Where Hope Begins: The Save One Life Podcast

Women Can Bleed Too: Andrea Hernandez Trinidad on Building Hemophilia Advocates – Philippines

22 min · 26. maj 2026
episode Women Can Bleed Too: Andrea Hernandez Trinidad on Building Hemophilia Advocates – Philippines cover

Description

In this episode of Where Hope Begins: The Save One Life Podcast, host Kai Sorensen sits down with Andrea Hernandez Trinidad, president of Hemophilia Advocates – Philippines (HAP) and internationally recognized as the face of hemophilia in the Philippines.

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7 episodes

episode From a Family’s Fight to a Nation’s Future: Agnes Kisakye on Founding the Hemophilia Foundation of Uganda artwork

From a Family’s Fight to a Nation’s Future: Agnes Kisakye on Founding the Hemophilia Foundation of Uganda

In this episode of Where Hope Begins: The Save One Life Podcast, host Kai Sorensen sits down with Agnes Kisakye, founder of the Hemophilia Foundation of Uganda (HFU) and recipient of the 2025 NNHF Community Award. Agnes traces her journey from a terrifying family mystery in 2004—her four-year-old nephew Jovan bleeding uncontrollably with no explanation—through a diagnostic odyssey that required shipping a sample to South Africa, to a chance meeting with another family that connected her to Lori Kelly, Save One Life’s Project SHARE, and the donated factor that changed everything. From that single act of connection grew a national movement: today HFU has helped identify more than 450 people with hemophilia across Uganda, supported a network of treatment centers, and trained more than 620 healthcare professionals. Agnes also speaks candidly about the triple burden Ugandan mothers carry—stigma, abandonment, and financial strain—and why HFU’s new entrepreneurship training program for women is as essential to long-term care as any dose of factor. Her message to listeners is unmistakable: every single penny sent through Save One Life has a name.

5. maj 202624 min
episode Ride Your Own Ride: Vaughn Ripley, Doug Mildram, and Ujjwal Bhattarai on Wheels for the World 2026 artwork

Ride Your Own Ride: Vaughn Ripley, Doug Mildram, and Ujjwal Bhattarai on Wheels for the World 2026

In this episode of Where Hope Begins: The Save One Life Podcast, host Kai Sorensen sits down with three longtime members of the Save One Life community—Vaughn Ripley, Doug Mildram, and Ujjwal Bhattarai—to talk about Wheels for the World 2026, Save One Life’s largest and most inclusive virtual ride yet. Together, they share what drew each of them to this community—whether through a personal diagnosis, a son’s bleeding disorder, or a relationship with Save One Life’s founder—and what keeps them coming back to the saddle year after year. From cross-country relays carrying the Save One Life flag to 10-mile rides on a rest day, they make one thing unmistakably clear: every mile counts, and every rider belongs. They also get honest about the physical and emotional demands of long-distance riding, the unexpected joy of community along the route, and why the fundraising conversation matters just as much as the training—because what’s ultimately at stake is factor access for children around the world who don’t have it.

15. apr. 202619 min
episode Let His Death Not Be in Vain: Maureen Miruka on Building a Community of Care in Kenya artwork

Let His Death Not Be in Vain: Maureen Miruka on Building a Community of Care in Kenya

In this episode of Where Hope Begins: The Save One Life Podcast, host Kai Sorensen sits down with Dr. Maureen Miruka, founder of the Jose Memorial Hemophilia Society of Kenya (JMHSK)—a leader whose story began with a mother’s fight to understand her son’s unexplained bleeding, and deepened through the loss of her son Jose to hemophilia complications in 2007. Maureen shares what it took to pursue diagnosis and care in a system with limited resources, the long bus rides families still take to reach treatment, and the isolation of not knowing another parent facing the same condition. She also explains how partnership with Save One Life helped grow advocacy, access to factor through Project SHARE, and a more holistic model of support—including peer groups, scholarships, micro-enterprise grants, and cash transfers that restore stability and dignity.

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