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Healthcare visionary from Liberia wins million-dollarTED Prize

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Vancouver: Raj Panjabi, who fled to the United States to escape civil war in his native Liberia, eventually returned to his shattered homeland to find rural communities desperate for adequate healthcare.


The trained physician co-founded Last Mile Health in Liberia, which aims to recruit, train, equip and manage people in communities to serve as local healthcare workers.


He spoke about his organisation on Tuesday at the TED Conference famous for “ideas worth spreading,” sharing his dream of revolutionising healthcare.


The innovators, entrepreneurs, influencers, and artists known as ‘tedsters’ picked his innovative healthcare project as the winner of a coveted million-dollar TED


Prize awarded each year to a visionary idea.


“It has always been true in history that illness has been universal and access to care has not,” Panjabi said during an interview before speaking to the TED audience late on Tuesday.


“This is a story of people in rural areas around the world,” he said. Dr Panjabi used to start Last Mile Health came from cash he had received as a wedding gift.


The operation has grown to provide care for tens of thousands of people, and win support from Liberia’s health ministry, according to TED.


During the Ebola crisis, Panjabi’s organisation supported the Liberian government’s response, training more than 1,300 health workers on infection prevention and control at clinics.


“As global citizens, we’re living in a tumultuous moment,” said TED Prize director Anna Verghese. “Raj understands more than anyone that disease adheres neither to borders nor to nationalities.”


Panjabi wished for help creating a global academy, recruiting the “largest army of healthcare workers the world has ever known.”


People with middle- or high-school level educations would be hired from their communities, then given training, medicines and support to provide healthcare to neighbours.


“The challenge is, we can’t do that without technology,” Panjabi said.


“A lot of people worry about technology these days; in this case technology is creating jobs.”


The academy will start in Liberia, where Last Mile Health has operated for a decade, with a goal of expanding around the world, according to Panjabi. — AFP


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