Last Mile Health CEO Raj Panjabi Says Underpaid Women Subsidize Health Care Globally and Doctors Are Often to Blame

The world is currently facing the largest health care worker shortage in history and Dr. Raj Panjabi, CEO and founder of Last Mile Health, believes he has a solution—but doctors are standing in the way. “Male-dominated professions are under-recognizing and under-valuing frontline caregivers, be they nurses, midwives or community health workers,” Panjabi said during an interview at the TIME 100 Health Summit on Thursday alongside TIME Nation Editor Haley Sweetland Edwards. Panjabi’s Last Mile Health trains individuals without a medical background to be community health workers, providing them with basic skills in areas such as infectious disease monitoring, maternal and neonatal health, family planning, first aid and how to care for common childhood illnesses. This can help the tens of millions of people around the world, often in rural communities, who lack access to health care every year. But it also makes economic sense, Panjabi said. Training people to be community health workers can create jobs in areas that need them. And for every dollar that a country or a health system invests in training and supervising community health workers, Panjabi says they get $10 back in the form of new jobs, longer lives for patients and even epidemics averted. So why hasn’t the idea of community health workers spread more rapidly? “Sometimes it’s those in my profession, the doctors’ guild, that get in the way,” explained Panjabi. Docto...
Source: TIME: Health - Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Tags: Uncategorized Health Care HealthSummit19 onetime Source Type: news