Medicine for Africa is dedicated to improve the general health care situation of select African countries through direct and indirect involvement.
The projects of Medicine for Africa will create an important and long lasting imprint on the selected countries’ future.
Objectives
1. Combine preventive, therapeutic and clinical medical services; establish contacts on both academic
and economic levels.
2. Build and equip new health care facilities and update existing ones.
3. Train local medical personnel via foreign medical personnel and by winning back expatriates -
develop academic contacts with US and European universities.
4. Promote telemedicine - for teaching medical students, and to support rural medical care centers
and remotely located physicians with diagnostic advice or second medical opinions
from primary health care centers.
5. Establish 'Child Care Centers' (CCC) for HIV/AIDS orphans - to provide health
care and basic
education,
as well as vocational training in income generating skills (e.g. sewing, carpentry, etc.).
6. Develop medical business contacts between US and EU corporations and African companies
for promoting local economies and thus improving health care services.
7. Mobile Hospital Units (MHUs) - which will bring health care to the patient.
Introduction
In
1913, Dr. Albert Schweitzer founded his famous hospital on the bank
of the Ogooué River in western Gabon, making him one of the first
European physicians who became involved in Africa and who felt responsible
for providing African people with the best medical care he was able
to provide at that time.
Over the years, non-profit organisations (NPOs) such as the International
Red Cross, Doctors without Borders, and a large number of private or
semi-private foundations, have become involved in an increasing number
of African countries. However, either their financial situation or their
internal organizational set-up allows only limited possibilities for
alleviating the countries' problems on a more permanent basis.
Now,
in the year of 2008, 95 years later, it is time again that
a new group of strong advocates who believe in the future of Africa
and the well-being of its people, will start a new wave of health-related
interventions in a continent where diseases ravage the populations,
killing millions of innocent people who could be saved by today's medical
knowledge. In less time than anyone might be able to perceive today,
Africa could very well become the world's bread basket, if it were to
receive more attention and help from developed countries. Thus, as globalization
accelerates, and the interdependence of nations becomes more and more
obvious, the developed world, which has valuable knowledge and resources
in all medical fields at its disposal, should become more involved in
this continent.
Over
the last few decades, health care in America has become more and more
expensive to its citizens. This has been caused partially by new expensive
medical procedures, but has often also originated in the need of excessive
testing procedures that are needed in order to prevent physicians from
becoming a target for malpractice suits.
Expanding
medical coverage, provided by American companies and physicians, to
foreign countries, can alleviate the incremental operating costs at home
and become a successful advertisement tool for the quality of American
medical services. Furthermore, this strategy would be considered extremely
ethical and by helping the African countries, it could provide the developed
countries and medical institutions that become involved, with a new
and efficient way of "outsourcing" knowhow and of making better
use of their medical equipment.
Among
the most important aspects of improving the general health care situation
are efforts to increase the number of local medical personnel who can
serve their people. However, an important prerequisite consists of the
availability of a sufficiently large number of medical teachers, which
most countries lack badly, thus delaying the chance of meeting the above
mentioned goal in the foreseeable future. 'MfA
- MDs for Teaching' has taken on the
challenge to find a way to speed up the training of local medical personnel
in a variety of ways.
Thus,
Dr. Tom C. Garven has taken on the task to develop two major projects
-
'Medicine for Africa' (MfA) and MfA
- MDs for Teaching
-
which are intended to help all sides involved in receiving maximum results
for their country, for their people, for their investors, for their
donors, and for all other parties involved ! If
you are interested in any of these projects - in whichever way -
we urge you to contact us for further information. |