coordinating logistics

Hans Rosling

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C
Focus Area(s)
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4
Country of Reform
Interviewers
Leon Schreiber
Name
Hans Rosling
Interviewee's Position
Co-Founder,
Interviewee's Organization
Gapminder Foundation
Language
English
Nationality of Interviewee
Swedish
Country
Date of Interview
Reform Profile
No
Abstract

In this 2016 interview Hans Rosling reflects on his role in the response to the 2014 Ebola Outbreak in West Africa. Rosling traveled to Monrovia, Liberia in October 2014 to assist the Incident Management System (IMS) with modeling the spread of the disease. He describes Liberia’s case monitoring systems and the challenges of coordinating data collection and epidemiological surveillance. Rosling discusses how domestic and internationals responders coalesced into an organized force for disease control and treatment. When the large numbers of cases in West Africa crashed a CDC-provided database called Epi-Info, Rosling switched to a system of Excel spreadsheets. He also introduced daily situation reports to update the response team members about the status of cases across the country and served as a powerful communicator of the story behind the data.

Profile

Hans Rosling was a Swedish physician, academic, statistician, and public speaker. He was Professor of International Health at Karolinska Institutet, where he led the Division of International Health (IHCAR) from 2001 to 2007. In 2005, he co-founded the Gapminder Foundation, which makes development data freely available and easy to analyze and visualize with the goal of promoting sustainable global development. Rosling held presentations around the world, including several TED Talks in which he promoted the use of data to explore development issues. Throughout his career Rosling focused on community-based epidemiology. After studying medicine and public health at Uppsala University (Sweden) and St. John's Medical College (India), he served as a public health officer in post-Independence Mozambique. He then helped Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda, and  other countries identify and track a rare paralytic disease, which he discovered arose from poorly processed cassava. In the early 1990s, he worked in Cuba to help respond to an epidemic of neuropathy that occurred there. He co-founded Doctors Without Borders Sweden and long-time adviser to WHO and UNICEF.  Rosling supported the response to the 2014 West African Ebola Outbreak and traveled to Liberia to assist in October of that year.

 

Qazi Ullah

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A
Focus Area(s)
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6
Interviewers
David Paterson
Name
Qazi Ullah
Interviewee's Position
Deputy Chief Integrated Support Services
Interviewee's Organization
UNMIL
Language
English
Town/City
Monrovia
Country
Date of Interview
Reform Profile
No
Abstract

In this interview, Colonel Qazi Ullah, Deputy Chief for Integrated Support Services at UNMIL and a Bangladeshi military logistician. Colonel Ullah begins by describing the initial challenges of coordinating the logistics of a 35-agency response effort for Ebola. He then details a variety of specific logistics problems he dealt with and the innovative solutions he and his team were able to design, relating to issues such as Priority Procurement Lists for donors, warehouse management, shipping and helicopters, and cold storage challenges for medical supplies. Finally, Col. Ullah concludes by reflecting on the overall logistical successes in the management of the Ebola crisis, offering lessons learned and best practices going forward. 

Profile

Colonel Qazi Ullah is a Bangladeshi military logistics officer and the Deputy Chief for Integrated Support Services at the UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL). Prior to joining UNMIL, he held a variety of assignments relating to logistics, natural disaster response, and national emergency response for the Bangladeshi army. He also was stationed at the UN Mission in Sierra Leone, and did a first tour at UNMIL before being assigned as a military advisor to the UN Mission for West Africa in Senegal, after which he returned to UNMIL to assume his current post in January of 2014. At UNMIL, his main responsibilities encompassed all logistical coordination for the multi-agency response to Ebola, when he simultaneously worked for UNMIL and was seconded to the Liberian Ministry of Health, coordinating resources and supply chain management for the Ebola response for over 35 different multinational partner agencies. 

Full Audio Title
Audio available upon request