The Four Pillars of Outbreak Preparedness (and How to Rebuild Them) - a podcast by Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University

from 2020-04-01T00:00

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Adam Levine is the director of the Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian Studies at Watson and associate professor of emergency medicine at Brown. Much of his work has grown out of an essential fact about epidemics that many of us are just now learning: as Adam explains on this episode, “our global public health system for detecting outbreaks is only as good as the remote nurse working in a rural village in Africa or Indonesia or anywhere else in the world.” To address this interconnectedness, Adam and health care professionals at Brown have partnered with the healthcare NGO Project HOPE to remotely train health care workers on how to safely identify and combat COVID-19 and the coronavirus.

On this episode Adam talks with Sarah about this partnership and the role high-quality training plays at all levels in stopping the spread of a pandemic. They also discuss what Adam’s learned from treating Ebola in active war zones, and why this likely won’t be the last pandemic we see.

You can learn more about Watson's Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian Studies here:[https://watson.brown.edu/chrhs/]

You can learn more about Project HOPE here: [https://www.projecthope.org/]

You can read a transcript of this episode here: [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1YcUSDU8Cx18VnZbb-H4yIc7jhkj09kqL/view?usp=sharing]

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