Andrew Bastawrous: A new way to fund health care for the most vulnerable
Andrew Bastawrous studies eye health -- and builds accessible new tools to bring eye care to more people. Full bio
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literally, for 10 years,
from a curable condition called cataracts.
sat together for over an hour
at the nearest hospital.
she would poison her grandson,
what she was cooking for him.
from cooking on a charcoal stove,
her six-year-old grandson of his childhood
was going through the generations.
or break the cycle of poverty.
solutions existing.
in under 10 minutes
who are blind don't need to be;
treatments already exist.
to the nearest hospital
look me in the eyes,
on her eyes called pterygium
for marriage or children
it was pretty straightforward.
that the funds we had
to cover her treatment,
were common every day,
funding hadn't been earmarked.
or smart philanthropy on paper,
when you're looking the person in the eye.
to millions of people the world over.
for a very long time.
that completely transformed my life.
that I would go for an eye test.
brown boy in the school,
a chocolate chip in rice pudding,
was not particularly appealing.
an eye test with wearing glasses
with the trial lenses
at just how poor my sight was.
to report what I could see.
trees had leaves on them.
I saw stars in the night sky.
of my life changed.
who was constantly told I was lazy
with opportunity and potential.
this opportunity was not universal.
are originally from,
a lot more like me
and they had theirs?
that completely changed my life
still can't access them.
drove me to become a doctor,
packed our bags and moved to Kenya
a hundred eye clinics
like Mama Jane and Theresa.
called Peek Vision,
we built smartphone technology
for people in the community
who are being missed,
easier to diagnose them
I'd had as a child,
25 of them, with smartphones
in 21,000 children
to reach 200,000 children,
in six new programs
same problems I had with Theresa
was build an incredible team
that would change the lives
whatever their needs were.
with partners who understood,
where your money's going,
through the requirement
lots of paperwork.
if the dynamic needs of people
on delivering the plan?
we should have to make,
we can only serve one master.
vulnerable amongst us.
and too many people are being left behind.
incredible supporters and partners,
is being screened and treated
that good vision affords.
partners and stakeholders,
to eventually come on board.
in their own national budget.
the resources to do this.
came alongside us,
we were aligned on mission,
what had to be done.
and gave us autonomy
ambitious and take risk.
the social causes we're trying to solve?
the autonomy to be creative
vulnerable in our societies.
the amount on tackling the global goals
the very inequalities we're not serving.
it makes business sense.
would gain 1.3 billion dollars
that value is generated in the future,
to pay for it up front,
can realize that future value now.
in the house straightaway.
all of the money to move into the house,
whilst trying to save the money
never able to get there,
we've put on ourselves.
of our funders and partners,
two world-leading banks,
not-for-profit organizations,
built in by design.
the need of the most vulnerable.
can work together in partnership,
of an entire population,
the individuals affected
and social difference,
will create sustainability
catalytic cycle of improvement and change.
like myself can be met.
has come together this year
with 53 heads of government,
to quality eye care for all.
of glasses to the fund
and individual needs of people --
required simple surgery --
her place back in society,
it wasn't just restoring her sight,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Andrew Bastawrous - Eye surgeon, inventorAndrew Bastawrous studies eye health -- and builds accessible new tools to bring eye care to more people.
Why you should listen
Andrew Bastawrous is cofounder and CEO of Peek Vision, a social impact organization that uses smartphone technology to radically increase access to eye care in some of the most challenging places in the world. Bastawrous is also an ophthalmologist (eye surgeon) and Associate Professor in International Eye Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
Peek's vision app, Peek Acuity, is being used to transform eye health in more than 150 countries. The organization ran one of the top-ten all-time Indiegogo crowd-funding campaigns in the health sector -- for Peek Retina, a smartphone ophthalmoscope -- and was voted "best social-impact start-up in Europe" by Google and McKinsey in 2016. All prize money has been re-invested in Peek.
Bastawrous is working with astrophysicists to crowdsource retinal data; with National Geographic explorers to reach isolated communities; and with artists and activists to advocate for eye care globally. He and his wife Madeleine have established a social enterprise healthy bakery in Kenya that provides employment, with profits paying for eye care.
In 2018, Bastawrous was invited to deliver the Commonwealth Address in the presence of the British Royal Family, where he announced the creation of a new one-billion-dollar Vision Catalyst Fund -- a new vision for international aid.
Andrew Bastawrous | Speaker | TED.com