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Global Health: Making a Difference. Robert Malkin Director, Global Public Service Academies. Instructions. During our call To mute #5 To unmute press #5 again Press #0 for technical assistance. First: What is Global Health?. Global Health. $29 billion. Global Health. $29 billion.
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Global Health: Making a Difference Robert Malkin Director, Global Public Service Academies
Instructions During our call • To mute #5 • To unmute press #5 again • Press #0 for technical assistance
Global Health $29 billion
Global Health $29 billion $31 billion
Global Health $29 billion $31 billion
What is global? Dry, ice and green on earth
What is Global? Earth at Night
What is Global? (Millions per square mile) Population Density
What is Global Health? % Without safe water
What is Global Health? % Stunting
What is Global Health? % HIV Positive
What is Global Health? Life Expectancy
Medium Human Development High Human Development (most, first) What is Global Health? Low Human Development (least, third) UN Human Development Index
Most Developed Nations Least So, what can we do? Conclusion: Send $$
Just Sending Money Won’t Work Conclusion: Send Equipment Corruption Brain Drain Infrastructure Savannah Carson, EWH volunteer with new friends in Tanzania
of hospital equipment in least developed nations is donated 80% WHO Guidelines for Medical Equipment Donations WHO Essential Health Care Technology: http://www.who.int/medical_devices/en/index.html
My Experience at Kissy Eye ClinicFreetown,Sierra Leone Arrival with cataract surgeon At the end of the day, this girl was waiting
Medium Human Development High Human Development (most, first) Where Sierra Leone? Sierra Leone Low Human Development (least, third) UN Human Development Index
Sierra Leone • Life Expectancy - 38 years • Safe Drinking Water - 54% • Infant Mortality - 170/1000 • Under Five Mortality - 286/1000 Ingrid BB Cindy Adolfo
Something Was Wrong • It was late at night • Cataract patients waiting • Phaco and XYZ = 20 minutes
Got to Work • In 30 minutes • Fixed the XYZ • All Patients Treated • Needed • Spare parts • Tools • Knowledge Training Paul to work on XYZ Scope
of all donated medical equipment does not work*+ Hypotheses Spare Parts Consumables Too Complicated 70% *WHO Guidelines for Medical Equipment Donations + Malkin, Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering, 2007
O2 sensor Needs replacement Tracy Lipps with donated Siemens Ventilators Worked for 4 months, then stopped
Jinotepe, Nicaragua Sidelined due to consumables
Electrodes Sensors Test strips Reaction Cartridges Blood Pressure Cuffs Printing Paper Sterilization Check strips IV Pump Cartridges Reagent Packs Bovie Pens Tubing Canulae Consumables
Malignant neoplasm, % of population Inappropriate Donations
Leading Causes of Mortality Most Developed Nations Least Developed Nations WHO data 2003 (COPD= chronic obstructive pulmonary disease)
What is Everyone Talking About? • Global Health ≠ us • archetype = Africa • Sending money is NOT the answer • Only medium human development • Sending equipment is NOT the answer • Consumables • Lack of trained staff • Spare parts • Our equipment is NOT appropriate • Solves the wrong problems • There is no silver bullet
What are we doing? • Duke-EWH Summer Institute • Global Public Service Academies (GPSA) • Duke Research: Capacity Building • Duke CUREs What can you do?
Duke-EWHSummer Institute www.ewh.org 56 Participants in 2009 1 Month Training in Costa Rica/Tanzania 1 Month in a poor Hospital Nicaragua, Honduras, Tanzania
Analysis Failures Repairing Equipment 29% Spare Parts for the Power Supply
InventoryWhat do they have? Training 24% training including user error and installation
Health Impact • 2003-2009: >2000 pieces into service • >$4 million worth
Training100’s Global Engineers Trip Profile: Stephanie Patnode University of Southern California, UC Berkeley “I’d go back tomorrow. I … for once, felt like an engineer.”
Students Making a Difference www.gpsa.us Global Public Service Academies Academic Summer Programs for High School Students
Students Making a Difference Pediatric Ward Jacmel, Haiti • High School Students • Sophomores/Juniors • Interested in health careers • 4 weeks in a developing world clinic/hospital • Mornings in training • educational collaborator MIT, FLGCU • language
Students Making a Difference www.gpsa.us • Afternoons working in the clinic • Health Screening (vision, BP, temperature, weight, etc) • Shadowing physicians, pharmacists, nurses • Traditional volunteer roles • Research with MIT faculty, undergrads, grads • Needs Finding – Disabilities FGCU faculty, undergrads
Students Making a Difference www.gpsa.us Men’s Ward, Sierra Leone • Expecting it to be very competitive • Will cost, scholarships available • Applications available Oct 1 @www.gpsa.us • First summer in 2010
What can you do?Design for the Developing World • Web Site: www.ewh.org/youth • Lists about 20 Identified Needs • Anyone can design solutions • EWH will pay for prototyping • May enter distribution system