PATH operates a distributed health systems organization across 16+ countries, with 51 active roles heavily weighted toward healthcare delivery and field operations. The tech stack is analytics-focused (DHIS2, Tableau, SQL, Stata, Epi Info) rather than product-engineering focused, reflecting their core model: partnering with national governments to build surveillance capacity, improve case management, and deploy digital health tools. Active projects span malaria control, outbreak response, and health system strengthening—all data-intensive work constrained by integration challenges (fragmented data streams, compliance friction) rather than raw compute.
Notable leadership hires: Product Development Director, Technical Malaria Lead, Digital Health Lead, Project Director
PATH is a Seattle-based nonprofit founded in 1977 that designs and scales health interventions for low-resource settings. Their work spans vaccine immunization, infectious disease surveillance, malaria case management, and digital health transformation, primarily in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. The organization partners directly with ministries of health and donor agencies (USAID, Gates, others) to build local capacity—hiring is concentrated in Ethiopia, Malawi, Nigeria, and other implementation countries. Leadership roles include Technical Malaria Lead and Digital Health Lead, signaling specialized domain expertise rather than generalist scaling. With 1,001–5,000 employees, PATH functions as a delivery and research hybrid, balancing rigorous epidemiological work with operational implementation.
DHIS2, Tableau, SQL, Stata, Epi Info, PowerPoint, and Excel dominate the toolkit. This analytics-heavy stack reflects their focus on data integration, epidemiological modeling, and health system dashboards rather than custom product development.
Current projects include malaria case management and control (SMC implementation, PMI Reach), the STRIDES outbreak investigation platform, digital health pilot deployments in Indonesia, and real-time data pipelines for infectious disease surveillance across multiple countries.