Scrub Life Cares CEO Tanya Ambrose is setting her sights on transforming health education in Antigua and Barbuda following a prestigious international recognition. According to Antigua Observer, Ambrose is now moving to bridge what she describes as a "structural gap" in the country's health education curriculum.

The initiative comes on the heels of Ambrose's organisation being named the 2026 "Site of the Year" by Georgia State University (GSU) — an honour that has added significant credibility to her applied practice model. She has outlined plans to expand that model to local institutions here in Antigua and Barbuda.

As reported by Antigua Observer, Ambrose's vision centres on connecting classroom learning with real-world clinical and community health experience — an approach that earned her organisation its GSU distinction and that she believes can directly address shortcomings in how health professionals are currently trained locally.

The move signals a growing ambition for Scrub Life Cares beyond its established operations, with Ambrose positioning the organisation as a potential partner for domestic academic and health institutions seeking to modernise their training frameworks.