A new way to fund health care for the most vulnerable Andrew Bastawrous

These two Kenyan ladies were best friends

from neighboring villages,

but they’d stopped seeing each other,
literally, for 10 years,

because both had gone blind
from a curable condition called cataracts.

They hadn’t been aware they’d been
sat together for over an hour

when we offered them surgery
at the nearest hospital.

Mama Jane, on the right, told me

her biggest fear was that
she would poison her grandson,

whom she’d never seen,

because she couldn’t see
what she was cooking for him.

Her arms were covered in burns
from cooking on a charcoal stove,

and she despaired that she was robbing
her six-year-old grandson of his childhood

because he was effectively her eyes.

The effect of her blindness
was going through the generations.

He wasn’t able to go to school
or break the cycle of poverty.

All of this, despite cost-effective
solutions existing.

Cataract surgery can be done
in under 10 minutes

for just a hundred dollars.

Four in every five people
who are blind don’t need to be;

curative or preventive
treatments already exist.

Fortunately for Mama Jane and her friend,

a donor had provided treatment

so that we could take them
to the nearest hospital

three hours away.

But in that very same clinic,

I met Theresa,

a shy young woman who couldn’t
look me in the eyes,

not because she couldn’t see,

but the appearance of the growth
on her eyes called pterygium

meant she’d lost her confidence,

and with it, her place in her community.

She had no prospects
for marriage or children

and had been completely ostracized.

I knew how to treat her condition;
it was pretty straightforward.

But we had strict instructions
that the funds we had

were for people with cataracts.

What was I supposed to do?

Ignore her?

My wife and I managed to raise the funds
to cover her treatment,

but situations like Theresa
were common every day,

where people had the wrong diseases.

And by the “wrong diseases,”

I mean conditions for which
funding hadn’t been earmarked.

Earmarking may seem like smart business
or smart philanthropy on paper,

but it doesn’t make any sense
when you’re looking the person in the eye.

Yet, this is how we deliver health care
to millions of people the world over.

I’ve been thinking about this problem
for a very long time.

Things happened to me at the age of 12
that completely transformed my life.

My teachers insisted
that I would go for an eye test.

I resisted it for as many years as I could

because as the only
brown boy in the school,

I already felt like
a chocolate chip in rice pudding,

and the idea of looking more different
was not particularly appealing.

You see, I’d associated
an eye test with wearing glasses

and looking different,

not with seeing differently.

When eventually I was persuaded to go,

the optometrist fitted me
with the trial lenses

and was shocked
at just how poor my sight was.

He sent me outside
to report what I could see.

I remember looking up and seeing
trees had leaves on them.

I had never known this.

Later that week, for the first time,
I saw stars in the night sky.

It was breathtaking.

In fact, the entire trajectory
of my life changed.

I went from a failing child at school
who was constantly told I was lazy

and not paying attention

to suddenly being a child
with opportunity and potential.

But I soon realized that
this opportunity was not universal.

That same summer, in Egypt,

the home where my parents
are originally from,

I was with children that looked
a lot more like me

but couldn’t have been more different.

What separated us was opportunity.

How is it that I had this life
and they had theirs?

It still makes no sense to me.

How is it we’ve –

in a world where glasses,
that completely changed my life

have been around for 700 years,

yet two and a half billion people
still can’t access them.

This deep sense of injustice
drove me to become a doctor,

eventually an eye surgeon,

and in 2012, my wife and I
packed our bags and moved to Kenya

to try and give something back.

We started by setting up
a hundred eye clinics

across the Great Rift Valley,

where we met people
like Mama Jane and Theresa.

We founded a new organization
called Peek Vision,

a social enterprise where
we built smartphone technology

that makes it possible
for people in the community

to find people in their homes,

the most vulnerable groups
who are being missed,

and created new tools that made it
easier to diagnose them

and connect them to services.

Inspired by the challenges
I’d had as a child,

we equipped teachers,
25 of them, with smartphones

to screen children in schools.

Our first program resulted
in 21,000 children

being screened in just nine days.

That same program was replicated
to reach 200,000 children,

covering the entire district.

Soon we were able to repeat this
in six new programs

in different countries.

But now, I was faced with the very
same problems I had with Theresa

of earmarked funds,

but now as an organization.

People wanted to fund specific projects

or particular diseases

or subsets of the population.

But it didn’t make sense,

because what we needed to do
was build an incredible team

who could create the systems
that would change the lives

of millions of people,
whatever their needs were.

But it didn’t work that way.

Soon, we were able to align ourselves
with partners who understood,

because I understand the challenge.

Ultimately, you need to trust
where your money’s going,

and that trust usually manifests
through the requirement

to create detailed plans –
lots of paperwork.

But what happens
if the dynamic needs of people

don’t fit with the plan that you created,

and your funding is dependent
on delivering the plan?

You end up with a choice:

Do you serve the plan, the funder,

or do you serve the need?

This is not a choice
we should have to make,

because ultimately,
we can only serve one master.

The measure of our humanity

is how we serve the most
vulnerable amongst us.

Currently, the system is not working,
and too many people are being left behind.

We’ve been fortunate to find
incredible supporters and partners,

which led to a new program in Botswana,

in which every single schoolchild
is being screened and treated

by the end of 2021,

meaning an entire generation of children

will have the opportunity
that good vision affords.

But this took years of work.

It took multiple feasibility studies,

engaging different
partners and stakeholders,

business cases, economic analyses,

to persuade the government
to eventually come on board.

But they’re now leading and funding this
in their own national budget.

But we did not have
the resources to do this.

Our visionary funders and partners
came alongside us,

and the key ingredients were
we were aligned on mission,

on the why we were doing it.

We agreed on the outcome,
what had to be done.

But critically, they were flexible
and gave us autonomy

to work out how we got there,

giving us the space to be creative,
ambitious and take risk.

What if all health care looked like this?

What would it mean for all
the social causes we’re trying to solve?

Business knows this.

By taking a long-term, ambitious view

and giving people
the autonomy to be creative

to solve our world’s biggest challenges,

we’ve disrupted entire industries.

Look at Amazon, Google.

Surely, we need the same level of ambition

if we’re going to serve the most
vulnerable in our societies.

As a planet, we’ve set a target,

the Sustainable Development Goals,

yet we’re spending less than half
the amount on tackling the global goals

than we are on conflict resolution,

which mostly arises from
the very inequalities we’re not serving.

It’s time for change.

It’s not just common sense as well –
it makes business sense.

Our work in Botswana showed

for a modest investment, the economy
would gain 1.3 billion dollars

over the lifetime of the children.

That was 150 times return on investment.

But part of the problem is
that value is generated in the future,

but we need the money now to deliver it.

Turns out, this is not a new problem.

Banks have been solving it for centuries.

Simply put, it’s called financing.

If you want to buy a house

but you can’t afford
to pay for it up front,

the bank financiers, you see,
can realize that future value now.

In other words, you can live
in the house straightaway.

But what if you couldn’t?

What if you had to wait until you’d raised
all of the money to move into the house,

and you were kept homeless
whilst trying to save the money

to get there in the first place?

You’d end up in an impossible cycle,
never able to get there,

yet that’s this very same bind
we’ve put on ourselves.

Inspired by the change in Botswana

and by the visionary support
of our funders and partners,

we’ve come together –
two world-leading banks,

for-profit and private,
not-for-profit organizations,

foundations and philanthropists –

to launch the Vision Catalyst Fund,

a fund which will have trust
built in by design.

It will make funding available now

to the organizations that can serve
the need of the most vulnerable.

It will ensure that those organizations
can work together in partnership,

rather than competing for limited funds,

serving the priority needs
of an entire population,

whatever they are,

so that ultimately
the individuals affected

can receive the care that they deserve.

And as we’ve shown,

it doesn’t make just a health
and social difference,

it creates huge economic benefit.

This benefit in itself
will create sustainability

to perpetuate a virtuous,
catalytic cycle of improvement and change.

Because when we do this,

the individual needs of people
like myself can be met.

And this coalition
has come together this year

to make a commitment
with 53 heads of government,

who have now committed to take action

towards achieving access
to quality eye care for all.

We’ve had incredible commitments

of 200 million pairs
of glasses to the fund

and millions of dollars,

so that the dynamic
and individual needs of people –

like my own issues that I had as child,

and like Theresa, who just
required simple surgery –

can be met.

For Theresa, it meant
her place back in society,

now with her own family and children.

And for Mama Jane,
it wasn’t just restoring her sight,

it meant the opportunity to restore hope,

to restore joy

and to restore dignity.

(Music)

Thank you.

(Applause)

这两位肯尼亚女士是邻村的好朋友

,但
实际上,他们已经有 10 年没有见面了,

因为两人都
因一种叫做白内障的可治愈疾病而失明。 当我们在最近的医院为他们提供手术时,

他们并不知道他们已经
坐在一起超过一个小时

右边的简妈妈告诉我,

她最大的恐惧是
她会毒死

她从未见过的孙子,

因为她看
不到她在为他做饭。

她的手臂被
炭炉上的烹饪烧伤

,她绝望地认为自己正在剥夺
她六岁的孙子的童年,

因为他实际上是她的眼睛。

她失明的影响
代代相传。

他无法上学
或打破贫困的循环。

所有这一切,尽管存在成本效益高的
解决方案。

白内障手术只需一百美元
即可在 10 分钟

内完成。

五分之四的
盲人不需要;

治疗性或预防性
治疗已经存在。

对简妈妈和她的朋友来说幸运的是,

一位捐赠者提供了治疗,

以便我们可以将他们
带到

三个小时外最近的医院。

但是在同一个诊所,

我遇到了特蕾莎,

一个害羞的年轻女子,她不能
直视我的眼睛,

不是因为她看不见,

而是她眼睛上长出的称为翼状胬肉的生长物

意味着她失去了她 信心,

以及她在社区中的地位。

她没有
结婚和孩子的希望

,完全被排斥在外。

我知道如何治疗她的病情;
这很简单。

但我们有严格的指示
,我们拥有的资金

是用于白内障患者的。

我应该怎么做?

不理她?

我和妻子设法筹集资金
来支付她的治疗费用,

但像特蕾莎这样的情况
每天都很常见,

人们得了错误的疾病。

我所说的“错误疾病”

是指
没有指定资金的情况。

指定用途可能看起来像是
纸面上的聪明生意或聪明的慈善事业,

但当你直视对方时,它没有任何意义。

然而,这就是我们
为全世界数百万人提供医疗保健的方式。

我已经考虑这个
问题很长时间了。

12岁时发生在我身上的
事情彻底改变了我的生活。

我的老师坚持
要我去做视力检查。

我尽可能地抵制了它,

因为作为学校里唯一的
棕色男孩,

我已经觉得自己像
米布丁里的巧克力片

,看起来更不同的
想法并不是特别吸引人。

你看,我
将视力测试与戴眼镜

和看起来不同,

而不是与不同的视觉联系起来。

当我最终被说服去的时候

,验光师给我
配上了试镜

,对
我的视力有多差感到震惊。

他让我
出去报告我能看到的东西。

我记得抬起头来,看到
树上有叶子。

我从来不知道这一点。

那周晚些时候,我第一次
看到夜空中的星星。

真是令人叹为观止。

事实上,我的整个
人生轨迹都发生了变化。

我从一个在学校失败的孩子开始,
他经常被告知我很懒惰

,没有

注意突然成为一个
有机会和潜力的孩子。

但我很快意识到
这个机会并不普遍。

同一个夏天,在埃及

,我父母的故乡,

我和孩子们
看起来更像我,

但完全不同。

把我们分开的是机会。

为什么我有这样的生活,
而他们有他们的生活?

这对我来说仍然没有意义。

我们是怎么过的——

在一个
完全改变了我生活的眼镜

已经存在了 700 年,


仍有 25 亿人无法使用它们。

这种深深的不公正感
驱使我成为一名医生,

最终成为一名眼科外科医生

,2012 年,我和妻子
收拾行装,搬到肯尼亚

尝试回馈一些东西。

我们首先在东非大裂谷建立了
一百家眼科诊所

在那里我们遇到了
像简妈妈和特蕾莎这样的人。

我们成立了一个
名为 Peek Vision 的新组织,这

是一家社会企业,我们在其中开发
了智能手机技术

,使
社区

中的人们能够在家中找到被遗漏

的最弱势
群体,

并创建了新的工具,使事情
变得更容易 诊断它们

并将它们连接到服务。

受我小时候遇到的挑战的启发

我们为教师(其中
25 名)配备了智能手机

来筛查学校里的儿童。

我们的第一个项目

在短短 9 天内就对 21,000 名儿童进行了筛查。

同样的计划被复制

覆盖整个地区的 200,000 名儿童。

很快我们就能够

在不同国家的六个新项目中重复这一点。

但是现在,我面临着
与特蕾莎(Theresa)在专项资金方面遇到的同样的问题

但现在作为一个组织。

人们想要资助特定项目

或特定疾病

或人口子集。

但这没有任何意义,

因为我们需要做的
是建立一个令人难以置信的团队

,他们可以创建
能够改变

数百万人生活的系统,
无论他们的需求是什么。

但它没有那样工作。

很快,我们就能够
与理解的合作伙伴保持一致,

因为我理解挑战。

最终,你需要
相信你的钱的去向,

而这种信任通常体现

制定详细计划的要求上——
大量的文书工作。

但是,
如果人们的动态需求

不符合您创建的计划,

并且您的资金依赖
于计划的实施,会发生什么?

您最终有一个选择:

您是为计划、资助者

服务还是为需求服务?

这不是
我们应该做的选择,

因为最终
我们只能侍奉一位主。

衡量我们人性的标准是我们

如何为我们当中最
脆弱的人服务。

目前,该系统无法正常工作
,留下太多人。

我们很幸运地找到了
令人难以置信的支持者和合作伙伴,

这促成了博茨瓦纳的一项新计划,

到 2021 年底,每个小学生
都将接受筛查和治疗

这意味着整整一代儿童

将有机会获得
良好的视力 提供。

但这需要多年的工作。

它进行了多项可行性研究,

参与了不同的
合作伙伴和利益相关者、

商业案例、经济分析,

以说服
政府最终加入。

但他们现在
在自己的国家预算中领导和资助这项工作。

但我们
没有资源来做这件事。

我们有远见的资助者和合作伙伴
与我们并肩作战

,关键因素是
我们在使命上保持一致,

在我们这样做的原因上。

我们就结果达成一致,
必须做什么。

但至关重要的是,它们很灵活
,让我们能够自主

地弄清楚我们是如何到达那里的,

给了我们发挥创造力、
雄心勃勃和冒险的空间。

如果所有的医疗保健都是这样的呢?

这对
我们试图解决的所有社会问题意味着什么?

企业知道这一点。

通过采取长远的、雄心勃勃的观点,

并赋予人们
创造性的自主权

来解决我们世界上最大的挑战,

我们已经颠覆了整个行业。

看看亚马逊,谷歌。

当然,

如果我们要为
社会中最弱势的群体服务,我们需要同样的雄心壮志。

作为一个星球,我们已经设定了一个目标,

即可持续发展目标,

但我们
在解决全球目标上的花费

还不到我们在解决冲突上的一半,

这主要
源于我们没有服务的不平等 .

是时候改变了。

这不仅是常识——
它还具有商业意义。

我们在博茨瓦纳的工作表明,

只要进行适度的投资,经济
就会

在孩子们的一生中获得 13 亿美元的收益。

那是投资回报率的 150 倍。

但问题的一部分
是价值是在未来产生的,

但我们现在需要钱来交付它。

事实证明,这不是一个新问题。

几个世纪以来,银行一直在解决这个问题。

简单来说,就是融资。

如果你想买房子,

但你付不起

预付款,你看,银行金融家
现在可以意识到未来的价值。

换句话说,你可以直接住
在房子里。

但如果你不能呢?

如果你不得不等到你筹集到
所有的钱才能搬进这所房子,

而你却一直无家可归,
同时试图存钱

去那里呢?

你最终会陷入一个不可能的循环,
永远无法到达那里,

但这正是
我们给自己施加的同样的束缚。

受到博茨瓦纳的变化

以及
我们的资助者和合作伙伴富有远见的支持的启发,

我们走到了一起——
两家世界领先的银行,

营利性和私人、
非营利组织、

基金会和慈善家

——推出 Vision Catalyst Fund,

该基金将
通过设计建立信任。

它将立即

为能够
满足最弱势群体需求的组织提供资金。

它将确保这些组织
能够以伙伴关系合作,

而不是争夺有限的资金,

服务于
整个人口的优先需求,

无论他们是谁,

以便最终
受影响的个人

能够得到他们应得的照顾。

正如我们所展示的那样,

它不仅会带来健康
和社会影响,

还会创造巨大的经济效益。

这种好处本身
将创造可持续性,

以维持一个良性的、
催化的改进和变革循环。

因为当我们这样做时,

可以满足像我这样的人的个性化
需求。

今年,这个联盟

与 53 位政府首脑共同作出承诺,

他们现在承诺采取行动


为所有人提供优质的眼保健服务。

我们已经向该基金承诺

了 2 亿副眼镜

和数百万美元的令人难以置信的承诺,

因此人们的动态
和个性化需求——

比如我小时候遇到的问题

,以及只
需要简单手术的特蕾莎 ——

可以满足。

对特蕾莎来说,这意味着
她重返社会,

现在与自己的家人和孩子在一起。

对于简妈妈来说,
这不仅仅是恢复她的视力,

还意味着有机会恢复希望

、恢复快乐

和恢复尊严。

(音乐)

谢谢。

(掌声)