-
I want to share with you
something my father taught me:
-
no condition is permanent.
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It's a lesson he shared with me
again and again,
-
and I learned it to be true the hard way.
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Here I am in my fourth-grade class.
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This is my yearbook picture
taken in my class in school
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in Monrovia, Liberia.
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My parents migrated from India
to West Africa in the 1970s,
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and I had the privilege
of growing up there.
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I was nine years old,
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I loved kicking around a soccer ball,
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and I was a total math and science geek.
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I was living the kind of life
that, really, any child would dream of.
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But no condition is permanent.
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On Christmas Eve in 1989,
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civil war erupted in Liberia.
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The war started in the rural countryside,
-
and within months, rebel armies
had marched towards our hometown.
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My school shut down,
-
and when the rebel armies captured
the only international airport,
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people started panicking and fleeing.
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My mom came knocking one morning
and said, "Raj, pack your things --
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we have to go."
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We were rushed to the center of town,
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and there on a tarmac,
we were split into two lines.
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I stood with my family in one line,
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and we were stuffed into the cargo hatch
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of a rescue plane.
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And there on a bench,
I was sitting with my heart racing.
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As I looked out the open hatch,
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I saw hundreds of Liberians
in another line,
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children strapped to their backs.
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When they tried to jump in with us,
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I watched soldiers restrain them.
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They were not allowed to flee.
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We were the lucky ones.
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We lost what we had,
-
but we resettled in America,
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and as immigrants, we benefitted
from the community of supporters
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that rallied around us.
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They took my family into their home,
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they mentored me.
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And they helped my dad
start a clothing shop.
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I'd visit my father
on weekends as a teenager
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to help him sell sneakers and jeans.
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And every time business would get bad,
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he'd remind me of that mantra:
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no condition is permanent.
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That mantra and my parents' persistence
and that community of supporters
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made it possible for me
to go through college
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and eventually to medical school.
-
I'd once had my hopes crushed in a war,
-
but because of them,
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I had a chance to pursue my dream
to become a doctor.
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My condition had changed.
-
It had been 15 years
since I escaped that airfield,
-
but the memory of those two lines
had not escaped my mind.
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I was a medical student in my mid-20s,
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and I wanted to go back
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to see if I could serve
the people we'd left behind.
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But when I got back,
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what I found was utter destruction.
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The war had left us with just 51 doctors
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to serve a country of four million people.
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It would be like the city of San Francisco
having just 10 doctors.
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So if you got sick in the city
where those few doctors remain,
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you might stand a chance.
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But if you got sick in the remote,
rural rainforest communities,
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where you could be days
from the nearest clinic --
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I was seeing my patients die
from conditions no one should die from,
-
all because they were
getting to me too late.
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Imagine you have a two-year-old
who wakes up one morning with a fever,
-
and you realize she could have malaria,
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and you know the only way to get her
the medicine she needs
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would be to take her to the riverbed,
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get in a canoe, paddle to the other side
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and then walk for up to two days
through the forest
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just to reach the nearest clinic.
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One billion people live
in the world's most remote communities,
-
and despite the advances we've made
in modern medicine and technology,
-
our innovations are not
reaching the last mile.
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These communities have been left behind,
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because they've been thought
too hard to reach
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and too difficult to serve.
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Illness is universal;
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access to care is not.
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And realizing this lit a fire in my soul.
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No one should die because they live
too far from a doctor or clinic.
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No condition should be permanent.
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And help in this case
didn't come from the outside,
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it actually came from within.
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It came from the communities themselves.
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Meet Musu.
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Way out in rural Liberia,
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where most girls have not had
a chance to finish primary school,
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Musu had been persistent.
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At the age of 18,
she completed high school,
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and she came back to her community.
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She saw that none of the children
were getting treatment
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for the diseases
they needed treatment for --
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deadly diseases, like malaria
and pneumonia.
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So she signed up to be a volunteer.
-
There are millions of volunteers like Musu
in rural parts around our world,
-
and we got to thinking --
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community members like Musu
could actually help us solve a puzzle.
-
Our health care system
is structured in such a way
-
that the work of diagnosing disease
and prescribing medicines
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is limited to a team of nurses
and doctors like me.
-
But nurses and doctors
are concentrated in cities,
-
so rural communities like Musu's
have been left behind.
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So we started asking some questions:
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What if we could reorganize
the medical care system?
-
What if we could have community
members like Musu
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be a part or even be the center
of our medical team?
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What if Musu could help us bring
health care from clinics in cities
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to the doorsteps of her neighbors?
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Musu was 48 when I met her.
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And despite her amazing talent and grit,
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she hadn't had a paying job in 30 years.
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So what if technology could support her?
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What if we could invest in her
with real training,
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equip her with real medicines,
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and have her have a real job?
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Well, in 2007, I was trying
to answer these questions,
-
and my wife and I were
getting married that year.
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We asked our relatives to forgo
the wedding registry gifts
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and instead donate some money
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so we could have some start-up money
to launch a nonprofit.
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I promise you, I'm a lot
more romantic than that.
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(Laughter)
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We ended up raising $6,000,
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teamed up with some
Liberians and Americans
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and launched a nonprofit
called Last Mile Health.
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Our goal is to bring a health worker
within reach of everyone, everywhere.
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We designed a three-step process --
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train, equip and pay --
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to invest more deeply
in volunteers like Musu
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to become paraprofessionals,
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to become community health workers.
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First we trained Musu to prevent,
diagnose and treat
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the top 10 diseases afflicting
families in her village.
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A nurse supervisor visited her
every month to coach her.
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We equipped her with modern
medical technology,
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like this $1 malaria rapid test,
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and put it in a backpack
full of medicines like this
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to treat infections like pneumonia,
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and crucially,
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a smartphone, to help her track
and report on epidemics.
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Last, we recognized
the dignity in Musu's work.
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With the Liberian government,
we created a contract,
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paid her
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and gave her the chance
to have a real job.
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And she's amazing.
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Musu has learned over 30 medical skills,
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from screening children for malnutrition,
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to assessing the cause
of a child's cough with a smartphone,
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to supporting people with HIV
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and providing follow-up care
to patients who've lost their limbs.
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Working as part of our team,
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working as paraprofessionals,
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community health workers can help ensure
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that a lot of what
your family doctor would do
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reaches the places that most
family doctors could never go.
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One of my favorite things to do
is to care for patients
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with community health workers.
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So last year I was visiting A.B.,
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and like Musu, A.B. had had
a chance to go to school.
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He was in middle school,
in the eighth grade,
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when his parents died.
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He became an orphan and had to drop out.
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Last year, we hired and trained
A.B. as a community health worker.
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And while he was making
door to door house calls,
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he met this young boy named Prince,
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whose mother had had trouble
breastfeeding him,
-
and by the age of six months,
Prince had started to waste away.
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A.B. had just been taught how to use
this color-coded measuring tape
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that wraps around the upper arm
of a child to diagnose malnutrition.
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A.B. noticed that Prince
was in the red zone,
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which meant he had to be hospitalized.
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So A.B. took Prince
and his mother to the river,
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got in a canoe
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and paddled for four hours
to get to the hospital.
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Later, after Prince was discharged,
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A.B. taught mom how to feed baby
a food supplement.
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A few months ago,
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A.B. took me to visit Prince,
and he's a chubby little guy.
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(Laughter)
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He's meeting his milestones,
he's pulled himself up to a stand,
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and is even starting to say a few words.
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I'm so inspired by these
community health workers.
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I often ask them why they do what they do,
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and when I asked A.B.,
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he said, "Doc, since I dropped out
of school, this is the first time
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I'm having a chance
to hold a pen to write.
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My brain is getting fresh."
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The stories of A.B. and Musu
have taught me something fundamental
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about being human.
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Our will to serve others
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can actually help us
transform our own conditions.
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I was so moved by how powerful
the will to serve our neighbors can be
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a few years ago,
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when we faced a global catastrophe.
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In December 2013,
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something happened in the rainforests
across the border from us in Guinea.
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A toddler named Emile fell sick
with vomiting, fever and diarrhea.
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He lived in an area
where the roads were sparse
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and there had been massive
shortages of health workers.
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Emile died,
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and a few weeks later his sister died,
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and a few weeks later his mother died.
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And this disease would spread
from one community to another.
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And it wasn't until three months later
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that the world recognized this as Ebola.
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When every minute counted,
we had already lost months,
-
and by then the virus had spread
like wildfire all across West Africa,
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and eventually to other
parts of the world.
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Businesses shut down,
airlines started canceling routes.
-
At the height of the crisis,
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when we were told that 1.4 million
people could be infected,
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when we were told
that most of them would die,
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when we had nearly lost all hope,
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I remember standing with a group
of health workers
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in the rainforest where
an outbreak had just happened.
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We were helping train and equip
them to put on the masks,
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the gloves and the gowns that they needed
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to keep themselves safe from the virus
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while they were serving their patients.
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I remember the fear in their eyes.
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And I remember staying up at night,
terrified if I'd made the right call
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to keep them in the field.
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When Ebola threatened to bring
humanity to its knees,
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Liberia's community health workers
didn't surrender to fear.
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They did what they had always done:
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they answered the call
to serve their neighbors.
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Community members across Liberia
learned the symptoms of Ebola,
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teamed up with nurses and doctors
to go door-to-door to find the sick
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and get them into care.
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They tracked thousands of people
who had been exposed to the virus
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and helped break
the chain of transmission.
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Some ten thousand community
health workers risked their own lives
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to help hunt down this virus
and stop it in its tracks.
-
(Applause)
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Today, Ebola has come
under control in West Africa,
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and we've learned a few things.
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We've learned that blind spots
in rural health care
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can lead to hot spots of disease,
-
and that places all of us at greater risk.
-
We've learned that the most efficient
emergency system
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is actually an everyday system,
-
and that system has to reach
all communities,
-
including rural communities like Emile's.
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And most of all,
-
we've learned from the courage
of Liberia's community health workers
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that we as people are not defined
by the conditions we face,
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no matter how hopeless they seem.
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We're defined by how we respond to them.
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For the past 15 years,
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I've seen the power of this idea
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to transform everyday citizens
into community health workers --
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into everyday heroes.
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And I've seen it play out everywhere,
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from the forest communities
of West Africa,
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to the rural fishing villages of Alaska.
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It's true,
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these community health workers
aren't doing neurosurgery,
-
but they're making it possible
-
to bring health care within reach
of everyone everywhere.
-
So now what?
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Well, we know that there are still
millions of people dying
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from preventable causes
-
in rural communities around the world.
-
And we know that the great majority
of these deaths are happening
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in these 75 blue-shaded countries.
-
What we also know
-
is that if we trained an army
of community health workers
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to learn even just 30 lifesaving skills,
-
we could save the lives of nearly
30 million people by 2030.
-
Thirty services could save
30 million lives by 2030.
-
That's not just a blueprint --
-
we're proving this can be done.
-
In Liberia,
-
the Liberian government is training
thousands of workers like A.B. and Musu
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after Ebola,
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to bring health care to every
child and family in the country.
-
And we've been honored to work with them,
-
and are now teaming up
with a number of organizations
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that are working across other countries
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to try to help them do the same thing.
-
If we could help these countries scale,
-
we could save millions of lives,
-
and at the same time,
-
we could create millions of jobs.
-
We simply can't do that, though,
without technology.
-
People are worried that technology
is going to steal our jobs,
-
but when it comes
to community health workers,
-
technology has actually
been vital for creating jobs.
-
Without technology --
without this smartphone,
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without this rapid test --
-
it would have been impossible for us
to be able to employ A.B. and Musu.
-
And I think it's time
for technology to help us train,
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to help us train people faster
and better than ever before.
-
As a doctor,
-
I use technology to stay up-to-date
and keep certified.
-
I use smartphones, I use apps,
I use online courses.
-
But when A.B. wants to learn,
-
he's got to jump back in that canoe
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and get to the training center.
-
And when Musu shows up for training,
-
her instructors are stuck using
flip charts and markers.
-
Why shouldn't they have the same
access to learn as I do?
-
If we truly want community health workers
to master those lifesaving skills
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and even more,
-
we've got to change this old-school
model of education.
-
Tech can truly be a game changer here.
-
I've been in awe of the digital
education revolution
-
that the likes of Khan Academy
and edX have been leading.
-
And I've been thinking that it's time;
-
it's time for a collision
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between the digital education revolution
-
and the community health revolution.
-
And so, this brings me
to my TED Prize wish.
-
I wish --
-
I wish that you would help us recruit
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the largest army of community health
workers the world has ever known
-
by creating the Community Health Academy,
-
a global platform to train,
connect and empower.
-
(Applause)
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)
-
Thank you.
-
Here's the idea:
-
we'll create and curate
-
the best in digital education resources.
-
We will bring those to community
health workers around the world,
-
including A.B. and Musu.
-
They'll get video lessons
on giving kids vaccines
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and have online courses
on spotting the next outbreak,
-
so they're not stuck using flip charts.
-
We'll help these countries
accredit these workers,
-
so that they're not stuck remaining
an under-recognized, undervalued group,
-
but become a renowned,
empowered profession,
-
just like nurses and doctors.
-
And we'll create a network
of companies and entrepreneurs
-
who've created innovations
that can save lives
-
and help them connect
to workers like Musu,
-
so she can help better
serve her community.
-
And we'll work tirelessly
to persuade governments
-
to make community health workers
a cornerstone of their health care plans.
-
We plan to test and prototype
the academy in Liberia
-
and a few other partner countries,
-
and then we plan to take it global,
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including to rural North America.
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With the power of this platform,
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we believe countries can be more persuaded
-
that a health care revolution
really is possible.
-
My dream is that this academy
will contribute to the training
-
of hundreds of thousands
of community members
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to help bring health care
to their neighbors --
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the hundreds of millions of them
-
that live in the world's most
remote communities,
-
from the forest communities
of West Africa,
-
to the fishing villages of rural Alaska;
-
from the hilltops of Appalachia,
to the mountains of Afghanistan.
-
If this vision is aligned with yours,
-
head to communityhealthacademy.org,
-
and join this revolution.
-
Let us know if you or your organization
or someone you know could help us
-
as we try to build this academy
over the next year.
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Now, as I look out into this room,
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I realize that our journeys
are not self-made;
-
they're shaped by others.
-
And there have been so many here
that have been part of this cause.
-
We're so honored to be part
of this community,
-
and a community that's willing
to take on a cause
-
as audacious as this one,
-
so I wanted to offer, as I end,
-
a reflection.
-
I think a lot more about
what my father taught me.
-
These days, I too have become a dad.
-
I have two sons,
-
and my wife and I just learned
that she's pregnant with our third child.
-
(Applause)
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)
-
I was recently caring
for a woman in Liberia
-
who, like my wife,
was in her third pregnancy.
-
But unlike my wife,
-
had had no prenatal care
with her first two babies.
-
She lived in an isolated community
in the forest that had gone for 100 years
-
without any health care
-
until ...
-
until last year when a nurse
trained her neighbors
-
to become community health workers.
-
So here I was,
-
seeing this patient
who was in her second trimester,
-
and I pulled out the ultrasound
to check on the baby,
-
and she started telling us stories
about her first two kids,
-
and I had the ultrasound
probe on her belly,
-
and she just stopped mid-sentence.
-
She turned to me and she said,
-
"Doc, what's that sound?"
-
It was the first time she'd ever heard
her baby's heartbeat.
-
And her eyes lit up in the same way
my wife's eyes and my own eyes lit up
-
when we heard our baby's heartbeat.
-
For all of human history,
-
illness has been universal
and access to care has not.
-
But as a wise man once told me:
-
no condition is permanent.
-
It's time.
-
It's time for us to go as far as it takes
-
to change this condition together.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)