Meet Dr. Gründl Who Determined To Save the Lives of Millions To Get Access to Safe and Affordable Surgeries
MUNICH — "To be above it all" has become Magdalena
Gründl’s purpose in life. By this, she doesn't mean to sound egotistical.
The-25 year-old research assistant working at Harvard wants to
understand the bigger picture. She hopes to make the world a better place while
managing her life as a young academic at an Ivy League university, which is why
treating individuals patients was never enough for the medical student.
Saving millions of lives
Gründl is determined
to save the lives of millions together with other researchers on her team. It
sounds utopian, but it is actually quite serious business. And it is precisely
this which makes being above it all and seeing the bigger picture from that vantage
point so important to Magdalena Gründl. She regularly flies back and forth
between America, Africa and Asia, being on at least one long distance flight
every month. It's certainly an exhausting way of getting the bigger picture.
Five billion people in the world do not have access to safe and affordable surgeries and anesthesia.
Magdalena Gründl grew
up in a small town with nearly 1,000 inhabitants, but now she is one of the
youngest scientists in the world who is working on cutting edge research with a
single goal in mind: trying to identify how to provide lifesaving surgeries in
places where they are not available.
There are a couple
numbers that Gründl can recite by heart to underscore the gravity of this
medical emergency. Five billion people in the world do not have access to safe
and affordable surgeries and anesthesia. An estimated 143 million operations
are needed in less affluent regions of the world to save lives. Nearly 17
million patients in 2010 died because they did not receive the surgical care
that they required. That corresponds to about a third of all deaths worldwide
and exceeds the number of deaths as a result of AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria
together.
Cardiac surgery in Senegal — Photo: Pascal Deloche/ZUMA |
A scientist who grabs the bull by the horns
Gründl is not angry
when she recites these statistics. She doesn't particularly see herself as an
activist but rather as a scientist who wants to grab the bull by the horns.
After completing an internship in a hospital in Tanzania, she studied medicine in Romania as well as Germany and applied for a scholarship in Boston prior to
qualifying as an MD. Nowadays, she is part of an international team of
scientists which collates and processes data from around the globe.
Phase one of Magdalena
Gründl’s research project focuses on obtaining precise data that will provide
the basis for understanding why there is such a decided shortage in medical
care. In phase two the team will work with governments to develop a medical
plan that will deal with the concrete problems of each particular country.
Gründl emphasizes that it is of the utmost importance in that case to not take
work away from local doctors and degrade them to the role of mere spectators as
yet another American medical aid convoy rolls in. She believes that in the age
of globalization and mobile data transfers the key to helping people in remote
regions is working and communicating on equal terms.
The opinion that investing in prevention rather than curative measures still predominates the thinking among doctors.
This type of
cooperation has long been the goal of international developmental aid, which is
why the World Health Assembly, the legislative branch of the World Health
Organisation (WHO), issued a decree to improve the global basic
surgical care in 2015.
When asked to judge
this proclamation, Gründl argues that, in spite of its success, the opinion
that investing in prevention rather than curative measures still predominates
the thinking among doctors and health officials. Clearly, she continues, it is
much easier to organize vaccination campaigns than to build hospitals and
roads, to train doctors and nurses, and to pay these trained individuals well.
At the same time, certain surgical procedures, such as setting a broken bone,
can be as easy and inexpensive as treating HIV or diabetes.
But Magdalena Gründl
is sure that the international focus is directed toward other areas. Indeed,
the term “surgery” is not mentioned anywhere in the UN Millennium Development
Goals although the fight against HIV and malaria is specifically stated.
To be sure, global
surgery researchers, such as Gründl and her team, do not want to curtail the
international effort to eradicate infectious diseases. But it is simply the
case that approximately 26 out of 100,000 people on the African continent die
annually due to traffic accidentswhile
only 9 people die of the same causes in Europe. Many of the traffic accident
victims in Africa die due to the fact that they have no access to surgeons.
For example, the data
that Gründl’s team has collated demonstrates that in Zambia a quarter of the
population lives at least a two-hours drive from the nearest hospital. Patients
suffering from a stroke or cranial trauma or complications while in labor
cannot survive at these distances. Every year, nearly 300,000 pregnant women
around the globe die prior to giving birth because they bleed to death. In
Zambia there are only 97 surgeons servicing the entire country with a
population of 16 million people.
The numbers clearly
demonstrate that it is not easy to decide on where to invest available funds.
But if one judges an illness not only by how many people die from it but also
by how many people cannot live a carefree life because of it, surgery very quickly
becomes a priority. Just think of a farmer with a broken arm who who cannot
feed his family.
To be above it all, to
see the world from an objective vantage point has therefore become very
important to Magdalena Gründl. A revolutionary article in the medical
journal The Lancet, which Gründl frequently cites, states what an
incredible effect good surgical provision can have on people’s lives in many a
part of the world. It is the triad of “lost lives, lost potential, and lost
output”, the vicious downward spiral that people like Magdalena Gründl attempt
to combat with needle and surgical thread, x-rays, better training, and safer
roads.
Source: WorldCrunch
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