The COM Department of Emergency Medicine’s Section of Global Health recently completed another successful visit to its partner institutions in Ghana. The team taught point-of-care ultrasound courses to physicians and nurses at the 37 Military Hospital in Accra. In addition, we also provided an intermediate as well as an advanced level ultrasound trainin as pre- and post-conference courses for the 6th African Conference on Emergency Medicine, which took place in Accra, Ghana. Faculty, fellows and alumni of the Section of Global Health presented multiple posters and plenary sessions at the conference. In addition, during this visit, the MotoMeds Ghana project was launched. MotoMeds is a pediatric nighttime telemedicine and medication delivery service. Supported by the United States Agency for International Development and the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine, this project is being led by Dr. Torben Becker, Director of the Section of Global Health in the Department of Emergency Medicine, in Ghana. On the ground, Katelyn Flaherty, UF MD/PhD student, serves as the operational director of MotoMeds and is on site at our call center every night. MotoMeds has partnered with the Ghana National Ambulance Service, whose EMTs are serving as the clinical staff. When parents of sick children call, an over-the-phone telemedicine assessment is being conducted, followed by dispatch of a household team to the urban slum of Jamestown/Usshertown in Accra, the target area for the pilot program. There, the MotoMeds team completes a physical exam, performs necessary testing, such as a rapid diagnostic test for malaria, and provides medications for many common conditions. MotoMeds’ goal is to prevent illness progression at night for illnesses such as diarrhea, malaria and pneumonia, with a stated goal of reducing childhood morbidity and mortality in Ghana. MotoMeds already operates successfully in Haiti.