Title: The Future of Global Health
1The Future of Global Health
- Jim Yong Kim M.D., Ph.D.
- François Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and
Human Rights - Brigham and Womens Hospital
- Harvard Medical School
- Harvard School of Public Health
- Partners In Health
Global Classroom Columbia University
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3The MDR-TB Death Sentence as Public Health Policy
- In developing countries, people with
multidrug-resistant tuberculosis usually die,
because effective treatment is often impossible
in poor countries. - - WHO 1996
- MDR TB is too expensive to treat in poor
countriesit detracts attention and resources
from treatingdrug-susceptible disease. - WHO
1997
4August 1996MDR-TB treatment project initiated in
Peru by Socios en Salud and Harvard/Partners in
Health.
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6Reduced prices of second-line TB drugs
7Scaling up of DOTS-Plus
Feb 2006 35 projects
8Changes in life expectancy in selected African
countries with high HIV prevalence, 1950 to 2000
65
60
Botswana
Uganda
55
South-Africa
Life expectancy at birth, in years
Zambia
50
Zimbabwe
45
40
35
1950-55
1955-60
1960-65
1965-70
1970-75
1975-80
1980-85
1985-90
1990-95
1995-00
Source United Nations Population Division, 1998
4
9Act Up and Initial AIDS Protest Efforts
10Objections to Treatment
- July 2000
- There are many ways to communicate the vital
information about HIV/AIDS. What works best in
one country may not be appropriate in another.
But to tackle the disease, everyone must first
understand that HIV is the enemy. Research, not
myths, will lead to the development of more
effective and cheaper treatments, and hopefully a
vaccine. But for now, emphasis must be placed on
preventing sexual transmission. -
- - Durban Declaration signed by over 5000
attendees of the XIII International AIDS
Conference in Durban, South Africa
11Global Protests Surrounding Access to ARVs
12No program to treat people in the poorest
countries has more intrigued experts than the one
started in Haiti by Partners In Health NEW
YORK TIMES11/30/2003
13Launching PEPFAR
- AIDS can be prevented. Anti-retroviral drugs can
extend life for many years. And the cost of those
drugs has dropped from 12,000 a year to under
300 a year -- which places a tremendous
possibility within our grasp. Ladies and
gentlemen, seldom has history offered a greater
opportunity to do so much for so many - January 28, 2003
"The British government has learned that Saddam
Hussein recently sought significant quantities of
uranium from Africa."
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16Number of people receiving ARV therapy in low-
and middle-income countries, 20022006
17Universal Access
18 19HIV Prevention and Treatment Integration into
Primary Health Care
Boucan Carre June 03 VCT with Staff Essential
Meds Community outreach
Boucan Carre March 03
20The four pillars of primary health care
HIV prevention and careintegration into
primary health care services
Womens Health, reproductive health, family
planning, PMTCT
21What does the Rwinkwavu model cost?
New Sites/Capital investment (14)
Administration
Building/ Infrastructure
Labour, excl. accompagnateurs (32)
Referrals
Transport/ Communication
Labour, accompagnateurs only (5)
Social (education, housing, mutuelles,
micro-finance, etc.)
Outpatient Nutritional Support (5)
Supplies (28)
6000 US/Capita
22Lesotho
23KZN XDRTB Survey Patient Characteristics
- Characteristics No. ()
- No prior TB Treatment 26 (51)
- Prior TB treatment
- Cure or Completed treatment 14 (28)
- Treatment Default or Failure 7 (14)
- HIV-infected (44 tested) 44 (100)
- Dead (Includes 34 on ARV) 52 (98)
- Identical M. tb spoligotype 26/30
Moll A, Gandhi NR, Pawinski R, Lalloo U, Sturm
AW, Zeller K, Andrews J, Friedland G. HIV
associated Extensively Drug-Resistant TB (XDR-TB)
in Rural KwaZulu-Natal (South Africa MRC Expert
Consultation Sept 8, 2006)
24Implementation bottleneck
- Vaccines
- Primary Health Care
- Drug Therapies
- Maternal and ChildHealth Care
- Basic Surgery
25Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation 6.5 BThe
Global Fund 8.6 BPresidents Emergency Plan
for AIDS 15 BInternational Finance Facility 4
BMulti-Country HIV/AIDS Program 1.1 BGlobal
Alliance 3 BPublic-private partnerships 1.2
BAnti-Malaria Initiative in Africa (proposed)
1.2 BUnited Nations Fund 360 M TOTAL 40.7 B
Funds pledged, committed, or spent. Overlap
exists between organizations (e.g., PEPFAR money
supports the Global Fund). Adapted from Jon
Cohen, The new world of global health. Science
2006311(5758)162-167.
26Gates grants
GATES GRANTS 448M - new health
technologies413M - HIV/AIDS vaccine 258M -
malaria vaccine165M - new malaria drugs 124M
- anti-HIV microbicides115M -
diarrhea/nutrition 106M - TB
vaccines/diagnostics
27Implementation bottleneck
- Vaccines
- Primary Health Care
- Drug therapies
- Maternal Child Health Care
- Basic Surgery
- Gates Foundation develops
- Microbicides and other preventive tools
- New malaria and TB drugs, diagnostics
- New combination therapies
- Drugs for neglected diseases
- gt10 new vaccines
28Conventional wisdom explaining delivery failures
- Markets not working incentive misalignment
- Slow diffusion of knowledge
- Lack of management skills
- Inadequate funding of infrastructure development
- Health care delivery is a complex,
multidimensional phenomenon that is difficult to
understand and even more difficult to manage
29Harvard Business School Faculty experts on
delivery and operations research
Michael E. Porter, Bishop William Lawrence
University Professor, Harvard University
30HOW DO WE STUDY COMPLEX STRATEGY PROBLEMS?
- Careful study of numerous case studies spanning
multiple settings and encompassing both success
and failure - Conduct in-depth field research focused on the
role of organizational leaders and their choices,
studied in context - Employ a mix of quantitative and qualitative
analysis - Develop analytic frameworks that can be applied
prospectively to guide practice - Develop theoretical principles about the
underlying phenomenon based on experience from
other industries - Encompass the complexity of the whole problem
- Intensive interaction with practitioners to
disseminate concepts and refine implementation in
specific country settings
Michael E. Porter, Harvard Business School
31Mismatch in Skills Taught and Skills Needed
Bachelors
MPH
MBA/MPA
MD
- No defined degree program in global health
- Broad liberal arts courses on on social or basic
science - Field-work on an ad-hoc basis
- Focus on quantitative methodology and research
- Population-level interventions
- Field-work on an ad-hoc basis
- Private/public management emphasis
- Little discussion of work in resource-poor
settings - No education of health science
- Focus on clinical and basic science
- Little education on health care delivery or
public health issues - Focus on single-patient interventions
No or extremely limited focus on health care
delivery
32Is there a place for a new discipline in health
education?
EvaluationSciences
Basic Science
Clinical Science
What is the pathophysiology?
What is the appropriate intervention?
Does the intervention work?
33Is there a place for a new discipline in health
education?
Basic Science
Clinical Science
EvaluationScience
Healthcare Delivery Science
How do we best deliverthe intervention to
everyone?
What is the pathophysiology?
What is the diagnosis and appropriate
intervention?
Does the intervention and delivery model work?
34Global Health in 2007 Increasing Access
35Our Response Building the Field of Global Health
Delivery
Better Health Care Outcomes
Advance Evidence Based Strategies
Build the Field and Disseminate Lessons Learned
Developing Leaders
Improving Service Delivery
Field Test Best Practices with Global Health
Practitioners
Training Programs
Community of Practice EMR Systems
Case Production
Create Innovation Network
Phase II
Phase I
36Objections to HIV Treatment
- April 2006
- The standard policy prescription is that in order
that to maximize health, with a limited budget,
funds should first be allocated to more cost-
effective interventions, and only then to
interventions with lesser cost effectiveness.
With limited resources, should the focus of
efforts to combat HIV/AIDS be on prevention or
treatment?...if the goal is to maximize the
health benefits produced, developing country
governments and international institutions should
focus their health spending first on the
prevention of HIV transmission, before moving on
to treatment. The opportunity cost of emphasizing
HIV/AIDS treatment over prevention in a
resource-constrained environment is measured in
millions of lives needlessly lost. -
- David Canning, Professor of Economics and
International Health at the Harvard School of
Public Health
37The Fruits of Advocacy
Bridge to Nowhere- 398 Million
38Before
After
39The Fruits of Advocacy
Bridge to Nowhere- 398 Million
National Security FY2008 war supplemental-
196.4 Billion
40Before
After
41The Fruits of Advocacy
National Security FY2008 war supplemental-
196.4 Billion
Bridge to Nowhere- 398 Million
Corn- 5.1 Billion/yr
42Before
After
43The Fruits of Advocacy
Bridge to Nowhere- 398 Million
National Security FY2008 war supplemental-
196.4 Billion
Corn- 5.1 Billion/yr
Sugar- up to 1.9 Billion/yr
44G7 Military Spending and Foreign Aid, 2006
45American Perceptions on Foreign Aid and Defense
Budget
- Recent 2005 survey showed Americans typically
believed that economic and humanitarian aid 10
of total federal budget - Only 18 guessed less than 3
- Actual 1.6
- When asked what should be allocated to foreign
aid, median response 15
46To create and nurture a community of the best
people committed to leadership in alleviating
human suffering caused by disease. HARVARD
MEDICAL SCHOOL MISSION STATEMENT