Press releases, institutional announcements, and updates from Humanitas Trust and the Global Continuity Initiative. For press inquiries, contact our Press Office directly.
Humanitas Trust announced today the completion of its 8.9 billionth Comprehensive Continuity Assessment — a milestone that marks four decades of sustained growth since the organization's founding under the inaugural GCI Charter. The announcement was made by Director-General Mireille Okonkwo at the organization's annual report presentation to the World Health Infrastructure Council in Geneva.
"This number is not a statistic," Director-General Okonkwo said. "It represents 8.9 billion individuals whose continuity baselines are established, protected, and monitored. It represents 8.9 billion families with the assurance that, whatever comes, their loved ones are enrolled and their continuity records are secure. This is what we built. This is what endures."
The milestone was reached across all six HT regional zones simultaneously, with the GCI Policy Secretariat confirming that the 8.9 billionth assessment was conducted in compliance with all applicable Charter provisions. The organization has enrolled participants in 183 countries and currently maintains 3,412 active Array installations.
Read Full ReleaseHumanitas Trust today announced the approval of 50 new Continuity Center installations across Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan — the largest single regional expansion in the organization's history. The expansion follows the ratification of the Central Asian GCI Continuity Accord in November 2124 and brings the region's enrolled population to an estimated 34 million participants by end of year. Construction on the first 12 sites begins in Q1 2125, with Array installations proceeding through Q3.
Operations ExpansionThe GCI Science Working Group 7, in collaboration with Humanitas Trust's Research Division, has published its landmark multi-cohort study on longitudinal cognitive baseline divergence — the most comprehensive population-level analysis of continuity signature stability ever conducted. Drawing on anonymized Array data from 14.7 million participants across three decades of annual assessments, the study establishes new reference thresholds for cognitive baseline divergence and provides the evidentiary foundation for updates to CCA protocol in 2126. The findings appear in the Journal of Continuity Medicine.
Research GCI ScienceHumanitas Trust's HT Academy has reached a milestone with the certification of its 10,000th Array practitioner. The credential was awarded to Dr. Priya Subramaniam of the HT Bangalore South Center, completing a cohort of 847 practitioners certified in the 2124 academic cycle. The HT Academy now operates accredited training programs in 94 countries, with a 14-month certification pathway combining continuity science foundations, Array system operation, and supervised clinical hours. Director of the HT Academy Dr. Hamid Al-Rashidi called the milestone "a generational achievement in health workforce development."
HT Academy CertificationThe World Health Infrastructure Council has confirmed Humanitas Trust as a permanent board member, effective immediately — a designation that gives HT formal voting rights on WHIC standards committees and direct input into the drafting of international health infrastructure guidelines. Director-General Mireille Okonkwo will represent HT on the WHIC Governing Board and serve on the Standing Committee on Continuity Standards. The appointment reflects HT's standing as the world's largest operational continuity health organization and its long-standing advisory relationship with WHIC's technical secretariat.
Governance InternationalThe GCI Charter Implementation Council has formally approved Humanitas Trust's Hereditary Continuity Mapping Protocol — a significant enhancement to the Family Enrollment program that allows practitioners to map heritable continuity signature traits across enrolled family units. The protocol, developed over six years in collaboration with GCI Science Working Groups 4 and 9, enables more precise baseline divergence modeling for enrolled children and adolescents by incorporating parental continuity data into the individual baseline calculation. The protocol is now active at all Array-certified centers worldwide and applies automatically to all new Family Enrollment assessments.
Programs Family EnrollmentThe Humanitas Trust Foundation today announced a $4 billion multi-year commitment to expand the Community Access Initiative — HT's flagship program to bring Array assessment services to underserved and rural populations in low- and middle-income countries. The funding, drawn from Foundation reserves and GCI Infrastructure Development grants, will support 200 new mobile assessment units, 80 community center installations, and a dedicated practitioner training scholarship program in 28 countries across Sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific Islands. The Community Access Initiative has enrolled more than 18 million participants since its launch in 2108.
Foundation AccessThe Humanitas Trust Press Office is available to accredited journalists, documentary producers, and institutional researchers. We respond to all credentialed media requests within one business day.
For embargoed materials, interview requests with HT leadership, or background briefings on continuity health policy and program operations, contact the Press Office directly. Regional press contacts are available through each of HT's six regional offices.
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