From Part-Time Volunteer to Full-Time Surgeon: Dr. Mike Russell’s Journey to CURE

At CURE Malawi, Dr. Mike will use his pediatric orthopedic training to care for children with complex conditions.


To understand Dr. Mike Russell’s journey from Pennsylvania to full-time Pediatric Orthopedic Surgeon at Beit-CURE Children’s Hospital of Malawi (CURE Malawi), you have to go back to 2010, when he was studying chemical engineering at Kettering University and working for General Motors.

That year, he visited Haiti just five months after a devastating earthquake claimed more than 220,000 lives. “Even here in the Western Hemisphere, only two hours from the US, there was nobody there to help them,” Dr. Mike recalls. “That was pretty eye-opening for me.”

It was a defining moment. The suffering he witnessed—and the lack of medical care—moved him to pursue medicine. He returned home, added pre-med coursework to his engineering degree, and never looked back.

 

A Heart for Global Health and a Connection to CURE

During one of his volunteer visits to CURE Malawi, Dr. Mike loved connecting with patients.

Global medical missions run deep in Dr. Mike’s DNA. His parents, both family medicine physicians, took the family on trips to Honduras and Kenya throughout his childhood. It was his parents who first took him to visit CURE’s hospital in Kijabe, Kenya. 

Dr. Mike decided to defer his entrance to medical school for a year and taught English in the Middle East. Later, during another year off between medical school terms, he earned a master of business administration and a master of public health, and spent several months volunteering internationally with NGOs, including CURE International. 

That’s when he fell in love with CURE’s mission.

“What really attracted me to CURE was the opportunity to help prevent long-term disability through low-cost, mostly public health-based interventions,” he says. “And I loved seeing the impact CURE could have—completely changing the trajectory of kids’ lives—along with the ability to couple sharing the gospel message with excellent surgical care.”

 

From Medical Missionary to Team Member

Dr. Mike’s wife, Rebekah, enjoys visiting with and ministering to children at CURE Malawi.

Over the years, Dr. Mike has volunteered with CURE hospitals in Ethiopia, Kenya, and Malawi. Now, after completing an orthopedic surgery residency from the University of Iowa, an orthopedic oncology fellowship from UCLA, and an additional pediatric orthopedic oncology fellowship at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Ohio, he’s returning to CURE Malawi—not as a volunteer, but as a full-time Orthopedic Surgeon.

In August 2025, Dr. Mike, along with his wife and their two young daughters, relocated from Columbus, Ohio, to Blantyre, Malawi.

“Being able to meet and care for children who would otherwise slip through the cracks and live their lives with significant physical disabilities that are treatable is something that I am passionate about,” he says.

 

Eventually, he hopes to build a pediatric limb-salvage practice, helping children with bone tumors avoid unnecessary amputation.

Dr. Samuel Maina, Medical Director at CURE Malawi, sees Dr. Mike’s arrival as a key step in strengthening the hospital’s ability to care for complex orthopedic cases: “We are thrilled to welcome Dr. Russell to the surgical team at CURE Malawi. His training in pediatric orthopedic care and oncology will further strengthen the hospital’s capacity to treat children and serve families. His commitment to train local physicians in pediatric care will also bless many lives across the country.”

Learn about CURE’s network of eight children’s hospitals across Africa and the Philippines.

Make a gift that brings surgical care and the love of Jesus to children in poverty. 

 
 
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