35 Who Made a Difference: Bill Gates
The king of software takes on his biggest challenge yet
- By Jimmy Carter
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Our two organizations mesh well in the programs we've undertaken jointly. We share a view that health interventions can have a multiplier effect on societies. Keeping people alive and healthy is a worthy goal in itself, but good health also keeps more children in school and farmers in their fields, which promotes a more active community life and a stronger economy. Sustainable economies require less financial assistance and, foreseeably, put an end to dependency.
While a major focus of the Gates Foundation's work has been delivering and developing vaccines, the foundation also supports The Carter Center's efforts to eradicate Guinea worm disease, which needs no vaccine. I've been impressed with Bill's understanding of what it takes to end that extremely disabling disease, caused by a parasite ingested in impure drinking water. Most business people want quick results, but stopping the transmission of the Guinea worm larvae to other human hosts takes time and is rife with uncertainty. Although we've reduced the number of cases by more than 99 percent to just 7,000 victims so far this year, who are mostly in two African countries, Ghana and Sudan, the last cases are the most crucial, difficult and costly to contain. Bill has translated his vision and optimism into tangible support for the eradication effort and challenged others to join him.
The foundation is also helping The Carter Center to realize the goal of eliminating river blindness disease from Latin America in this decade. River blindness is caused by parasites left by the bites of small black flies that breed in rapidly flowing streams; the parasites infect a victim's eyes, often leading to blindness.
In this case, medicine is the answer. We've determined that treating 85 percent of the half-million people at risk in the Americas with semiannual doses of ivermectin will halt transmission of the disease.
Bill likes the payoff from this initiative. But I would hate to imply that it's only Bill's intellect and business sensibilities that drive his philanthropy. It's his heart. "I believe the death of a child in the developing world is just as tragic as the death of a child in the developed world," I've heard him say. And if we can make sure that all people, no matter what country they live in, have the preventive care, vaccines and treatments they need to live a healthy life, he says, "it will be the best thing humanity has ever done." He adds: "I believe we can do this."
Bill and Melinda's foundation has set a major change in motion, elevating the potential of public health research and policy to improve life on earth. It has energized research into global health, made that work a credible career choice and attracted politicians to the cause. Perhaps most important, the confidence Bill has brought to the field has stimulated much more funding. As a result, we can see a day when sufficient resources are applied to global health to prevent the suffering and deaths of tens of millions of people.
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Comments (3)
this is incedibly inspiring.
Posted by shay<3 on January 18,2013 | 09:49 AM
inspiring
Posted by Timothy on September 5,2010 | 12:43 PM
this is a truely inspiring paper
Posted by john mccumfre on September 18,2009 | 01:02 PM