Pharmacy on a bicycle: innovative solutions for global health and poverty Bing, Eric G.
Series: BK CurrentsPublication details: 2013 Berrett - Koehler Publishers San FranciscoDescription: xii, 223 pISBN:- 9781626561175
- 362.1782091724 B4P4
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Ahmedabad | Non-fiction | 362.1782091724 B4P4 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 180333 |
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362.170284 C2 Care in practice: on tinkering in clinics, homes and farms | 362.175 G2B3 Being mortal: medicine and what matters in the end | 362.1782 C5 The clinical practice of drug information | 362.1782091724 B4P4 Pharmacy on a bicycle: innovative solutions for global health and poverty | 362.18 C2 Case studies in public health preparedness and response to disasters |
Every four minutes, over 50 children under the age of five die. In the same four minutes, 2 mothers lose their lives in childbirth. Every year, malaria kills nearly 1.2 million people, despite the fact that it can be prevented with a mosquito net and treated for less than $1.50.
Sadly, this list goes on and on. Millions are dying from diseases that we can easily and inexpensively prevent, diagnose, and treat. Why? Because even though we know exactly what people need, we just can’t get it to them. They are dying not because we can’t solve a medical problem but because we can’t solve a logistics problem.
In this profoundly important book, Eric G. Bing and Marc J. Epstein lay out a solution: a new kind of bottom-up health care that is delivered at the source. We need microclinics, micropharmacies, and microentrepreneurs located in the remote, hard-to-reach communities they serve. By building a new model that “scales down” to train and incentivize all kinds of health-care providers in their own villages and towns, we can create an army of on-site professionals who can prevent tragedy at a fraction of the cost of top-down bureaucratic programs.
Bing and Epstein have seen the model work, and they provide example after example of the extraordinary results it has achieved in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. This is a book about taking health care the last mile—sometimes literally—to prevent widespread, unnecessary, and easily avoided death and suffering. Pharmacy on a Bicycle shows how the same forces of innovation and entrepreneurship that work in first-world business cultures can be unleashed to save the lives of millions.
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