11 April 2019

Leveraging GeoHealth for Global Surgery

I am presenting today at Global Surgery Colombia and wanted to share some of what we are hearing.

In the opening address by Walter Johnson of the World Health Organization (UN) we learned about the complexity of WHO's approach to global health issues. I was struck by the diagram he used to diagram the financing:


It is impressive for its elegance as an infographic. But more importantly, it convincingly makes that point. Global health is vast and complex.

Surgery is increasingly important in the global health equation because of the alarming rate of global growth of non-communicable disease.


The turn towards surgery is challenging, because it requires more than just shipping supplies to remote areas. It requires infrastructure. It requires skilled specialists. It requires coordination.


Gabriel Herrera MD FACS helped explain the Lancet Commission's 6 indicators as a foundation for examining the surgical system for an entire country. Having worked on the topic for much of the last year, it was remarkable to hear it presented to an audience of surgeons and medical students.

But the highlight of the morning came when the Vice Minister of Health, Dr. Ivan Dario Gonzalez, announced that there will soon be a public online map of all of the hospitals in Colombia. Having mapped Colombian hospitals some myself, it was exciting to see the points arrayed on the map and to hear of the commitment to push these data into the public realm as an explicit step to improve health across the country.

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