If we can agree what the collaboration whole truths are then we can search who is collaboratively empowering them and linkin millennials' goals around most urgent local challenges to human sustainability and developing livelihoods
can you recommend any editing suggestions to these whole truths
Where do you map leaders  of investing in women and youth 
1972-1996 principles womens banking to end poverty  
(Bangladesh BRAC from 1972 , Grameen from 1983)
 
Trust those who network infant health solutions even to extent  that if they offer you as an illiterate village mother a loan to train for a job they will deliver the job ; next demand that they invest bank in our childrens education!
 
Post 1996 extra demand millennials banking & win-win leapfrog
- mobile web  services for poor that help youth develop missing infrastructure sustaining 10 times  more health and growth - eg grameen solar, kenya jamii bora, mpesa, ihub-usahidi,  nanocredit - most of these supported by mit wizard technologists whose work now converges at BRAC's Home | bKash and #2030now  
(extra good news - 33 years of networking between boston and haiti  (and peru since mid 1990s) came up with an even better microhealth design than bangladesh thanks to farmer/kim and friends of ih) -just look at New hospital in Haiti proves that aid done right can change lives with special thanks to soros summit- keynotes farmer and abed- and students at budapest central european university summer 2013
 
 
image
 
 
 
 
 
New hospital in Haiti proves that aid done right can cha...
Mirebalais, HaitiThe gleaming white hospital appears out of nowhere in the bustle of this impoverished city in the Central Plateau of Haiti.
Preview by Yahoo
 

 

nb 1972 definition of bangladesh village zero infrastructure - no electricity, no literacy, no telecoms, no roads, no running water, no sanitation, no money, in womens case extreme underclass
 
chris macrae worldentrepreneur.net bethesda 301 881 1655

 

 
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forbes article

Does Paul Farmer Have the Ebola Solution? George Soros Is Spending $4 Million to Find Out



The Ebola outbreak, which public health officials privately fret could turn into a global pandemic, carries with it a quiet riddle: while West Africa ineptly focuses on prevention, virtually no one has focused on care.

Or to put it mathematically, the fatality rate from Ebola, historically near 90%, sits closer to 50% during this outbreak (4,366 cases, 2,218 deaths), despite the fact that the facilities in Liberia, Sierra Leone and other countries affected remain appalling. What would the true rate be if victims were treated under western standards? And the larger ramifications if Ebola was no longer viewed as an automatic death sentence?

“There’s never been a connection between Ebola and first-rate medical care,” says Paul Farmer, the renowned co-founder of Partners in Health, before pointing out that none of the health care workers flown back to the U.S. for treatment have died. Could the answer to the outbreak lie in the care regiment for those afflicted?

We’ll soon find out. Farmer landed in Liberia this morning, at the center of a coalition quietly formed to specifically – and quickly – test that thesis. In the next few weeks, the Farmer group will open a top-notch treatment facility in one of Liberia’s most rural provinces, along with strategies designed to maximize its effectiveness.

“This has been coming together for years,” Farmer tells Forbes, a few hours before departing on the trip. “The Ebola crisis pushed it over the edge.”

The impetus for this coalition began with a meeting two weeks ago, convened by Farmer’s co-founder at Partners in Health, Jim Kim, who is now president of the World Bank. Attendees included Director-General Margaret Chan of the World Health Organization, Tom Frieden, Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Francis Collins, Director of the National Institute for Health. Dismayed by the global response – Kim told the group that the outbreak already ranks among the worst health crises in world history — Kim tabbed Farmer as the World Bank’s special Ebola advisor and also enlisted another attendee at the meeting, Raj Panjabi, who runs Last Mile Health in Liberia. (Full disclosure: Panjabi was mentored at last year’s Forbes 400 Summit on Philanthropy and I now chair the advisory board for Last Mile Health, which hires, trains and manages front-line health care workers in remote villages.)

George Soros’ Open Society Foundations quickly provided $4 million to fund this project. “The coalition got us a proposal the next day, they answered all our questions the day after, and we got them the funds they needed before the week was out,” says Chris Stone, the organization’s president. The project was appealing to Soros’ team because it features a local group familiar with the turf, an entrepreneurial mentality and the ability to scale.

Scalability is key because if this test facility in Liberia’s Grand Gedeh County works short-term, it provides the long-term blueprint to curb the outbreak. Rather than quarantine healthy people with the sick  or sometimes watch suspicious — and highly-contagious – patients break out even after being committed, Farmer and Panjabi plan to create a top-notch, results-driven care facility that the afflicted want to go to. The sick will seek help, and get helped. “It’s a very natural, about-damn-time progression,” says Farmer.

And instead of massive, centralized centers – creating treks that can take days, with the sick infecting caring family members who bring them (“a damned if you do, damned if you don’t dilemma,” says Farmer) – localized treatment will stem, in theory, Ebola’s explosive spread.

Such decentralization has another benefit: creating a national medical structure in a country that, after Liberia’s cripping civil war, only had 51 doctors left to treat a diffused population of 4 million. Says Panjabi: “One of the best ways to fight Ebola is to ramp up the health care system that should have been there in the first place.”

If Farmer’s crew can show results, it would be left to folks like the World Bank’s Kim,  USAID chief Raj Shah, who has also expressed his support, and President Obama, who has taken tentative steps to help, to move quickly to implement this decentralized system throughout West Africa.

How soon will we know? The Grand Gedeh facility will up in a matter of weeks. And Farmer and Panjabi will be in Liberia until Sunday, looking for early clues.

 

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survey 1of child centric education

My dream: everyone experiences Harrison Owen OpenSpace After%20the%20Rage.pdf

IF SCHOOLS were child centric they would make age relevant interventions:

if anyone is illiterate at age 6 it only takes 90 days to change that - best of all a literate kid can be main helper in 20 minute session - see sunita gandhi

finacial literacy would be practicsed from age 8 - see aflatoun ( works in 100 countries

from age 10 pre-teens would have access to pfysical and mental health studies designed peer to peer -see Lancet

no kid would leave primary school without knowing how open space meetings/teamwork is facilitated

teachers would be celebrated for clarifying which skills involve experiential learning not classroom examination - while there is some recognition that music and sports involve practice, its shocking that coding isnt valued this way ..

==============

Do you have life-changing moment to share? - what was it and what did you think or do differently after it?

example until 9/11, i assumed that (good) futures are happening somewhere in the world and would be searched out so that all could communally replicate them;  === 9/11 caused me to question whether global connectivity will give us time to find sustainable solutions for our kids- i became particulaly interested in places where good education leaps appeared but did not get app'd the world over - one example actually goes back to my favorite 1990s advances in schools that a small cliuster of new zealand schools pioneered - download it here https://oiipdf.com/download/the-learning-revolution

i welcome discussion of this book's parts at any time rsvp chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk if you have a solution every community that develops youth could be cooperational

in 1984our book with economist editors 2025report made the case for 40 year commitment to every child identifying own skils dashboard and maximising AI curation of this- we valued this as sustainability critical worldwide cooperation - we see no logic for changing this concern

== we live in an age where most up to half of knowhow of techforgood changes every 3 years - we needed mindsets for exploration not for being standard examined; a nation that makes its college students its largest debt class is likely to collapse economically socially environmentally if web3 is designed for celebrating sustainability cooperation; and if web3 is not designed for neough yout to linkin the first sustainability generation then we are all heading the way of the dodo

I am learn to learn

chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk  

TECH - What is IT? and which exponential multipliers most impact human and natural futures?

AI   >. silicon chip singularity (ie when one chip > one brain in pure analytical capacity) - science fictiion no moore

who programs the ai - the race to include lost voices eg girls- the world of statistics re=-examined like never before (eg previously mass statistics very weak at coding meaining from numbers)

Biotech  >> Affective science (loveq and emotional intelligence remains human's unique edge over artificials for at least 10 more years!)

Some people say that Virtual or Augmented Reality has advanced at its best so far in last 12 months that there are hardly any qualified teachers only pioneering explorers- does this matter - well its VR which is your gateway to web3 - intead of just a mobile device you will like wear  a visual sensor system; equally others argue that you shouldnt worry about how fast you put googles on - what you should want is to take back ownbership of what you spend time creating virually- look at the small print of the big platforms you probably dont own anything without them..maybe this is a generation issue bu interstingly the met-generation can now work on chnaging anything that old systems are destroying (eg climate) ...t 

 IOT which things will now have brains and be as mobile connected as you are

Crypto - can communities celebrate financiang their own most urgent sustainability cooperations? if they dont who wil?

Cyber >> Drone - opportunities and threats of public spaces- first in spaces like the arctic circle if we dont use drones we will get no warning before the big meltdown

-the mkist memorable western campus event i attended in 2010s was tufts colllaboratory summit convened mainly by arctic circle youth under 25; 

one of the main debates how to help teachers in arctic circle schools empower their students to use virtual reality to visit other arctic circles schools communities; many of the changes and solutions are analogous; I am reminded by educators leading the compilation of virtual realty libraries of the DICE acronym - a reen might want to do something dangerous like climb everest, why not VR simulate that? there are impossible things a trainee doctor will never be able to travel inside a humans gut but that can be VR'd; there are catastropghic simulations - you would rid the world of bees just to test if donald is wrong about nature being more powerful than he is, you can simulate it; or the future of smart tourism may be curation of what a community is proudest of being visited for - this way ecotourism, cultural appreciation exchanges can be twinned to maximise celebration of each other- and by the way friends of the tourist can join in virtually- of corse this raises a metaverse question - that Hong Kong is leading the world on

being 100% public - good and bad hacs- note context matters - context 1 smart city context 2 isolated vilalge no moore context 3 make a huge land safe at borders

3D printing aka additive engineering

Big Data Small by market tech sector Leapfrogging

Nano cf einstein - to innovate science model more micro

Blockchain

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