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The Winner Of The $1 Million TED Prize Is Bringing Health Care To The World’s Most Remote Communities

Last Mile Health wants to take its model of community health workers from Liberia to the entire world.

The Winner Of The $1 Million TED Prize Is Bringing Health Care To The World’s Most Remote Communities

The winner of this year’s $1 million TED Prize has a solution for poor, remote communities that can’t afford to hire doctors and nurses. [Photo: Bret Hartman/TED/Flick]

BY Adele Peters1 minute read

If you live in a remote village in Liberia and you get sick, seeing a doctor might involve a canoe ride down a river and two days of walking through the rainforest. Clinics are similarly hard to reach for roughly a billion people around the world.

The winner of this year’s $1 million TED Prize–Rajesh Panjabi, the founder of a nonprofit called Last Mile Health–has a solution for poor, remote communities that can’t afford to hire doctors and nurses. Instead of recruiting trained medical professionals, the organization hires local community members, some of whom may have only a middle-school education. Then it gives them the training needed to screen and treat common illnesses like malaria, providing local jobs as it fills the health care gap.

The organization hires local community members, some of whom may have only a middle-school education. Then it gives them the training needed to screen and treat common illnesses. [Photo: Bret Hartman/TED/Flick]
It’s a system that the organization has proven can work in Liberia, where community health workers now carry backpacks with modern but low-cost medical equipment such as a $1 rapid test for malaria, and a smartphone to track and report on epidemics. Now the organization wants to scale up to reach the rest of the world. Using the prize money, Last Mile Health plans to create theCommunity Health Academy, a digital platform that will train workers on skills like administering vaccines or how to treat a malnourished infant.

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The platform, inspired by other digital education platforms like Khan Academy, will be piloted in Liberia and then go global.  [Photo: Bret Hartman/TED/Flick]
The platform, inspired by other digital education platforms like Khan Academy, will be piloted in Liberia and then go global. Last Mile Healthalso was a Skoll Prize awardee earlier this year.

“We know that there are still millions of people dying from preventable causes in rural communities around the world,” Panjabi said at TED 2017. “What we also know is that if we trained an army of health care workers to learn even just 30 life-saving skills, we could save the lives of 30 million people by 2030 . . . If we can help these countries scale, we could save millions of lives, and at the same time, we could create millions of jobs.”

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Adele Peters is a senior writer at Fast Company who focuses on solutions to climate change and other global challenges, interviewing leaders from Al Gore and Bill Gates to emerging climate tech entrepreneurs like Mary Yap. She contributed to the bestselling book "Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century" and a new book from Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies called State of Housing Design 2023 More


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