Saturday, February 25, 2012

Global Health Delivery Course

I will be posting more information in the coming days including videos of lectures, summaries, pictures, and other materials. For the moment, please refer to my article in The New Times about the Harvard Global Health Delivery course that was held in Rwinkwavu from 19-23 February 2012.

You can read my article here: 

Conceptualizing Global Health Delivery

And another article by Rwanda Focus journalist Marie-Brigitte Kabalira here:

New Course Looks Beyond Patient As a 'Health Issue'

More materials coming soon...

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Conceptualizing Global Health Delivery in Rwanda


I published the following piece in the New Times on Thursday, 23 February.




The traditional definition of public health has often been relatively narrow and focused on siloed programs, or the management of health for quick “cost-effective” impact. This definition cannot suit Rwanda’s approach to public health, as we know that the ultimate end of our programs must be to break the cycle of poverty and disease. This means managing in a high value way for supporting sustainable development, and this begins with always accounting for the cost of inaction.

Rwanda today is led by a leader who in my point of view runs this country efficiently as a value-driven private enterprise for sustainable and equitable economic growth. He will lead us to a be a middle-income country by 2020.  To support Vision 2020, our health laws, policies, strategies, and implementation approaches must be oriented towards breaking the cycle of poverty and disease that pulls down development. This important to keep in mind as face day after day much urgency and we have to solve them without undermining our future, as we know that some “quick win” interventions can in fact be the enemy of sustainable development when they are not designed thoughtfully and with the larger context in mind. 

This week, thirty-seven officials and professionals from the Ministry of Health, Rwanda Biomedical Center, and CHUK have gathered together with faculty from Harvard Medical School in Rwinkwavu, Kayonza District for the inaugural Global Health Delivery in Rwanda course. Led by my dear friend Paul Farmer, Kolokotrones Professor and Chair of the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School, the top-ranked American university has pioneered a new approach to global health partnership by teaching this course outside of the United States for the first time and brining it to the heart of Africa.

To make this course possible, Harvard has sent a team of professors to Rwanda, and the Ministry of Health has availed its training facilities in Rwinkwavu, to host the course with the support of Partners In Health/Inshuti Mu Buzima. This partnership has created a unique and collaborative learning environment that will pay dividends throughout the entire health Rwandan sector and beyond.

Last Sunday, young professionals and program managers were trained to be faculty members for future offerings of the Global Health Delivery in Rwanda course, learning how to share their experiences, to conceptualize their work using strategy and value analysis, and how to write their own cases to teach colleagues from around Rwanda and soon from around the entire world.

This course is about strategic thinking for better service delivery all along the cascade of services in the pursuit of optimal outcomes of prevention, care, and treatment. Students, faculty in training, and faculty exchange on techniques for better understanding the value added by each step within the cascade. For example, in our day-to-day management of the health sector, we realize the need to revise the usual approach to focusing on access by focusing on actual provision. Having an open door is sometimes not enough to meet the needs of the most vulnerable; sometimes, we must bring the services directly to them. 

We must also work towards a paradigm shift around traditional notions of cost effectiveness by emphasizing measurement tools that account for the impact of population health status on our country’s sustainable development process. This means implementing the health sector’s vision through a holistic approach driven by evidence-based and person-centered policies that are evaluated by rigorous monitoring, just as we would in building and sustaining a successful business. The inaugural Global Health Delivery in Rwanda course runs from 19 to 23 February this week, and will be offered twice per year from now on. I expect it to bring great things to Rwanda in the coming years. 

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Progress in Rwanda's Fight Against Malaria

On Monday, 30 January, the African Leaders Malaria Alliance (ALMA) presented to our President, His Excellency Paul Kagame, with a 2012 ALMA Award for Excellence in recognition of Rwanda’s tremendous progress in malaria control. 

This is truly a well-deserved honor, as he has supported the Ministry of Health and its partners across the public sector, civil society, and the international community  in achieving a 70% decrease in malaria incidence and a 60% decrease in malaria mortality between 2005 and 2010. These dramatic results are the latest data from the 2010 Demographic and Health Survey (which will be publically available online next month). 

Last week, I had the great pleasure of launching a new malaria control campaign in Nyagatare District, which alone accounts for 40.4% of malaria incidence across the whole of Rwanda. A cross-sectorial approach to increasing utilization of insecticide-treated bed nets and clearing areas of standing water where mosquitoes breed will help to dramatically reduce this unacceptable figure in the next three months and contribute to the Government’s goal of eliminating malaria within national borders by 2015.

I offer my deepest heartfelt congratulations to all those who have contributed to this success, from His Excellency to the health workers at the community level. Let us all take this opportunity to rededicate ourselves to the fight against malaria and for a Rwanda where no one dies needlessly of preventable and treatable diseases.

Now we must explore sustainable approaches to eliminating malaria as a public health priority. For this to occur, we must have factories manufacturing long-lasting insecticide-treated bed nets and appropriate anti-malarial drugs. We will also need to strengthen cross-border collaborations, including the improvement of anti-counterfeit drug activities and the harmonization of prevention and treatment strategies across the region. When we have achieved our goals, Rwanda’s children will have peaceful nights and parents will not fear when they hear the “bzzzzz” noise coming across the room, for it will not be a mosquito but rather a simple fly suffering from insomnia.

(Image courtesy of Rwanda News Agency)