Training Facilities for Dementia Care in Namibia

Training Facilities for Dementia Care in Namibia

OpenCharities Foundation · intended for CrossCare Health and Community Services CC

Our Story

Namibia lies in the south of Africa and is a young democracy. It is the third least densely populated country in the world and home to many different African cultures and peoples. The country is stable and has a female president.

They take this knowledge back to their communities, where it can literally save lives.

Apart from a handful of cities, people here still live entirely in harmony with nature. It is a breathtaking country that we lost our hearts to, a land of great potential but also of great challenges. Just as it is at home, dementia is everywhere here too. Dementia knows no borders.

Travelling through Namibia, we saw enormous differences. In Swakopmund, a small town on the desert coast, there is a dementia centre called ADN, which stands for Alzheimer's Dementia Namibia.

ADN was founded around sixteen years ago, and people with dementia live there. It is a family home where residents are supported wherever needed and cared for wherever necessary, all grounded in the values of a family. The knowledge and experience here are remarkable. In the Netherlands we would call this the care home of the future. It is where I would want to live myself if I ever developed dementia. This knowledge is exceptional, and we want to spread it, both in the Netherlands and across the rest of Namibia.

Because in the remote regions there is no knowledge of dementia at all. People do not even know the word. Even qualified nurses in Namibia learn almost nothing about it.

In some communities in northern Namibia, dementia is seen as witchcraft. People with dementia are sometimes accused of being witches. Some are tied up until they die, or worse. There is no knowledge, no training, and no care infrastructure. We want to change that.

We are renovating a building in Swakopmund into a training centre where unemployed nurses can learn dementia care. The site will have classrooms, bedrooms, a bathroom, and a kitchen, because distances in Namibia are vast and trainees cannot afford transport or housing.

Every quarter, a new group of ten nurses trains on-site for four months. After their training, they go to work in dementia care in the Netherlands. On one hand, they help ease our staffing shortage. On the other, they gain valuable experience that they bring back with them when they return to Namibia after three years.

We are setting up 'buurtzorg' (neighbourhood care) projects in Namibia, where by then they can pass on their knowledge and experience to the community they grew up in. This is how we want to help spread ADN's knowledge about dementia.

But with the planned facilities for the training centre in Swakopmund, ADN can also train families and informal carers every three months. Each quarter, people from remote communities in Namibia start as well. They are trained free of charge at the dementia centre on the same site, including room and board. They take that knowledge straight back to their community, where they already care for their father, mother, brother, or sister, and where it can literally save lives.

With your contribution, you help grow knowledge about dementia, both directly and indirectly. Literally every euro, around twenty Namibian dollars, can already make a difference in the care for people with dementia. This is something we can only do together, just as we care for our loved ones together.

The plan

What your donation makes possible

In remote regions there is no knowledge of dementia — it is sometimes even seen as witchcraft. This is what your donation builds in Swakopmund.

  • Renovation of an existing building into a classroom, bedrooms, bathroom and kitchen in Swakopmund
  • 10 unemployed nurses receive board and lodging during a 4-month in-house dementia-care training
  • A new group starts every quarter — a recurring training cycle
  • Free dementia training for people from remote communities, who carry the knowledge home

Where your money goes

€5,000
Renovation of classroom & office
€1,43329%
Bedrooms, bathroom & kitchen
€2,06741%
Board & lodging for 10 nurses
€1,50030%
Total€5,000 = funding goal

€1,433 covers phase 1 — renovating the classroom and office. €5,000 completes the whole site and gives 10 nurses board and lodging during their training.

A new group of 10 nurses starts every quarter.

Every euro is publicly accounted for. Follow progress in the trail below.

Watch our story

Updates

May 26, 2026

Ticket booked: back to Namibia on 18 June

The ticket is booked and on 18 June Ton flies back to Namibia. We have discussed the plans to convert two existing buildings, and there I will meet the contractor…

Ticket booked: back to Namibia on 18 June

May 11, 2026

The first ten nurses have started

Yes! The first group of ten nurses has started. Incredibly special, because we held the kick-off online. Imagine: they are somewhere in a hut more than 12,000 kilometres away, and…

The first ten nurses have started

May 8, 2026

Zoning plan approved by the municipality

Good news!!! The zoning plan has been approved by the municipality of Swakopmund. As far as the municipality is concerned we may start building, but before we get it formally…

Feb 11, 2026

Information days in Windhoek, Rundu, and Swakopmund

This week we organised information days for unemployed nurses in Namibia, in Windhoek, Rundu, and Swakopmund. We spoke with many nurses about the challenges they face, how they can be…

Information days in Windhoek, Rundu, and Swakopmund

Feb 9, 2026

Company name approved in Namibia

On 9 February 2026, the name of our company in Namibia was officially approved. Four months of work went into this. So much works differently there than in the Netherlands,…

Nov 15, 2025

Zoning plan application submitted

Another step forward… Today the application to change the zoning plan was formally submitted. In Swakopmund, ADN owns a 16-hectare plot of land with a formal agricultural designation. To build…

Apr 8, 2025

Visiting a local clinic

That same week, Claudine and I visited a local clinic, somewhat comparable to a GP practice but staffed by nurses who, as far as possible, also provide care directly. With…

Visiting a local clinic

Apr 7, 2025

The idea is born under the tree

Near Rundu, in the north of Namibia on the border with Angola, the idea for our project was born. Here we met with a tribal chief under his tree, as…

The idea is born under the tree

Independently Verified

Every donation is automatically recorded in an independent ledger. You can verify exactly which gifts have come in for this initiative and when.

Total pledged

€0

Last verified

Mar 26, 2026

Verification network: Gnosis
Treasury address: 0x4e5f6a7b8c9d0e1f2a3b4c5d6e7f8a9b0c1d2e3f
Token: EURe (Monerium)
€5,000fundraising goal
Next milestone

€1,433 — Phase 1 covered — the classroom and office can be renovated

View all milestones

€1,433Phase 1 covered — the classroom and office can be renovated

€3,500Bedrooms, bathroom and kitchen built so 10 nurses can live on-site

€5,000Site complete — the first group of 10 nurses can start with board and lodging

Funds independently verified
How does my donation work?

Your donation is legally a gift to the OpenCharities Foundation (ANBI application pending). Here is how it works:

  • Your donation goes to the OpenCharities Foundation.
  • We aim to spend it on this initiative.
  • If the threshold isn't met, we allocate your gift to a comparable goal within our mission — and show you where it went.
  • The Foundation makes the final allocation decision.

The board intends to allocate 100% of your contribution to this initiative, unless this is demonstrably not possible (for example, due to integrity issues or if the initiative does not proceed).

Read the full explanation on How does this work?
Ton in 't Veen

Ton in 't Veen

Entrepreneur & Founder

CrossCare Health and Community Services CC

In some communities here, people with dementia are accused of witchcraft. With a small training facility, we can change that, one nurse, one family at a time.

Verified by CrossCare Health and Community Services CC

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