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The vanguard of science has always been populated with young visionaries, those individuals who are motivated by impossibility and undaunted by failure, who operate and lead in a world in which cross-pollination and the synthesis of ideas are the norm. Seed’s Revolutionary Minds series features profiles of theses young innovators that are changing our world, moving us forward by asking the unasked questions. They revolutionize how science exists and operates, ensuring a better, more fulfilling, scientific future for us all.


Greg J. Smith is a Toronto-based designer with an active interest in the intersection of space and media. He authors Serial Consign, a blog dedicated to digital culture and information design and is a regular contributor to Rhizome. Greg co-edits the art and technology journal Vague Terrain and is currently working on several writing and design projects focused on the representation of urban space.


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Private Sector Strategy and Health Care

Category: Boundaries of science
Posted on: October 13, 2009 5:21 PM, by Greg J. Smith

Josh Ruxin has provided a thoughtful, measured description of how private sector management strategies could improve health care in developing countries. He drives this point home by highlighting the prevalence of dead-simple "institutional failures" such as convoluted daily schedules and bad accounting. How can we address these "cascading problems" and rethink healthcare (acknowledging that this is a universal problem—not just limited to developing countries)?

A little research yielded the above big think video interview where Ruxin outlines his experience directing Rwanda Works. Ruxin elaborates the ideas expressed in his RevMinds response in an extremely straightforward manner. As he states, "additional doctors, nurses and drugs" will not solve institutional shortcomings. He points to QuickBooks, accounting, HR and management training as bottom up actions that increase efficiency and profitability within individual clinics. Ruxin outlines that drug procurement alone is not the answer and instead points to the refining of knowledge-systems and optimization of workflows.

This thinking is echoed by Brian de Francesca, the Chief Operating Officer of Tawam Hospital in the UAE in an interview with FutureGov published this past summer:

People always want to make malls bigger and harder to manage, which I never understand. The same thing is happening with many hospitals. What matters to me is the management of information, different systems are unifying and we are getting a lot of information - we need to figure out how we design the systems to manage that enormous amount of data.
It is quite interesting that the same fundamental management problems hinder health care in all socioeconomic contexts. I'll dig further into information and management (specifically data) in health care in a post later this week.

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