You can’t find these things in Africa


We had a lecture on Monogenetics this afternoon and looked at some genetic conditions present in Uganda. Conditions like:

  • Thalassemia
  • Sickle cell anaemia
  • Haemophilia
  • Tay Sachs Disease
  • Huntington’s disease

The lecture was dragging a bit so I engaged the lecturer by asking some questions about how we could solve these problems forever.
And I asked what it would take to be able to do genetic screening on every newborn baby…as well as to do gene therapy on adults.

The question seemed to strike a nerve and the lecturer proceeded to detail how expensive the smallest possibility of doing this would be.

“Just one vial of primer for genotyping would cost $800…just to do part of the screening.”

And then after painting a doom and gloom picture, it culminated with the phrase:

“You can’t find these things in Africa.”

Henry Ford said: the person who thinks it can’t be done and the person who thinks it can are both right.

And all the breakthroughs in society are the result of a heretic daring to take someone’s ceiling as a floor for building the next discovery on.

I believe that many of the problems in Africa aren’t as impossible or hopeless as they’re made out to be.

The hopelessness narrative serves the purpose of generating sympathy (and donations) to fund the various NGOs on the ground.

But when you view them as simply problems to be solved, they’re no different from problems like:

  • Making cars easily affordable at great scale (Henry Ford)
  • Getting a heavier-than-air vehicle to fly without crashing (The Wright Brothers)
  • Inventing a bulletproof vest (Stephanie Kwolek)
  • Defining the theory of radioactivity (Marie Curie)
  • Equality between blacks and whites in the USA (Martin Luther King Jr)
  • Putting a computer on every desktop in the world (Bill Gates)
  • Organising all the world’s information (Larry Page and Sergey Brin)
  • Growing a baby outside of the body (Patrick Steptoe and Robert Edwards

Not to mention (in no order whatsoever): The Internet, overnight shipping, driverless cars, polio vaccine, seedless grapes, oral contraception, virtual reality glasses, the pancake…

All of these innovations – big and microcosmal – are simply successful attempts at developing problems to solutions.

And the problems in medicine aren’t the problems. But rather the Mindset that views them as “unsolvable”.

That’s one of the biggest issues I’ve found in my time dealing with medical schools over the last 18 years.

Students are trained to diagnose and manage rather than empowered and provoked to solve problems.

Management is an important part of solving the problem. But in practice, it becomes the end, rather than a means to support the end of completely solving the problem.

And when it comes to the so-called “that’s life in Africa” problems, this mindset of problem solving is a vital asset to cultivate.

So to make this practical…and not just a rant…my challenge is to outline some of the top high impact problems in healthcare…and see if I can articulate the solution that’s needed.

And if the solution is just “money”, then that’s another problem that is quite simple to solve.

Africa has the potential to be the healthiest, most prosperous and peaceful continent on the planet.

And an important step towards realising this potential is to ditch the “not in Africa” narrative when it comes to conceiving solutions.

All things are possible…especially in Africa.

Image: oecd.org

Disrupt your personal narrative

Anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, pharmacology, pathology, microbiology, epidemiology…

Surgery, paediatrics, geriatrics, obs and gynae, orthopaedics…

First year, second year, third year, fourth year, fifth year, internship, rotations, specialisation…

PLEB, USMLE, Fellowship, Part 1, Part 2, Masters, Diploma…

Now imagine all of this being replaced by a 9 year old with a smartphone.

Imagine all of these formidable bits of paper achievements being as relevant as a greasy newspaper used to wrap up last week’s fish and chips.

Imagine a world where a Doctor isn’t a person…but rather an interconnected network of trillions of devices all focused on annihilating and anticipating threats to the homeostasis of global (and individual) health.

Imagine that everything you’ve been using to define your personal narrative…suddenly vanished overnight, leaving you with one question:

Now what?

These were some of the ideas I was exploring in class today with one of the students who was asking me to give him advice about what he should do.

I think regardless of where you are, the practice of disrupting your own personal narrative is no longer an option.

Because all the changes that are happening right now are asking you whether you’re going to disrupt your personal narrative…or if you’d rather that someone else did it for you.

An important reminder for myself as I battle again with 2nd year basic sciences after a 15+ year hiatus.
I feel that Medicine is in the middle of being completely overturned.
And my goal is to use this blog to document and anticipate these changes…as well as to share my ideas regarding the Okay Doctor healthcare system.
But more than that, the act of committing to shipping out a new idea every day is a way of disrupting my personal narrative…instead of having it done for me.

Become Batman

Image credit: Hugh MacLeod

Don’t kill yourself.

Instead, kill the identity of your old self…and stick around to explore who you can be right now.

That’s how 8 year-old Bruce Wayne became Batman.

Wracked by grief after seeing his parents shot dead in front of him, young Bruce decided to secretly bury the life he was supposed to have before his parents were killed…and create an alternate identity that let him explore who he could become now.

He wore his old identity as a mask to give him the freedom of expressing his true self as Batman.

They think you’re just a focused medical student on track to making them proud.

You know you’re more than that. But don’t worry about trying to change this image.

Instead, use it as a mask that frees you to explore your true secret identity…and get to work on achieving your Escape Velocity.

This is a taster from Escape Velocity: a personalised email course that guides medics step-by-step in how to successfully make the transition from being stuck in medical school…to living a life of happiness, freedom and fulfilment. Admission is by invitation-only. Click here to apply for your FREE invite.

Seek first to understand…

Image credit: Hugh MacLeod

…then to be understood.

One of the most crucial lessons from Steven Covey’s “7 Habits of Highly Effective People”, especially when it comes to recruiting your parents as allies in your transition from a career in Medicine into the Work you were created to pursue.

Dare to feel where they’re coming from and looking at the world from their perspective (don’t worry about losing your sense of self or desire for freedom…that’s built into you)

Or as Stephen put it:

Seek first to understand, then to be understood.

This is a taster from Escape Velocity: a personalised email course that guides medics step-by-step in how to successfully make the transition from being stuck in medical school…to living a life of happiness, freedom and fulfilment. Admission is by invitation-only. Click here to apply for your FREE invite.

Happily ever after

Image credit: Hugh MacLeod

That’s all your parents want for you, and they’re driving you towards the best path (that they know) to achieving that outcome.

Your dreams, ambitions and interests are seen as saboteurs of your success and hooligans who want to divert you towards a life of aimless drifting in mediocrity.

And that’s because you present them with no plan, no conviction and a poor track record of following things through.

(They remember all the other plans you convinced them you were interested in, and yet didn’t follow through on).

All they want is for you to live happily ever after. That’s all.

Understanding this is the first step to letting go of the bitterness, frustration and negative emotions that are inhibiting your ability to transform your dreams into reality.

You all want the same thing…you just have different ways of pursuing the same goal.

This is a taster from Escape Velocity: a personalised email course that guides medics step-by-step in how to successfully make the transition from being stuck in medical school…to living a life of happiness, freedom and fulfilment. Admission is by invitation-only. Click here to apply for your FREE invite.

Money, respect and impact

Image credit: Hugh MacLeod

Those are the 3 “biggies” used to drive us into a career in Medicine.

Doctors make a lot of money. Doctors receive a lot of respect. Doctors make a huge impact on the world.

But under the microscope lenses of “personal experience” and “reality”, these 3 USPs aren’t as brilliant as they seem at first glance.

Doctors don’t get as much money as you think they do…when you divide what they earn by the crazy number of hours that they work.

Doctors are respected by some of the patients they treat. But they do not get respect from the Health care Factory that treats them as the dispensible, replaceable cogs that it trained them to be.

And whilst Doctors work really hard to make a difference in the lives of their patients, the impact their work has on the global canvas of health care is about zero percent.

That is, unless they develop an innovation like the Polio vaccine or a breakthrough in Human genomic that can scale independent of their continual efforts…something that most Doctors will neverdo because they aren’t given enough time, energy or encouragement to make meaningful breakthroughs in their fields of interest.

Also under the microscope, we see that the Money, Respect and Impact offered by a career in Medicine, come attached with a huge price tag:

Your personal happiness and well-being.

You have as much right to these as the patients you’re being trained to serve…don’t you think?

This is a taster from Escape Velocity: a personalised email course that guides medics step-by-step in how to successfully make the transition from being stuck in medical school…to living a life of happiness, freedom and fulfilment. Admission is by invitation-only. Click here to apply for your FREE invite.