A Day in the Life of a Global Health Physician

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Rajesh Panjabi, MD, has a secret to balancing his work as a global health physician with his personal life as husband and father to a young son: the support and love of his wife, Amisha, a psychologist at the VA in Bedford, MA.

Dr. Panjabi, a native of Liberia, was profoundly impacted by his family’s experience fleeing the country during its civil war.  As a 9 year old boy, he and his family escaped in a cargo plane to resettle in North Carolina. The memory of all those left behind on the tarmac is what he calls the “clarifying moment” that inspired him to make the commitment to return one day.  He honored that commitment in 2005 when he returned as a medical student working with other survivors of Liberia’s civil war and American colleagues to form Tiyatien Health, now known in the United States as Last Mile Health.

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Transforming Global Women’s Health, Fellow by Fellow

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From Botswana to Haiti to the Middle East, Global Women’s Health Fellows are making vital contributions in this newly emerging field.

Neha Pagidipati, MD, MPH is the most recent fellow to graduate from the program, receiving her certificate before an enthusiastic and supportive group of colleagues, family, and leadership from the Division of Women’s Health on June 3.

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“The Upstream Doctors” – An Accompanying Essay

The following is an excerpt from an accompanying essay I wrote for the TED book, “The Upstream Doctors,” by Dr. Rishi Manchanda. 

At the end of almost a decade spent in teaching hospitals and clinics, most (we hope all) physicians have honed their clinical acumen by focusing on the care of the patient who is right in front of them. Perhaps this is as it should be: as patients, we don’t want our doctors (or nurses or social workers) distracted by “outside” considerations such as the suffering or concerns of other patients not there in the exam room or, heaven forfend, by abstractions such as the extra-personal social forces that place people in harm’s way. We want the doctor focused on us, by bringing expertise and attention to our specific “illness episode” and even to our minor aches and pains. That’s what we want: laser-like focus, to use another term from the medical profession, on our own “chief complaint.”

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New Global Health Certificates from the MGH Institute of Health Professions

Nurses worldwide provide 80–90 percent of care to individuals in many under-served areas, yet it remains extremely difficult for nurses to get the broad-based experience and education that allows them to provide care for vulnerable populations in various cultural backgrounds around the globe.

To address this issue, the MGH Institute of Health Professions School of Nursing, in conjunction with clinicians at the world-renowned Partners In Health, has created two certificates in Global Health Nursing that will begin in fall 2013. A 9-credit fully online Certificate of Completion is available for RNs with a baccalaureate degree or higher, and a 15-credit Certificate of Advanced Study is available for master’s-prepared students. Both programs have flexible schedules to accommodate working professionals.

Contact Dr. Lynda Tyer-Viola for more information.

Following the Footsteps of Operation Walk

Operation Walk Boston began in 2007 with a simple goal: to help patients with arthritis and joint disease in the Dominican Republic get back on their feet through knee and hip replacement surgeries.

Six years later, Operation Walk has performed surgeries on more than 200 patients—enabling them to walk, run and even dance in this island nation—thanks to the team of BWHers who volunteer to travel there each year to perform joint replacement surgeries.

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Redefining Health Care Delivery

“If delivery systems can be transformed around the principle of value, the promise of health and productivity for those now facing both poverty and disease will not be squandered.” This is the core take-away message of a new paper out  in the Lancet by Global Health Delivery Project advisors Drs. Paul Farmer and Jim Kim, and Prof. Michael Porter at the Global Health Delivery Project at Harvard.

The paper represents six years of teamwork across institutions and geographies with the generosity of investors and implementers. Read more on the Global Health Delivery Project blog.

Celebrating Haiti’s New Teaching Hospital

I was honored to speak at the opening of Haiti’s national teaching hospital on April 28. The Haitian flag bears a phrase meaning “strength through unity,” and the Hôpital Universitaire de Mirebalais – also known as HUM –  is a shining example of the power of unity. Many of our committed staff at BWH have worked tirelessly in Haiti to design, build and outfit the facility, including Dr. David Walton from the Division of Global Health Equity, who played an instrumental role in shepherding HUM from ideas to reality. I admire and commend David as well as the countless others whose collaboration and guidance helped transform a rice field in the Haitian countryside into a world-class teaching hospital.   Continue reading “Celebrating Haiti’s New Teaching Hospital”

Health in Navajo Nation

Yesterday marked the start of Community Outreach and Patient Empowerment’s (COPE) 2013 Symposium: Community Health in Navajo Nation (NN). COPE is a partnership with the Navajo Nation Community Health Representative Outreach Program to improve the lives of those living with chronic diseases in Navajo.

NN Surgeon General, Dr. Gayle Dine Chacon, spoke about the need for community health innovations to better meet the needs of the Navajo people.

The goal of the COPE project is to strengthen the existing Community Health Representative (CHR) Program of the Navajo Nation and other American Indian / Alaska Native (AI/AN) nations with the following aims:

  • To provide CHRs with the training, support, and resources needed to enhance their ability to promote the health of their community members living in Navajo Nation;
  • To improve the health status of high-risk patients with diabetes and other chronic conditions;
  • To increase efforts of prevention and early diagnosis of diabetes and other chronic conditions affecting the Navajo community and other Native American communities.

Above: COPE Director Dr. Sonya Shin from Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Mrs. Didi Bertrand Farmer from Partners In Health.

A Paradigm Shift in Global Health Partnerships

RWANDA MINISTER OF HEALTH DR. AGNES BINAGWAHO SPOKE AT BRIGHAM AND WOMEN'S HOSPITAL ABOUT THE HUMAN RESOURCES FOR HEALTH PROGRAM TUESDAY AFTERNOON

The impact of the Human Resources for Health (HRH) program on Rwanda isn’t simply improving health in the African country. It’s changing everything.

“This program is a way that we can reverse the injustice of poverty,” said Dr. Agnes Binagwaho, minister of Health in Rwanda, of HRH’s long-term impact.

The seven-year HRH program is a partnership between the Rwandan government and universities and hospitals in the U.S. that strives to achieve one goal: to help Rwanda develop a high-quality and sustainable health care system. The program enables Rwanda to train and educate its health care workforce, care for the country’s patients and, as an indirect result, bring new businesses to the country that will stimulate economic growth.

During her visit to BWH last week, Binagwaho presented with BWH President Betsy Nabel, MD, about Rwanda’s health care needs and HRH’s first year of progress to a packed Bornstein Amphitheater. Binagwaho likened her country’s challenge in developing its own health care workforce to a classic “chicken and egg” conundrum.

“How can we produce these professions we need when we don’t have the people to train them?” she asked. “So we thought about creating partnerships with universities and hospitals like the Brigham. Let’s borrow ‘chickens’ from the United States to produce ‘eggs’ for Rwanda. This is a way to bring more justice by improving access to care.”

HRH launched last fall, with 97 faculty members—nine of whom are BWH physicians—participating from 23 universities in the U.S., including Harvard Medical School. The faculty members are focused on educating and training the next generation of doctors, nurses, midwives and other health care professionals.

When the program concludes in 2019, Rwanda’s workforce should be sustainable without foreign aid. In its first year, HRH is focusing on educating professionals in five specialties: gynecology, internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics and anesthesiology. After two years, the program will begin to focus on building subspecialties, such as pediatric surgery.

The needs in Rwanda are staggering. The country currently has six physicians per 100,000 people. By comparison, Boston alone boasts 1,053 physicians per 100,000 people. There isn’t a single cardiac surgeon, pathologist or cancer specialist in the country. HRH works to strengthen these and other specialty fields with critical shortages.

Led by co-investigators Robert Riviello, MD, and Corrado Cancedda, MD, HRH also builds upon the existing partnerships that many BWHers have already formed in Rwanda, including those through the Division of Global Health Equity, Partners In Health, the Center for Surgery and Public Health and the BWH-led Team Heart (see related story). While the HRH model builds on these programs and efforts, it also raises existing collaborations to an academic level to ensure Rwanda can educate the next generation of health care professionals and build a sustainable health care system.

“This is a wonderful partnership,” Nabel said. “I believe that reciprocity is the prize at the end of the day. We benefit from learning from one another and growing through this experience.”