DeHealthFoundation · UA

dehealth.ua

Aid that actually reaches the front

$3.2M+ in medical and humanitarian aid since February 2022. No collections from Ukrainians. No advertisements. Only an international network of partners and documented results.

$3.2M+

delivered in aid

50+

supported units

200+

frontline deliveries

48+

months of continuous work

Our process

How we work - no middlemen

01

Request from the front

Military medics or hospitals contact us directly. We don't search for projects in the news - we work on real needs.

02

Verification

We verify each request through our network. Confirmation from commanders, partner approval, document checks.

03

Procurement and delivery

Only verified suppliers. Shortest logistics route. No intermediaries, no markups, no kickbacks.

04

Public report

Every delivery is documented - photos, receipts, letters of gratitude.

Our way

How we are different from other foundations

In four years of operation, we have not raised a single hryvnia from ordinary Ukrainians. No public collections, no card numbers on social media, no advertisements with well-known bloggers.

All $3.2M+ in aid came through the international network of the foundation's founders - Anna Bon and Denys Tsvaig. Partners include global corporations, members of the Ukrainian diaspora in the US, Canada, and EU, and institutional donors.

We don't think it's wrong to collect from people - that's how many foundations operate. Our path is simply different: we use what we have - international connections.

We are open to public audit at any time.

Voice from the front

When a direct delivery arrives faster than official channels, it means someone behind the lines is thinking as fast as we are out here. We feel: someone has our back.

Call sign "Doc"

Combat medical brigade, eastern direction

Systemic contribution

From one-time aid to a systemic solution

In February 2022, the Foundation started with point-by-point deliveries of medical equipment to the front. After months of requests from medics, it became clear: the problem wasn't just equipment. The problem was the system.

Military medics needed a way to quickly process patient data, coordinate evacuations, share information between units. Not on paper. Digitally.

In 2022, responding to these requests, the Foundation began creating what would later become ArmyHealth System - an AI and data infrastructure for military medicine. This is the Foundation's most lasting contribution - not one-time deliveries, but a systemic solution that will operate for years.

Why the foundation moved in this direction

01

2022: direct deliveries close urgent supply gaps

02

Frontline requests reveal recurring information bottlenecks

03

ArmyHealth becomes the systemic answer

The people behind it

Two founders. One personal network.

Anna Bon and Denys Tsvaig founded DeHealth Charitable Foundation in 2021. The Foundation operates through their international corporate and diaspora connections — no anonymous money, no opaque structure.

Anna Bon

Co-founder

Anna Bon

Healthcare-technology entrepreneur, concert violinist, and public speaker at the intersection of civilian digital health and military medicine. Co-founded DeHealth Charitable Foundation in 2021 and DeHealth (Delaware + London) in 2017.

Denys Tsvaig

Co-founder · CTO

Denys Tsvaig

Systems engineer and platform architect. Co-founded DeHealth Charitable Foundation in 2021 with Anna Bon and leads the technical roadmap for the founders' shared technology portfolio, including the DeHealth electronic-health-record platform.

Full bios in /team

Verified by independent sources

You don't have to take our word for it.

Every claim on this site traces to an external, authoritative source. Government registries, press archives, independent investigations — all collected on the References page.

UK Companies House
Ukrainian Wikipedia
Den newspaper
National Security & Defense Council of Ukraine
See all references

Common questions

Before you decide to support — read this.

Four of the most-asked questions, drawn from the full FAQ.

  • How can I verify this is real?
    Every claim on the site is traceable to an external authoritative source. The Verification page links to UK Companies House for DeHealth (#13472275), Den newspaper for press coverage, Ukrainian Wikipedia for Anna Bon's biography, the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine (RNBO) for the ArmyHealth partnership, plus Medtech Insight, AIN.ua, Vector, LIGA.tech, and RBC.ua. The Foundation's official Instagram (@dehealth.ngo) documents ongoing handovers.
  • Who founded the Foundation and when?
    The Foundation was founded by Anna Bon and Denys Tsvaig in 2021. After Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022, the Foundation rapidly scaled up its humanitarian and medical aid operations for military medics, hospitals, and frontline units. The two are also co-founders of DeHealth, an international healthcare-technology company headquartered in Delaware and London.
  • How are requests verified before delivery?
    Every request runs through a verification cycle: commander confirmation, coordination with military structures where relevant, and independent partner cross-checks. We don't deliver "on the spot" — if verification takes an extra day or two, it takes an extra day or two. Verification is mandatory.
  • Does the Foundation accept monetary donations?
    No. The Foundation officially has no bank account — we do not accept monetary donations from individuals or businesses, and we never have. We receive medications, medical equipment, and intellectual support from foreign states, corporations, and partner organizations — and coordinate their delivery to verified military brigades, hospitals, and frontline units.
  • What are the Foundation's operating expenses?
    Legally zero. We have no bank account, accept no monetary donations, and pay no salaries. All medications, equipment, and intellectual aid we receive from international partners are delivered directly to verified recipients — no intermediaries, no markups, no commissions.
Read all 26 questions