© 2026 Smiling Heart Foundation. All Rights Reserved.
Smiling Hearts Foundation’s work is organised around three core programmatic areas, each responding to a specific and critical gap in community development:
From 2020 to 2021, a dedicated initiative was launched to bridge the gap between disability rights and public understanding. This project focused on transforming perceptions and equipping individuals with the tools they need to thrive.
The primary goal was to educate the general public — both persons with and without disabilities — on disability issues, and to empower community members to advocate for their rights and access appropriate services.
The impact of this period was marked by significant strides in advocacy and social integration:
Public awareness raised on disability rights across Krachi East Municipal.
PWDs empowered with knowledge and confidence to demand their rights.
Reduction of stigma through sustained community-level radio engagements.
Strengthened collaboration between SHF and the Department of Social Welfare.
Success is rarely a solo effort. This project was made possible through strategic partnerships and generous funding:
Partners: Department of Social Welfare, Krachi East Municipal
Donor / Funder: SHF (Self-funded) | GOIL Ghana
From march 2020, a vital initiative was implemented to support young girls in rural communities, ensuring that menstruation does not become a barrier to education.
To reduce school absenteeism among girls by addressing menstrual hygiene management (MHM) through free sanitary pad distribution, counselling, and community education.
Measurable reduction in school absenteeism among girls in targeted schools
Ghana Education Service, Krachi East Municipal |
SHF (Self-funded) | Hon. Michael Yaw Gyato | Donations from the general public |
Since December 2019, we have worked to unite the PWD community in Krachi East Municipal by providing assistive aids and advocating for the integrated support of health, education, and traditional leaders.
To recognise and unite Persons with Disabilities in the Krachi East Municipal, and to provide assistive aids while highlighting the roles of health, education, and traditional authorities in supporting PWDs.
PWDs in Krachi East Municipal officially united and registered under SHF
Department of Social Welfare, Krachi East Municipal |
SHF (Self-funded) | Hearty Love Foundation | Church of Latter Saints | Hon. Michael Yaw Gyato |
Since December 2019, we have worked to unite the PWD community in Krachi East Municipal by providing assistive aids and advocating for the integrated support of health, education, and traditional leaders.
To improve food security and economic independence for Persons with Disabilities engaged in agriculture. |
Department of Social Welfare, Krachi East Municipal |
SHF (Self-funded) | Hearty Love Foundation | Church of Latter Saints | Hon. Michael Yaw Gyato |
Dedicated to the health of rural women from 2022–2025, our goal was to bridge the gap in healthcare through early breast cancer detection and improved access to vital diagnostic screenings.
To promote early detection of breast cancer and improve access to general health screening services for rural women.
Ghana Health Service, Krachi East Municipal |
SHF (Self-funded) | Hon. Michael Yaw Gyato | Donations from the general public |
To become the leading catalyst for integrated rural development in Ghana, where agricultural innovation, health equity, and social advocacy empower every rural household to achieve economic self-reliance.
For All Rural Folks: Establish an Equipment Leasing Pool. While PWDs may get prioritized or subsidized rates, all rural farmers can access tractors, planters, and threshers to reduce the drudgery of manual labor.
Climate-Smart Demo Farms: Create community learning centers where general farmers, youth, and PWDs learn Conservation Agriculture (e.g., mulching, zero-tillage) together. This promotes social integration through shared learning.
Aggregated Marketing: SHF will act as a “Broker-of-Hope,” aggregating produce from all rural folks to negotiate better prices with large-scale processors (Anchor Firms), ensuring even the smallest farmer gets a fair market rate.
Tech-Transfer: Train rural youth as “Mobile Extension Agents.” They will provide weather alerts and pest management advice to elderly and PWD farmers using digital tools, bridging the generational tech gap.
Agri-Entrepreneurship: Encourage youth to set up small-scale processing units (e.g., cassava grating or soybean milling) that serve the entire rural community.
Current Program | Expanded Strategy for General Rural Folks |
Radio Advocacy | "The Rural Voice": Transition from only PWD rights to a platform for Agric Education and Community Health, where rural folks can call in to discuss market prices or land disputes. |
MHM & Pad-a-Girl | "Health for Education": Expand workshops to include maternal health and nutrition for all rural women, ensuring that physical health never hinders the agricultural productivity of the household. |
Smile with SHF (Assistive Aids) | "Universal Accessibility": Advocate for "Universal Design" in rural infrastructure (markets, clinics, and water points) so they are accessible to the elderly, pregnant women, and PWDs alike. |
Health Screening | "Mobile Wellness Clinics": Regular screenings for non-communicable diseases (Diabetes, Hypertension) for all rural adults, recognizing that a healthy workforce is the backbone of a productive farm. |
Action: Establish a “Smiling Hearts Processing Centre” where rural folks can process raw crops into finished goods (e.g., fortified flour).
Impact: Reduces post-harvest losses and keeps more profit within the operational communities.
Action: Form Village Savings and Loans Associations (VSLAs) that include PWDs, youth, and general rural folks.
Impact: Creates a local “revolving fund” where farmers can borrow for inputs without the high interest rates of commercial bank.
Action: Launch a “Community Tree Planting & Soil Health” initiative to combat the effects of climate change on rural livelihoods.
Target Group | Primary Benefit | Role in the Ecosystem |
PWDs | Assistive tools + Subsidized Agric Inputs | Management and Value Addition |
Youth | Technical Training + Digital Tools | Mechanization & Extension Services |
General Rural Folks | Market Access + Equipment Leasing | Bulk Production & Community Leadership |
SHF will implement a “Community Give-Back” model. Farmers who benefit from SHF’s subsidized tractor services or seeds will contribute a small percentage of their surplus to the SHF Food Bank. This food bank will then support the most vulnerable (severely disabled or elderly) who cannot farm, creating a self-sustaining cycle of care.
Year | Milestone Focus | Planned Action Steps | Intended Strategic Impact |
2026 | Financial Inclusion & Mobilization | • Form local Village Savings and Loans Associations (VSLAs) bridging PWDs, youth, and general rural folks. • Draft the operational bylaws and scale baseline enrollment. | • Creates an accessible local "revolving fund." • Bypasses the high interest rates of commercial banks so farmers can self-fund raw inputs. |
2027 | Environmental Infrastructure & Adaptation | • Launch the municipal "Community Tree Planting & Soil Health" framework. • Map out community-wide targeted planting areas. | • Proactively combats the intense, compounding effects of climate change on rural livelihoods.
• Ensures agricultural land remains productive for future generations. |
2028 | Digital Extension & Shared Knowledge | • Deploy youth "Mobile Extension Agents" and launch the Climate-Smart Demo Farms. • Scale shared learning models across PWDs and general folks. | • Delivers weather alerts and pest data directly to vulnerable and elderly farmers. • Bridges the generational technology gap through shared learning. |
2029 | Value Addition & Processing Centers | • Break ground on physical, localized "Smiling Hearts Processing Centres." • Install heavy processing machinery for raw regional crop yields. | |
2030 | Ecosystem Brokerage & Sustainability | • Scale Aggregated Marketing frameworks alongside the Community Give-Back Model. • Sign institutional supply contracts with corporate Anchor Firms. | • Guarantees even the smallest family farm receives an uncompromised, highly competitive market price.
• Supplies the SHF Food Bank to protect the most vulnerable. |
Year | Milestone Focus | Planned Action Steps | Intended Strategic Impact |
2026 | Financial Inclusion & Mobilization | • Form local Village Savings and Loans Associations (VSLAs). • Draft operational bylaws and scale enrollment. | • Creates an accessible revolving fund. • Reduces dependence on high-interest lending. |
2027 | Environmental Infrastructure & Adaptation | • Launch Community Tree Planting & Soil Health framework. • Map targeted planting areas. | Strengthens climate resilience. • Protects agricultural productivity. |
2028 | Digital Extension & Shared Knowledge | • Deploy youth Mobile Extension Agents. • Scale Climate-Smart Demo Farms. | • Delivers weather alerts and pest information. • Bridges the technology gap. |
2029 | Value Addition & Processing Centres | • Establish Smiling Hearts Processing Centres. • Install crop processing equipment. | • Reduces post-harvest losses. • Retains profit within communities. |
2030 | Ecosystem Brokerage & Sustainability | • Expand Aggregated Marketing systems. • Establish Anchor Firm agreements. | • Improves market access. • Supports vulnerable households. |
