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A memorial mass has been held for Dr Anne Merriman, the woman who pioneered palliative care in Uganda more than 30 years ago and whose work transformed the lives of thousands of critically ill patients across Africa.
Born in Liverpool on May 13, 1935, Merriman lived a life guided by a promise she made as a child to care for the sick and suffering.
Inspired by missionary work in Africa from an early age, she joined the Medical Missionaries of Mary in Ireland at the age of 18, beginning a 20-year journey of service that would take her across continents.
Father Augustine Kalemeera of Mbaaga Major Seminary (centre), assisted by Reverend Father Aloysius Lumala of Ggaba parish and Deacon Onesmus Ajuna of Mbaaga Major Seminary, conducting the memorial mass of Dr Anne Merriman.
After studying medicine at University College Dublin, where she earned her degree and completed her internship in Drogheda, Merriman received a mission call to Nigeria. She served as a surgeon, paediatrician, gynaecologist and general physician in underserved communities.
Even during the Biafran war, she remained in the country, working in a 100-bed hospital where she was the only doctor caring for more than 200 patients with the help of just five nurses and a few young girls whose education had ended at an equivalent of primary seven.
The difficult working conditions later forced her to return home, where she became a senior lecturer at the University of Liverpool, the first university in the United Kingdom to teach geriatric medicine.
In 1981, Merriman pursued a master’s degree in international community health. She later worked in Malaysia and Singapore, where she and a team of nurses started a home-based care programme for terminally ill patients, work that laid the foundation for Singapore’s palliative care movement.
A chance meeting at a conference brought her back to Africa, this time to Nairobi Hospice, where patients had no access to morphine and endured unbearable pain. There, she helped develop an oral form of morphine that is still used today.
Following her work in Nairobi, Kenya, Merriman received requests from seven African countries asking her to replicate the model. Looking for a country where she could establish a base and train others in palliative care, she chose Uganda.
In 1993, Merriman drove from Nairobi to Kampala with a few volunteers and one goal: to bring palliative care to people living in pain. With the support of the then minister of health, Dr James Makumbi, she introduced affordable oral morphine.
That marked the birth of Hospice Africa Uganda (HAU), which went on to inspire palliative care services in 37 African countries.
Since then, HAU has cared for more than 40,000 critically ill patients and their families. During the 2024 to 2025 financial year alone, Hospice Africa Uganda provided care to more than 2,000 patients across its sites in Kampala, Mbarara and Hoima, with more than 1,000 newly enrolled patients.
On Monday, May 18, 2026, on the first anniversary of her death, patients, health workers, family, friends and leaders gathered at the Hospice Africa Uganda (HAU) head office in Makindye, Kampala, where a memorial mass and blood donation drive were held to pay tribute to the woman who changed care for those in chronic pain.
Dr Miriam Ajambo, the Vice Chairperson of the Palliative Care Association of Uganda (PCAU) and Acting Head of the Palliative Care Division at the Ministry of Health making her remarks.
“Dr Merriman has left us with dedicated staff committed to caring for patients with dignity and respect. It’s not easy to find hospitals like HAU.”
She also appealed to both government and private individuals to continue supporting Hospice Africa Uganda so that patients can continue receiving treatment and support.
Molly Rutamwebwa also paid tribute to Merriman, recalling how her father benefited from Merriman’s programmes after being diagnosed with cancer.
“When I was young, my father suffered from cancer, and we were told he would live for only six months, but he lived for five years because of Dr Merriman and her programmes,” Rutamwebwa said.
“She became a friend of my father. He lived on a farm many miles away from here, and Dr Merriman would always say, ‘If he wants to stay at the farm, let him stay there because that is where he finds peace and happiness.’ She visited him for years.”
Rutamwebwa, who spoke on behalf of friends, said she would always remain committed to supporting Hospice Africa Uganda.
“A friend in need is a friend indeed. I will always stand with HAU at all costs. I speak about HAU wherever I go because I know what it means to support someone in pain,” she said.