mount Kenya, World Reach’s Children’s Home houses children who are orphaned, rejected, neglected or ignored by Kenyan society. Many of the children end up on the street if no one intervenes. Children’s Home kids are often rescued from the risk of being abused by an adult or from inducing harm to themselves by sniffing glue as a way to get their minds off daily difficulties they face.

World Reach learns of needy children through a variety of sources, including contact from the Kenyan government and/or contact from a grandmother or other relative seeking help due to lack of resources. Sometimes children are simply dropped off with a note at the gate of the campus.