Sunday, April 18, 2010

A tribute to CK Prahalad - The Tanzania Global Health Innovation Sandbox*



Noted author and thought leader Laurie Garrett has highlighted in her work that, “Moreover, in all too many cases, aid is tied to short-term numerical targets.” Arguments among pundits may vary, but not many deny the bottom-line; after decades of vertical programs traditional donor models need an infusion of new ideas and approaches to help reduce health disparities world-wide. Furthermore Secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton in a speech at the Center for Global Development in January 2010 that there is no limit to the potential for technology to overcome obstacles to progress or potential for fruitful partnership between our government and universities, laboratories, private companies, and charitable foundations that chase and fund discovery. To best promote these ideals for scientific discovery new models for partnership and testing of ideas must be enacted.

In the summer of 2006, the authors initiated the “Innovation Sandbox” project with graduate and undergraduate business, engineering, and liberal arts students from several premier universities from the United States in partnership with the Association of Private Health Facilities of Tanzania (APHFTA). This program has fostered cultural exchange and stimulated entrepreneurship for the over 500 physician practices in the APHFTA network to improve quality of care for the estimated over two million citizens they serve. Student teams have worked on programs that focused on creating a disease surveillance system for type II diabetes and reviewing the demand for micro-credit among private health care providers to expand purchasing power for essential equipment such as new generators and essential medicines. The philosophy of the Tanzania ‘sandbox program is to support the priorities of local partners to brainstorm opportunities and remove barriers to developing new programs that had fallen through the ‘cracks’ within the traditional donor system. Often time’s local doctors and health businesses felt that the traditional approaches focused on vertical programs and high profile diseases, rather than methods to strengthen health systems between public and private stakeholders.

What is a Sandbox?

The sandbox project was in part inspired by the work of C.K. Prahalad to achieve breakthrough innovation for the health care industry in India. Professor Prahalad stressed that there while there is no generic innovation sandbox design stakeholders can come together to identify the core constraints that must be overcome to achieve a breakthrough innovation in a particular sector or region.

Global Health sandboxes provide a forum to bridge universities, industry sponsors, students, and local communities within a ‘petri-dish’ collaborative environment to examine existing financial models, technology choices, distribution, scale, workflow, and organization of global health programs at the community level. To support this effectively all technologies, existing and emerging that could be deployed would be examined within the context of cultural acceptance, feasibility, and economic sustainability. This environment also includes ‘low hanging fruit’ interventions such as use of hand sanitizer stations in each community health clinic in places where running water is limited and providing community education and ‘wellness training’ by mobile phone to expectant mothers regarding the need to follow basic hand washing and water purification standards for children under-5. Larger scale programs that include public utilities for disposal of medical waste and pooled procurement facilities can be developed in the context of assessing novel methods for municipal debt financing through the issuance of bonds or creation of new global health equity markets. These equity markets can leverage the enormous good will of the international community to contribute towards portfolio of sustainable global health projects in the public and private sectors while maintaining the scrutiny to ensure that funds are reaching those citizens most in need and organization most qualified to implement field projects.

An important gap to address in creating an innovation sandbox for developing and deploying appropriate technologies for global health programs is the shortage of human resources and technical capacity. Exchange programs and associated spin off formal short course training can help develop a critical mass of technically skilled personnel familiar with the areas of business and entrepreneurship. To sustain innovation within the sandbox, mini-grants and ‘prizes’ should be awarded on a competitive basis to help implement new ideas.

Examples of topics to be sponsored by the innovation mini-grants for global health include

1) mobile health continuing medical education (CME) modules for maternal health,
2) testing of point of care (POC) diagnostics for non communicable and infectious diseases, and
3) micro franchising of wellness and prevention kiosks at the health center and village levels.

The innovators sandbox is a method to nurture creative financing, social media, and entrepreneurship to support and sustain locally driven research, development, and implementation of global health programs. However, as with any program, without good governance and transparent reporting of how funds are used and regular assessment of the impact of deployed programs within the local community, crossing the global health innovators chasm will not be fully achieved.

* Note: This article first appeared in the Africa Health - Tanzania Edition February 2010 and was presented at a poster session in March 2010 at the NCIIA Annual Conference. Authors;

SMA Hashim M.D. Chairperson (Retired), Association of Private Health Facilities of Tanzania (APHFTA)

Samwel Ogillo M.D. National Program Manager, Association of Private Health Facilities of Tanzania (APHFTA)

Kaushik Ramaiya M.D. Clinical Director, Hindu Mandal Hospital. Vice President, International Diabetes Federation

Jeffrey Blander Sc.D Co-leader Technology Innovation Working Group, Harvard Initiative for Global Health (HIGH) and President, Bienmoyo Foundation

Monday, April 05, 2010

Olympus 2010 - Humbled, Asante, Challenge, and Magic

2010 Olympus Innovation Award
Blander Acceptance
National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance (NCIIA) Conference
Friday March 26th, 2010
http://tinyurl.com/olympus2010


Dear distinguished colleagues and friends,

I have just a few minutes to make some remarks before they kick me off the stage. So I have tried to reduce these remarks to focus on 4 key words: Humbled, Asante, Challenge, and Magic.

The first word: humbled

  • I am very humbled when I look around this room and see the remarkable group of professionals who all are deserving of awards.
  • I am very Humbled when I think of the amazing heroes such as the patients and doctors I work with in field such as Tanzania would put their lives and talents on the line every day.
  • I am very Humbled with the extraordinary privilege of working with the brilliant and passionate students, mentors, and administrators who by their actions can turn a white board into a transformative universe of hope and statement of “yes we can” despite the obstacles in front of us.
  • So when I think of all of you and those mentioned, one must accept such an award with great humility and acknowledge all my colleagues dedication, hard work, courage and brilliance that have made my own accomplishments possible.

The second word: Asante (Thank you)

Accepting this award is an acknowledgment of all the amazing people in my life who have made me look much better than I am. While the list is too long, a few specific people & organizations need mentioning.

  • NCIIA. Olympus. Lemelson. Golinharris. Fogarty. Phil, Rachel, Tim, and Jennifer. Without your support. None of this would be possible.
  • Dr.’s Hashim, Ogillo, Kaushik, and Mugusi my super hero colleagues in Tanzania. I will walk through fire for you.
  • Patty, Linda, Steven Locke, Bryan Bergeron Danny Sands and Utkan Demirci, Jock Herron and rest of the HST939 crew from Harvard and MIT. Amy Smith who has led the way for so many.
  • Philip Kong and Vikram Kumar, my fellow Directors of the Bienmoyo Foundation
  • The amazing and endless list of graduate and undergraduate students from Harvard, MIT, UPENN.
  • The single most important person in my life, my amazing and talented wife Michelle. I wonder each day, hour, and minute how she puts up with me.
  • My family and my grandparents Rose and Fred. Thank you for encouraging me to pursue my dreams no matter what the odds.

The third word: Challenge

Despite the amazing efforts of the people in this community, the fact remains that Billions of citizens in the global community live in poverty without access to clean water, basic sanitation, or health care services. As shown during the first day group exercise, everyone in this room is capable of great accomplishments individually, but when we work together we have the power to transform the world with smarter technology and systems to break the unforgiving cycles of poverty and disease to create opportunities and empower all the worlds citizens.

The fourth word: Magic

Ms. J.K. Rowling of Harry Potter Fame said at a recent Harvard Commencement address “We do not need magic to change the world, we carry all the power we need inside ourselves already: we have the power to imagine better.”

My colleagues and friends, I look forward to working with you in this wonderful NCIIA global community to imagine better and to make our own brand of magic, through hard work, perseverance, and resolve knowing that the best is yet to come.

Thank you all so much.
Photo Credit: Michelle Levine