Learning and Impact Associate
Amref Health Africa
Location
Kenya
Type
Full-time
Posted
Jan 25, 2026
Mission
What you will drive
Core responsibilities:
- Provide technical and operational support for SUPREME LIFELINES implementation research in Kenya, focusing on planning, coordinating, and executing research and MEL plans
- Support data analytics, visualization, and evidence documentation through data cleaning, statistical analysis, dashboard development, and knowledge product creation
- Implement M&E activities including MEL plan development, data quality assessments, project monitoring, and ensuring data integrity
- Facilitate evidence uptake and scale by integrating findings into service delivery models, supporting knowledge exchange, and collaborating on advocacy initiatives
Impact
The difference you'll make
This role creates positive change by generating evidence to accelerate uptake of life-saving tools for preventing and managing pre-eclampsia and maternal anaemia, two leading contributors to maternal and neonatal mortality in low-resource African settings.
Profile
What makes you a great fit
Required qualifications:
- Bachelor's degree in Data Science, Information Management, Statistics, Demography, Epidemiology or health-related field
- 3-5 years experience as Research/Impact Assistant, Data Analyst or similar role in health-oriented NGO with strong data analysis track record
- Proficiency in programming languages such as Python, R, SQL for data manipulation and analysis
- Experience with data visualization tools (Tableau, Power BI), qualitative data analysis, mixed methods studies, and research regulation processes
Benefits
What's in it for you
No specific compensation, perks, or culture highlights mentioned in the job description.
About
Inside Amref Health Africa
Amref Health Africa is the largest African-based international health development organization, founded in 1957, with a vision of 'Lasting health change in Africa' and mission to catalyze community-led, people-centred health systems while addressing social determinants of health.