220225_WWH__Main_logo_white_RGB

SOMETHING GREAT
IS COMING SOON

Nothing less than the future of mobile healthcare

SOMETHING GREAT IS COMING SOON

SOMETHING GREAT IS COMING SOON

Nothing less than the future of mobile healthcare

ABOUT US

Demand for healthcare

Healthcare disparities between populations and the impact of extreme events on citizens around the world represent major challenges for the global community that undermine our common values and pursuit of peace, prosperity, and human dignity.

We Will Help!

This persistent global divide in access to health care and resources affects disease, mortality, and well-being, while forces such as climate change, conflict, and displacement strain already overwhelmed health systems. The world needs innovative solutions to strengthen its global capability for providing care and responding to health emergencies.

We are there

Worldwide Hospitals (WWH) believes it is our obligation to help citizens and societies meet these daunting challenges.

Our mission is to address these global health challenges through innovative health solutions that can make an impact, particularly for traditionally underserved populations and countries facing the most acute problems.

We Will Help!

what we do

Worldwide Hospitals is bringing fast, flexible, high-quality healthcare solutions through our innovative health High Cube Heavy Duty Medical Modules, configurable hospital ships, and land-based hospitals.

In a world confronted with growing health threats and disasters, we believe that no life should be lost due to a lack of care or deficient healthcare infrastructure. Therefore, we design healthcare facilities, provide hospital faculty and maintenance support, and assign medical professionals to co-lead local medical operations.

We Will Help!

We are global

Our company is strategically based in Zug, Switzerland. We are operating from our Headquarters North, in the international harbor city of Hamburg, Germany.

We have one factory in Seville, Spain (Cameleon Modules S.L.) and another manufacturing center under construction in Eastern Europe.

We Will Help!

ABOUT US

Demand for healthcare

Healthcare disparities between populations and the impact of extreme events on citizens around the world represent major challenges for the global community that undermine our common values and pursuit of peace, prosperity, and human dignity.

We Will Help!

This persistent global divide in access to health care and resources affects disease, mortality, and well-being, while forces such as climate change, conflict, and displacement strain already overwhelmed health systems.

The world needs innovative solutions to strengthen its global capability for providing care and responding to health emergencies.

We are there

Worldwide Hospitals (WWH) believes it is our obligation to help citizens and societies meet these daunting challenges.

Our mission is to address these global health challenges through innovative health solutions that can make an impact, particularly for traditionally underserved populations and countries facing the most acute problems.

We Will Help!

what we do

Worldwide Hospitals is bringing fast, flexible, high-quality healthcare solutions through our innovative health High Cube Heavy Duty Medical Modules, configurable hospital ships, and land-based hospitals.

In a world confronted with growing health threats and disasters, we believe that no life should be lost due to a lack of care or deficient healthcare infrastructure. Therefore, we design healthcare facilities, provide hospital faculty and maintenance support, and assign medical professionals to co-lead local medical operations.

We Will Help!

We are global

Our company is strategically based in Zug, Switzerland. We are operating from our Headquarters North, in the international harbor city of Hamburg, Germany.

We have one factory in Seville, Spain (Cameleon Modules S.L.) and another manufacturing center under construction in Eastern Europe.

We Will Help!

ABOUT US

Demand for healthcare

Healthcare disparities between populations and the impact of extreme events on citizens around the world represent major challenges for the global community that undermine our common values and pursuit of peace, prosperity, and human dignity.

We Will Help!

This persistent global divide in access to health care and resources affects disease, mortality, and well-being, while forces such as climate change, conflict, and displacement strain already overwhelmed health systems.

The world needs innovative solutions to strengthen its global capability for providing care and responding to health emergencies.

We are there

Worldwide Hospitals (WWH) believes it is our obligation to help citizens and societies meet these daunting challenges.

Our mission is to address these global health challenges through innovative health solutions that can make an impact, particularly for traditionally underserved populations and countries facing the most acute problems.

We Will Help!

what we do

Worldwide Hospitals is bringing fast, flexible, high-quality healthcare solutions through our innovative health High Cube Heavy Duty Medical Modules, configurable hospital ships, and land-based hospitals.

In a world confronted with growing health threats and disasters, we believe that no life should be lost due to a lack of care or deficient healthcare infrastructure. Therefore, we design healthcare facilities, provide hospital faculty and maintenance support, and assign medical professionals to co-lead local medical operations.

We Will Help!

We are global

Our company is strategically based in Zug, Switzerland. We are operating from our Headquarters North, in the international harbor city of Hamburg, Germany.

We have one factory in Seville, Spain (Cameleon Modules S.L.) and another manufacturing center under construction in Eastern Europe.

We Will Help!

OUR MISSION
Our mission is to bring high-quality healthcare to where it is needed most.
Our mission is to bring high-quality healthcare to where it is needed most.

WWH provides care at the highest medical standard in countries and regions with long-standing or recently emerged needs. This includes Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) on their way towards more and better Universal Health Coverage (UHC) as well as disaster areas where a natural or man-made disaster destroyed the existing healthcare infrastructure.

Care in regions with long-standing or recently emerged needs.

Our
Mission

Worldwide Healthcare

Care in regions with long-standing or recently emerged needs.

WWH provides care at the highest medical standard in countries and regions with long-standing or recently emerged needs. This includes Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) on their way towards more and better Universal Health Coverage (UHC) as well as disaster areas where a natural or man-made disaster destroyed the existing healthcare infrastructure.

OUR MISSION
Our mission is to bring high-quality healthcare to where it is needed most.

WWH provides care at the highest medical standard in countries and regions with long-standing or recently emerged needs. This includes Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) on their way towards more and better Universal Health Coverage (UHC) as well as disaster areas where a natural or man-made disaster destroyed the existing healthcare infrastructure.

Care in regions with long-standing or recently emerged needs.

Discover the advantages of our WWH ship

Discover the advantages of
our WWH ship

Discover the advantages of our WWH ship

Hospital space: 9 300 m²
/ 100 105 sq. ft

Click to see each deck plan

LEVEL + 4

LEVEL + 3

LEVEL + 2

LEVEL + 1

LEVEL - 1

LEVEL - 2

LEVEL - 3

Hospital space: 9 300 m²
/ 100 105 sq. ft

Click to see each deck plan

High Quality Healthcare
We bring a high western standard of healthcare to areas where it is needed most.
9 300 m² / 100 105 sq. ft of hospital space on seven floors offers a generous amount of space.

High Quality Healthcare

We bring a high western standard of healthcare to areas where it is needed most.
9 300 m² / 100 105 sq. ft of hospital space on seven floors offers a generous amount of space.

High Cube Heavy Duty Medical Modules

Our hospitals are configured from proprietary modules, i.e. spacious HCHD Medical Modules units that form the rooms and departments required in any hospital.

High Cube Heavy Duty Medical Modules

Our hospitals are configured from proprietary modules, i.e. spacious HCHD Medical Modules units that form the rooms and departments required in any hospital.

High Cube Heavy Duty Medical Modules

Our hospitals are configured from proprietary modules, i.e. spacious HCHD Medical Modules units that form the rooms and departments required in any hospital.

Production
facilities

Factory in Seville

Innovation
center

Factory in Pancevo

Manufacture complex

Production
facilities

Detailed information about our key points

Factory in Seville

Innovation center

Factory in Pancevo

Manufacturing complex

Production
facilities

Detailed information about our key points

Factory in Spain

Innovation center

Factory in Pancevo

Manufacturing complex

Modular hospital

Land based hospital

Our HCHD Medical Modules turn quickly into fully-fledged hospitals at the highest medical standard. This is a long-lasting solution to relieve the need for medical care in case of disasters or as an alternative to long-building hospital projects.

Modular hospital

Land based hospital

Our HCHD Medical Modules turn quickly into fully-fledged hospitals at the highest medical standard. This is a long-lasting solution to relieve the need for medical care in case of disasters or as an alternative to long-building hospital projects.

Modular hospital

Land based hospital

Our HCHD Medical Modules turn quickly into fully-fledged hospitals at the highest medical standard. This is a long-lasting solution to relieve the need for medical care in case of disasters or as an alternative to long-building hospital projects.

Fast

Our unique Click and Connect modular system enables a fast assembly within a couple of weeks.

Flexible

We provide tailored solutions and offer fast relief in worldwide missions.

Fit for purpose

Hospital ships that can be deployed to assemble a sustainable high-quality land based hospital.

Fast

Our unique Click and Connect modular system enables a fast assembly within a couple of weeks.

Flexible

We provide tailored solutions and offer fast relief in worldwide missions.

Fit for purpose

Hospital ships that can be deployed to assemble a sustainable high-quality land based hospital.

Global
challenges

Global
challengues

Global
challenges

8.6M people die yearly

from lack of essential care due to local capacity shortage.

19.3M Worldwide deaths

due a number of clinical conditions.

140 man made disasters

take 5,300 lives or more every year.

2B people worldwide

do not have access to emergency and essential surgical care.

Africa’s healthcare system is structurally weak with estimated spending of 2.3% of its GDP for health-related services and a life expectancy of only 63 years in some countries.

The hospital bed capacity is low (approx. 8 hospital beds per 10.000 inhabitants) and more importantly, many countries lack access to essential hospital care for large shares of their population.

Around 29% of people must travel more than 1 hour to access a health facility. In 2020, the World Bank stated that existing hospitals and the health system could not adequately respond to people’s daily health care needs.

Challenges:

  • Poor healthcare infrastructure
  • Vulnerable parts of society are hit hardest
  • Destroyed healthcare infrastructure in some countries
  • Existing healthcare infrastructure with limited water/electricity supply in some areas

Indonesia sits on a Volcano belt which causes 90 percent of earthquakes globally. In September 2018, a disastrous earthquake and tsunami hit the island Sulawesi near the city of Palu.

More than 4,000 people lost their lives, 14,000 people were injured, many of them severely. Regional hospitals were overwhelmed. The entire region suffered from a lack of clean water, food, and electricity which further deteriorated public health.

Only a month later, the monsoon season started which further aggrieved the people who had not yet recovered from the disaster. Even months after the disaster, the Red Cross stated that especially children, pregnant women, and elderly people suffered from poor health and inadequate healthcare.
This further puts strain on the already underdeveloped healthcare infrastructure in Indonesia. Government investment in the health system has been limited, leading to insufficient facilities and the workforce needed for public services.

Challenges:

  • Poor healthcare infrastructure
  • Break down of infrastructure
  • Focus on more pressing matters
  • Long-term health problems due to poor sanitation

On August 4, 2020, Lebanese capital Beirut was shocked by a massive explosion that had a catastrophic impact on the entire city.

The disastrous blast destroyed large areas of the port and caused damage to vast parts the city’s structure. At least 190 people were killed and more than 6,500 injured. The effects of the explosion were even more devastating in the aftermath, as Beirut’s hospital infrastructure, which had already been overly burdened with COVID-19 cases, broke down.

Three hospitals were evacuated as severely damaged or destroyed. According to the WHO, more than half of the 55 hospitals and health centers in the city were non-functional. With still operating hospitals overloaded and pandemic lockdown suspended.

Challenges:

  • Destroyed healthcare infrastructure
  • Lack of surgical capabilities
  • On-site Medicare puts personnel in danger
  • Existing healthcare infrastructure with limited water/electricity supply

During the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 Europe suffered many deaths due to an overburden of the existing healthcare infrastructure.

Many cities lacked ICUs and ventilators to treat the new disease.

Hospitals were overwhelmed by the increased influx of patients and triage was applied in some cases to deal with limited capacity.

Challenges:

  • Break down of infrastructure
  • Lack of equipment
  • Lack of medical staff

8.6M people die yearly

from lack of essential care due to capacity shortage.

19.3M Worldwide deaths

due a number of clinical conditions.

Africa’s healthcare system is structurally weak with estimated spending of 2.3% of its GDP for health-related services and a life expectancy of only 63 years in some countries.

The hospital bed capacity is low (approx. 8 hospital beds per 10.000 inhabitants) and more importantly, many countries lack access to essential hospital care for large shares of their population.

Around 29% of people must travel more than 1 hour to access a health facility. In 2020, the World Bank stated that existing hospitals and the health system could not adequately respond to people’s daily health care needs.

Challenges:

  • Poor healthcare infrastructure
  • Vulnerable parts of society are hit hardest
  • Destroyed healthcare infrastructure in some countries
  • Existing healthcare infrastructure with limited water/electricity supply in some areas

Indonesia sits on a Volcano belt which causes 90 percent of earthquakes globally. In September 2018, a disastrous earthquake and tsunami hit the island Sulawesi near the city of Palu.

More than 4,000 people lost their lives, 14,000 people were injured, many of them severely. Regional hospitals were overwhelmed. The entire region suffered from a lack of clean water, food, and electricity which further deteriorated public health.

Only a month later, the monsoon season started which further aggrieved the people who had not yet recovered from the disaster. Even months after the disaster, the Red Cross stated that especially children, pregnant women, and elderly people suffered from poor health and inadequate healthcare.
This further puts strain on the already underdeveloped healthcare infrastructure in Indonesia. Government investment in the health system has been limited, leading to insufficient facilities and the workforce needed for public services.

Challenges:

  • Poor healthcare infrastructure
  • Break down of infrastructure
  • Focus on more pressing matters
  • Long-term health problems due to poor sanitation

140 man made disasters

take 5,300 lives or more every year.

2B people worldwide

do not have access to emergency and essential surgical care.

On August 4, 2020, Lebanese capital Beirut was shocked by a massive explosion that had a catastrophic impact on the entire city.

The disastrous blast destroyed large areas of the port and caused damage to vast parts the city’s structure. At least 190 people were killed and more than 6,500 injured. The effects of the explosion were even more devastating in the aftermath, as Beirut’s hospital infrastructure, which had already been overly burdened with COVID-19 cases, broke down.

Three hospitals were evacuated as severely damaged or destroyed. According to the WHO, more than half of the 55 hospitals and health centers in the city were non-functional. With still operating hospitals overloaded and pandemic lockdown suspended.

Challenges:

  • Destroyed healthcare infrastructure
  • Lack of surgical capabilities
  • On-site Medicare puts personnel in danger
  • Existing healthcare infrastructure with limited water/electricity supply

During the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 Europe suffered many deaths due to an overburden of the existing healthcare infrastructure.

Many cities lacked ICUs and ventilators to treat the new disease.

Hospitals were overwhelmed by the increased influx of patients and triage was applied in some cases to deal with limited capacity.

Challenges:

  • Break down of infrastructure
  • Lack of equipment
  • Lack of medical staff

8.6M people die yearly

from lack of essential care due to local capacity shortage.

19.3M Worldwide deaths

due a number of clinical conditions.

140 man made disasters

take 5,300 lives or more every year.

2B people worldwide

do not have access to emergency and essential surgical care.

Africa’s healthcare system is structurally weak with estimated spending of 2.3% of its GDP for health-related services and a life expectancy of only 63 years in some countries.

The hospital bed capacity is low (approx. 8 hospital beds per 10.000 inhabitants) and more importantly, many countries lack access to essential hospital care for large shares of their population.

Around 29% of people must travel more than 1 hour to access a health facility. In 2020, the World Bank stated that existing hospitals and the health system could not adequately respond to people’s daily health care needs.

Challenges:

  • Poor healthcare infrastructure
  • Vulnerable parts of society are hit hardest
  • Destroyed healthcare infrastructure in some countries
  • Existing healthcare infrastructure with limited water/electricity supply in some areas

Indonesia sits on a Volcano belt which causes 90 percent of earthquakes globally. In September 2018, a disastrous earthquake and tsunami hit the island Sulawesi near the city of Palu.

More than 4,000 people lost their lives, 14,000 people were injured, many of them severely. Regional hospitals were overwhelmed. The entire region suffered from a lack of clean water, food, and electricity which further deteriorated public health.

Only a month later, the monsoon season started which further aggrieved the people who had not yet recovered from the disaster. Even months after the disaster, the Red Cross stated that especially children, pregnant women, and elderly people suffered from poor health and inadequate healthcare.
This further puts strain on the already underdeveloped healthcare infrastructure in Indonesia. Government investment in the health system has been limited, leading to insufficient facilities and the workforce needed for public services.

Challenges:

  • Poor healthcare infrastructure
  • Break down of infrastructure
  • Focus on more pressing matters
  • Long-term health problems due to poor sanitation

On August 4, 2020, Lebanese capital Beirut was shocked by a massive explosion that had a catastrophic impact on the entire city.

The disastrous blast destroyed large areas of the port and caused damage to vast parts the city’s structure. At least 190 people were killed and more than 6,500 injured. The effects of the explosion were even more devastating in the aftermath, as Beirut’s hospital infrastructure, which had already been overly burdened with COVID-19 cases, broke down.

Three hospitals were evacuated as severely damaged or destroyed. According to the WHO, more than half of the 55 hospitals and health centers in the city were non-functional. With still operating hospitals overloaded and pandemic lockdown suspended.

Challenges:

  • Destroyed healthcare infrastructure
  • Lack of surgical capabilities
  • On-site Medicare puts personnel in danger
  • Existing healthcare infrastructure with limited water/electricity supply

During the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 Europe suffered many deaths due to an overburden of the existing healthcare infrastructure.

Many cities lacked ICUs and ventilators to treat the new disease.

Hospitals were overwhelmed by the increased influx of patients and triage was applied in some cases to deal with limited capacity.

Challenges:

  • Break down of infrastructure
  • Lack of equipment
  • Lack of medical staff

Each year, over 8.6M people die from the lack of essential care due to local capacity shortage.

Each year, over 8.6M people die from the lack of essential care due to local capacity shortage.

Each year, over 8.6M people die from the lack of essential care due to local capacity shortage.

Video
resources

Video
resources

We understand the global challenges and believe it’s time to make a change. We are global healthcare specialists with over 40 years of experience in the medical field. We are driven by mobile healthcare and the worldwide need for essential care.

Different configurations for different mission types. We fully customize our 186 HCHD Medical Modules the way you need in 3x24h.

Find out more about our services and our business operations.

Video
resources

We understand the global challenges and believe it’s time to make a change. We are global healthcare specialists with over 40 years of experience in the medical field. We are driven by mobile healthcare and the worldwide need for essential care.

Different configurations for different mission types. We fully customize our 186 HCHD Medical Modules the way you need in 3x24h.

Find out more about our services and our business operations.

YOU ARE NOT ALONE

We’ve prepared for the new challenges,
please contact us right now!

YOU ARE NOT ALONE

We’ve prepared for the new challenges,
please contact us right now!

Do you have any more questions?

Send us a message and we will get back to you.

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Do you have any more questions?

Send us a message and we will get back to you.

By sending this form you agree our Privacy policy. Your data won't be transfer to third parties. Please notice, that you also agree with the Privacy policy and Terms from Google, since we use reCaptcha for this form.

Do you have any more questions?

Send us a message and we will get back to you.

By sending this form you agree our Privacy policy. Your data won't be transfer to third parties. Please notice, that you also agree with the Privacy policy and Terms from Google, since we use reCaptcha for this form.