The Brilliant Doctor Behind My Favorite Obscure Website
Beast of Burden
The Brilliant Doctor Behind My Favorite
Obscure Website
By Bill Gates
| September 15, 2015
The first time I met Chris
Murray, he was wrestling with a big question. It was in the early 2000s, and
Chris was working at the World Health Organization in Geneva. I was in town for
some meetings at the WHO and heard from Chris about a project he was working
on. He wanted to understand: Why do people get sick and die?
It wasn’t a philosophical
question. He meant, What are the biggest causes of death and disability? How
does HIV compare with strokes or road injuries or suicide or back injuries? How
do the answers change over time and in different countries?
As Chris would explain a
few years later: “Nobody would imagine starting out on a long journey without
knowing where they're going and what route they would take. Yet, if you look at
global health, that was where the world was—huge ignorance about what people
died from.”
Chris told me he wanted to
create a comprehensive database that would answer those questions, and make it
available free online. It was obviously a big challenge, both scientifically
and politically. But I thought that if he could pull it off, it would be a
fantastic tool for everyone who cares about these issues. And it became clear
that Chris—a compassionate scientist with a love for hard data and software—was
the right person to take it on.
Chris went on to spend a
few years on the faculty at Harvard University; when he left in 2007, I jumped
at the chance to help bring him to the University of Washington, where he set
up the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. A few years later, Chris
and his team launched the project he had been dreaming of: a comprehensive
update of the Global Burden of Disease, or GBD,
using data from researchers around the world. They also built some very cool
data visualizations with the information and analysis from the GBD.
Chris’s story is told well
in Jeremy Smith’s book Epic Measures: One Doctor. Seven Billion Patients, which came out earlier this
year. It’s a highly readable account for anyone who wants to know more about
Chris’s work and why it matters. As Smith says, it is “the story of a huge
independent effort, years in preparation, to do nothing less than chart
everything that threatens the health of everyone on Earth, and make that
information publicly available to doctors, health officials, political leaders,
and private citizens everywhere.”
I visit the GBD data visualizations
a few times each month. It takes a while to get good at finding your way around
the tools, but once you do, they are amazingly informative. There are more than
a billion entries in the database, covering several hundred causes of death and
disease. Recently Melinda and I were trying to understand suicide rates in
different countries—and how they differ among men and women—and we quickly
found the information
we were looking for. (It turns out that in some countries the male/female gap
is more than 5 to 1, while in others it is more like 1 to 1.)
The idea behind Chris’s
work is simple: We can’t cure what we don’t understand. If we know what the
biggest killers are, we can make sure our efforts to save lives are aimed at
the right things. And we can learn what works. In this TGN post you
can watch Chris use the GBD to explain how setting goals and measuring progress
has helped drive huge gains in health—which is one reason I’m optimistic about
the new Global Goals
being adopted this month at the United Nations. (Melinda and I will be there to
help spread the word about the goals.)
What I love most about the
GBD is the way it democratizes information. Much of the data was available
previously, but it was scattered around the world—buried in various countries’
databases and in printed reports that gathered dust on office shelves. The GBD
brings it all together, synthesizes it, and makes it available to everyone.
Thanks to input from experts around the world, it keeps getting more accurate.
It is slowly becoming the standard go-to resource for health data in rich and
poor countries alike.
Epic
Measures gives
you a good sense of why all this is so important. Smith writes, “With a truly
all-encompassing view of life and death, we can see for the first time if
Europe is healthier than America, or Iowa than Ohio, or you than your neighbor.
And then in what ways. And how people are responding, with specific details
everyone else around the world can try to emulate.”
I agree—and I would add
that the GBD is another example of how technology is making it easier to save
and improve lives everywhere. As Epic Measures shows, the more we make
sure reliable information gets out there, the better decisions we all can make,
and the more impact we all can have.
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