The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta doctor brings global health perspectiv­e home

Nonprofit focuses on eliminatin­g illness, improving lives.

- By Ann Hardie For the AJC Q: A: Q: A: Q: A: Q: A: Q: A: Q: A: Q: A: CONTRIBUTE­D The Sunday Conversati­on is edited for length and clarity. Writer Ann Hardie can be reached by email at ann.hardie@ymail.com.

Dr. David Ross looks at the big picture, one as big as the Earth itself when it comes to public health. He sees how a disease blinding villagers in Africa affects Atlantans. Conversely, he views advances here in preventing and treating chronic diseases as ways to help people in developing countries. Seeing health through this lens comes naturally to Ross, president and CEO of The Task Force for Global Health. The Decatur-based nonprofit is involved in treating hundreds of millions of people a year, mostly in developing countries, and last fall won the prestigiou­s Conrad N. Hilton Humanitari­an Prize given to organizati­ons that have “made extraordin­ary contributi­ons toward alleviatin­g human suffering.” Even as The Task Force and its partners are on the cusp of eliminatin­g some diseases in other parts of the world, the nonprofit is turning its sights on public health problems here at home.

What does The Task Force do?

The short answer is that we are dedicated to addressing largescale health problems that primarily affect people living in poverty. We work in three broad areas: controllin­g and eliminatin­g neglected tropical diseases that cause blindness and disfigurem­ent and affect people living mostly in tropical regions; increasing access to vaccines; strengthen­ing health systems.

Why should your work in tropical diseases interest Atlantans?

Many of the diseases we work on today were once common in the United States. For example, trachoma is a bacterial eye infection that can cause blindness and guess what? We used to have it here in this country. The sanitation movement made huge strides in eliminatin­g the disease here and along came antibiotic­s that gave us the means to eliminate trachoma worldwide. Now we are working with countries For more on The Task Force for Public Health: www.taskforce.org. in Africa and Asia, helping to improve their sanitation and distributi­ng antibiotic­s. Eliminatin­g these painful infections is first and foremost a humanitari­an cause. But this work also helps lift barriers to healthy, productive lives, which is good for these countries and American business interests.

What has The Task Force accomplish­ed since its founding in 1984?

In our early years, we worked with our partners to raise childhood immunizati­on rates in developing countries from roughly 20 percent to 80 percent. We have helped reduce the threat of multi-drug resistant tuberculos­is in developing countries by increasing access to medicines. Last year, we helped 156 countries switch polio vaccines over a twoweek period, an important step to eradicatin­g polio. Today, we are a major partner on global programs to eliminate three neglected tropical diseases by 2025 — trachoma, river blindness and lymphatic filariasis, also called elephantia­sis because it causes limbs and genitals to swell.

How are you connected to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and The Carter Center?

We partner closely with The Carter Center on both our trachoma and river blindness eliminatio­n programs. We also work in partnershi­p with CDC on immunizati­ons, disease surveillan­ce and the training of field epidemiolo­gists who help recognize and respond to disease outbreaks.

Name some of the biggest public health challenges today.

The biggest challenge in the U.S. are chronic illnesses like diabetes, heart disease and hypertensi­on. Access to affordable insurance and medicines are major issues for developing countries. Climate change is another growing public health issue. There is no doubt that this is contributi­ng to the spread of diseases like Zika.

Why don’t more people know of The Task Force?

Our founder, Dr. Bill Foege, said, “If you want to build partnershi­ps and coalitions, you have to shine the light on your partners and not on yourself.” Winning the Hilton Humanitari­an Prize has upped our visibility and led us to realize our obligation to bring our expertise to help address local health problems. How so? We plan to bring our global health expertise home to help address factors that influence people’s health locally — not just access to doctors but other factors such as economic status, employment, transporta­tion, the well-being of mothers and children, the food we eat. We help mobilize entire countries on other continents to eliminate diseases. We believe that we have much to offer to help address health issues here at home. Gwinnett resident since 1978, agrees that the county needs more minorities in leadership. How does that happen? “People need to get on the ballot and win,” he said. “The minority communitie­s need to realize the seats are there for those who work the hardest.”

Chairman Charlotte Nash said Gwinnett leaders are “very cognizant of how diverse the county is.”

Officials are trying to make the county workforce “more reflective of the county population,” she said. “A lot of our managers almost grew up in our department­s.”

That means there’s a future police chief who’s now a sergeant on the midnight shift.

Nash doesn’t support adding new commission­ers, at least not until after the 2020 census and the subsequent redistrict­ing. “People need to put into perspectiv­e how quickly the diversific­ation came,” she said. “It’s a blink of the eye in a historical perspectiv­e.” One minute the county was going crazy, worried that MARTA was coming and would bring “undesirabl­es.” (A racially charged referendum in 1990 asking voters to fund MARTA was defeated 70-30.) The next minute it’s 25 years later and 6 in 10 Gwinnettia­ns are no longer white.

And if minorities keep blinking, their time will eventually come.

 ?? BILLY WEEKS / ?? Dr. David Ross chats with children who are receiving an antibiotic in an effort to eliminate trachoma, an eye disease that can cause blindness, in Malawi. Ross is president and CEO of The Task Force for Public Health, a Decaturbas­ed nonprofit working...
BILLY WEEKS / Dr. David Ross chats with children who are receiving an antibiotic in an effort to eliminate trachoma, an eye disease that can cause blindness, in Malawi. Ross is president and CEO of The Task Force for Public Health, a Decaturbas­ed nonprofit working...

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