Archive for the 'Education' Category

A knowledge economy in Pakistan

May 5, 2008

I was watching Dr. Ata ur Rehman’s interview last night on a private TV network and what an encouraging experience that was. Dr. Ata ur Rahman is the chairman of Higher Education Commission of Pakistan and has been involved in this area for at least the last 5 years. If one is to believe the words of this man, a revolution in higher education and research has started to roll out in this country right in front of our eyes. We may not notice its results right now but the fact is: its not so bleak after all.

Through the course of the interview, I learnt 3 of Pakistan’s public sector universities have joined the top 450-550 ranking of world universities. Pakistan now has the biggest Fulbright Scholarship program in the world and every university has been allowed free high-speed internet access to 25000 journals and 45000 ebooks through the HEC digital library. Included in this free access are popular sites such as AccessMedicine, a very thorough and helpful resource for medical studies. These facilities are unparalleled in the world and according to a World Bank review, Pakistan’s higher education system now has the best infrastructure amongst 80 countries reviewed around the world.

45 PhDs came back last year to Pakistan to initiate research projects and 265 are coming back this year. These individuals were sent abroad on HEC scholarships and in their last year abroad, they are offered a Rs. 6 million grant to initiate research projects in Pakistan so that before they get here, their lab, equipment, chemicals and other resources are ready for them to get started right away.

On the flip side, Pakistan is spending only 2% of its Gross National Product on education all together while a seventh of that is spent on higher education so no wonder, there is room for improvement.

Pakistan has long been an agricultural economy but with the new measures in place and God willing, if they are sustained, Pakistan is quickly headed towards becoming a knowledge economy. Yeah I know, thats hard to believe and admittedly a little too optimistic but hey, the plans are in place and I want to believe that this time, they will get implemented.

Editted: Let us not also forget Imran Khan’s Namal College. Please take a look and see what this great man is doing for Pakistan.

You can’t get it right every time

July 21, 2007

We all like to think that medicine is an exact science. But Atul Gawande, an American surgeon whose bestselling book inspired the hit TV series Grey’s Anatomy, has news for you. He speaks to John Crace

Atul Gawande cannot forget the first time he sliced someone open. “I was in my final year at medical school,” he says, “and the surgeon in the operating room just handed me the knife on the spur of the moment and said, ‘You start.’ The knife was still warm from the autoclave [sterilising machine] and I started cutting down the line he had drawn for the hernia incision. The skin was much tougher and more rubbery than I expected and my first cut barely went through, so I had to make a second. It wasn’t frightening or nauseating in any way, but I did have a surreal sense that I was committing a violation. It felt an odd claim to make, that cutting someone open could make them better.”

More than 10 years and roughly 4,000 operations later, Gawande has never lost sight of surgery’s narrow divide between the sacred and the profane. Even now, before every procedure — no matter how routine — he runs through a checklist of the top three things that could go wrong and mentally prepares for these eventualities. And yet still things go wrong. “Each year I do about 400 operations and have about a 97 per cent success rate,” he says. “This means that 12 of my patients – two of whom will probably be dead — leave the theatre worse off than when they came in.

“Most of the time, they are patients whom I think I’ve done all I possibly could for, so I can accept it. But there are always the others. Six months ago, I was performing a thyroid operation on a teacher my age and damaged a nerve that led to her vocal cords. This woman can no longer talk and has had to give up work. The only way I can live with myself is to try to do all I can for her and understand what I did wrong and do better next time. Being sorry is not enough.”

Gawande is a general surgeon at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and assistant professor at Harvard Medical School. And he still makes mistakes. It’s this uncomfortable wound that he has opened up, first in Complications — his bestselling book that was shortlisted for the National Book prize in the US and became the inspiration for the TV series Grey’s Anatomy — and now in his follow-up, Better.

“What I’m interested in is failure,” he says, “as it’s the one area of medicine with which the professionals are often reluctant to engage because the stakes we are playing for are so high. We can fail by putting a decimal point in the wrong place and by not asking the right questions. If you ask any doctor when he or she last made a misdiagnosis, the truthful answer would always be in the last month. We get things wrong and we try to put them right. And, of course, we can fail with a slip of the hand. I once performed an emergency trachaeotomy in which I did everything wrong. I had the wrong knife, the wrong lights and I made the wrong incision. There was blood everywhere and the patient would have died if a colleague hadn’t stepped in to help. It was horrific.”

If his call for willingness to ruthlessly examine what goes wrong and why is not always shared by other doctors, then neither will be the second part of his prescription for demystifying failure. Mention league tables to most doctors and they start spitting blood, but Gawande is adamant that there is a value in open accountability. “You have to be careful you are comparing like with like,” he says, by way of a caveat, “because otherwise the data can be meaningless. For instance, death rates for cardiac surgeons can vary hugely, depending on the age of their patients and the difficulty of the procedures they are undertaking. But we shouldn’t allow this to disguise the fact that some surgeons and some hospitals get better results than others. And unless we are prepared to admit this, we’ll never improve the overall success rates.”

As an example, Gawande cites both the case of the paediatric team at a hospital in Cleveland, Ohio, who virtually single-handedly raised the average life expectancy of cystic fibrosis patients from three years old in 1957 to 33 in 2003, simply by providing aggressive preventive treatment before sufferers became visibly sick from it. You could argue that such successes are largely a matter of money, but Gawande disagrees. “We spend huge amounts of cash on healthcare in the US,” he says, “and not all of it is very effective. Infection rates in hospitals are proof of this. Some hospitals have spent a small fortune on portable $5,000 hand-washing machines [superbugs are as rife in America as they are in Britain], but their infection rates have remained as high as before.

“The one hospital in the US that has managed to reduce infection to almost zero did so not by spending money but by analysing procedures. They asked doctors and nurses how they used the system and found that the alcohol gel dispensers were in the wrong place, the gowns they needed for the 3pm ward rounds were in the wrong place and that it was better to have a single stethoscope designated for each patient’s sole use than for a doctor to carry his own from patient to patient.”

Gawande goes on to argue that though we traditionally associate significant improvements in healthcare with the big breakthroughs in science — such as transplant surgery and gene therapies — much the biggest gains are likely to come from the close attention to the detail of failure. Rather than shrugging their shoulders and boasting that a 98% success rate for any given procedure is a stunning success, doctors really ought to be looking at why the procedure does not work in the other two per cent of cases.

Here it all gets tricky, though, because the public’s attitude towards failure has become far less tolerant over the past two decades. Any hint of failure or incompetence is usually met with a lawsuit for malpractice and US surgeons pay insurance premiums of between $30,000 and $300,000 per year in case of just such an eventuality. In a way, this is just as it should be, because doctors should be held accountable for their actions. But Gawande believes there is a mismatch between the public’s perception of what is possible and what actually is. “People don’t truly understand the risks,” he says. “Back in the 1960s, about one in 30 babies would die in childbirth; now we’ve got it down to less than one in 500 and people expect their baby to be born alive. When it isn’t, they assume the doctor has messed up when he hasn’t necessarily. That’s why we have seen such an increase in caesarean sections: doctors just don’t want to take the chance.”

The downside of risk-averse medicine is that we may not have the bottle to see a treatment through. “Back in the 1950s, kidney disease used to be a killer,” Gawande says, “and there was a medical team in the US that was pioneering transplant surgery. Their first 30 patients died. Imagine that. You or I might have stopped at 10, thinking it just wasn’t going to work. After 20 deaths, even members of the team began to wonder if they were murderers. But then they got it right, Joe Murray won a Nobel prize and we now have an everyday operation that has saved many thousands of lives.”

The trick, Gawande insists, is to never lose sight of the fact that surgery is an imperfect science and that there will inevitably be times when you can only “peek and shriek”. “You just have to be the type of person who believes that action is generally better than inaction in times of uncertainty,” he says. “There are times when you are operating that everything feels just right and it’s as though you’re conducting a symphony. But even then you can’t always trust that feeling.

“I had one patient for whom I was convinced I had done great work by removing an adrenal tumour, but he still hadn’t left the intensive therapy unit six months later. Somehow, he caught an infection and just wasn’t strong enough to recover. Our best guess is that someone on the operating team didn’t wash their hands properly. And, you know what? It could have been me.” —Dawn/Guardian News Service

http://www.dawn.com/weekly/dmag/archive/070617/dmag9.htm

Ten billion dollars for education in middle east

May 19, 2007

In a fairly belated yet VERY WELCOME move, the ruler of Dubai has donated US dollars 10 BILLION for the development of an educational foundation. BRAVO!!! Research and education have finally struck their minds and with the kind of money they have, there is no stopping the Arabs.

For Pakistanis, they might not have to look far in the West (or South) to getting that extra edge in research and education. Hopefully, it is only a matter of years before research comes to us and if this “industry” in the Middle East is like all others, it will also end up having South Asians as the prime “labor” force.

Here is BBC reporting:

The ruler of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, says he is giving $10bn (£5bn) to set up an educational foundation in the Middle East.

The money is meant to improve the standard of education and research in the region, and aims to stimulate job creation, Sheikh Mohammed said.

It is thought to be one of the largest charitable donations in history.

The announcement was made to widespread applause at the World Economic Forum, which is being held in Jordan.

Sheikh Mohammed, known as a successful racehorse owner as well as ruler of Dubai, said his personal initiative was aimed at creating what he called “a knowledge-based society” in the Middle East.

  There is a wide knowledge gap between us and the developed world in the West and in Asia
Sheikh Mohammed

At the moment, he explained, there was high illiteracy in the region – where more than 40% of Arab women cannot read or write.

The whole Arab world publishes fewer books than the country of Turkey.

And spending on scientific research is only a tiny fraction of that in developed countries.

“There is a wide knowledge gap between us and the developed world in the West and in Asia. Our only choice is to bridge this gap as quickly as possible, because our age is defined by knowledge,” the sheikh said.

While there may be less learning in the region, there is high unemployment, and it is likely to get higher with a rapidly growing population.

“Our region needs at this moment 15 million job opportunities, and our Arab world will need in the next 20 years between 74 to 85 million job opportunities,” the sheikh told the conference.

“We need to develop the infrastructure so we can create jobs.”

Sheikh Mohammed hopes to increase education and research, and also to encourage innovation and entrepreneurship throughout the region.

“In order to realise these objectives, I have decided to establish the Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum Foundation to focus on human development, and have I decided to endow a fund of $10bn to finance its projects,” he said.

As ruler of Dubai, he can share the success of his principality, which is known the world over as the economic success story of the Middle East.

Story from BBC NEWS

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