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| From left to right: Dr. Robert K. Crone, Dr. George E.
Thibault, His Excellency Mohammed Al Gergawi, and Saeed Al Muntafiq
at the May launch of the HMSDC. |
HMI and Dubai Healthcare City launch Harvard
Medical School Dubai Center
Dubai Healthcare City (DHCC) has taken a monumental step
towards becoming a regional center of excellence for health care delivery,
medical education, and research. On May 31st, Dr. Robert K. Crone, president
and CEO of Harvard Medical International (HMI), and Dr. George E. Thibault,
Harvard Medical School professor of medicine, joined His Excellency Mohammed
Al Gergawi, chairman of the board of the Dubai Development and Investment
Authority, and Saeed Al Muntafiq, chairman of the board of DHCC, to break
ground on the Harvard Medical School Dubai Center (HMSDC). Scheduled for
completion in 2005, the Center will house the Institute for Postgraduate
Education and Research. The Center will be managed by HMI, which has a strategic
relationship with DHCC to develop the quality management infrastructure
and education programs for the entire site.
“As a locus of political and economic stability and innovation, Dubai
is in a position to serve the region’s needs for high-quality health
care, and to be a model for institution-building in the region,” said
Crone. “The leadership of DHCC is committed to the principle of accessibility
for all, to professional and academic development, and to international
recognition for quality of care as well as patient privacy, rights, and
satisfaction.”
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| Saeed Al Muntafiq: “The main focus of DHCC’s support is
to provide leadership that will complement and strengthen clinical services
at DHCC and, ultimately, benefit patients.” |
Al Muntafiq believes that the HMSDC is a key element of
DHCC’s efforts
to make Dubai a regional leader in medical education. “The physicians
and researchers who train in this program will form the core faculty who
will lead health care and research initiatives in the Gulf Region,” he
said. “The main focus of DHCC’s support is to provide leadership
that will complement and strengthen clinical services at DHCC and, ultimately,
benefit patients.”
A mission with meaning
The design and mission of the HMSDC is closely tied to the core objectives
of Dubai Healthcare City. In addition to enriching the medical services
provided within DHCC and providing an infrastructure to support lifelong
learning, the leadership of DHCC also see the HMSDC as a vessel through
which the Middle East can begin to reclaim its status as a center of
scientific discovery—recognized not just regionally, but globally
as well. “It
is hoped that research funded though the HMSDC will help to drive a resurgence
in scientific and medical excellence in the Arab world—a centuries
old tradition that has faded in recent years,” said Crone.
Dr. Joseph B. Martin, dean of Harvard Medical School,
certainly can attest to the critical relationship between research programs
and clinical services—the
success of one influences and supports the other. “The leadership
at DHCC recognize that creating a robust research environment will be
critical to attracting the best minds in the region to Dubai, and thereby
continually
enriching the services offered at DHCC for the well-being of families.”
The HMSDC is only one of three bold initiatives introduced at DHCC in
May. The partners have also launched the Harvard Medical School Foundation
for Dubai. The Foundation has been established to support the training
and research programs of the HMSDC, as well as collaborative research
programs around the world. Managed by the Harvard Management Company,
the Foundation
will be the mechanism through which HMI and DHCC attract philanthropy
as
well as private and governmental funding for DHCC’s development.
The third major entity announced is a strategic collaboration
known as the Center for Healthcare Planning and Quality (CPQ), which will
oversee
health care quality management, medical education, training, and credentialing
within DHCC, with the underlying goal of continuous improvement across
every aspect of the medical complex. Moving forward, the CPQ will also
offer its
services in health systems development, medical education, and professional
development to organizations throughout the Gulf Region. “At the core
of the HMI-DHCC collaboration is a commitment to quality,” said Crone. “To
that end, we have made instituting global best practices the major objective
of the CPQ, which in turn will enable the health care providers who are
part of DHCC to attract patients to their services, as well as top health
care professionals to their ranks.”
Education as the root of continued progress
HMI and DHCC have already established a postgraduate training
program to foster the development of a cadre of physician-specialists who
will
contribute to the advancement of medicine and health in Dubai, the United
Arab Emirates,
and the broader Gulf Region. The first clinical fellowships will begin
in July, 2004 in Harvard-affiliated teaching hospitals in the Boston
area. Ultimately, when the appropriate infrastructure is established and
clinical
and academic expertise is in place, the program will be based in DHCC
at
the Harvard Medical School Dubai Center.
Thibault, who serves on the HMI Board of Directors and directs the Academy
at Harvard Medical School, explained that educational innovations will
be built into the HMSDC programs. “An interesting element of this endeavor
is the participation of leading educators from Europe, Asia, and the U.S.,
who are excited about the opportunity to use their experiences to help create
a wholly new infrastructure that benefits from the lessons of past initiatives
and reform efforts,” he said. “This leadership group makes up
the Education Committee and is working to shape the programs so that
they accommodate current trends in medicine while also meeting the highest
international
standards of education excellence.”
Continuing medical education and postgraduate medical education courses
will be a regular component of DHCC and HMI’s activities, helping
to bring a constant supply of updated knowledge and practices to the
entire region. These programs will build upon the success of the first
Practi-Med Dubai, which in December 2003 attracted more than 1,200 health
care professionals
to hear about advances in clinical practice from a faculty drawn in large
part from Harvard Medical School.
A growing community moves forward
DHCC has invited leading academic medical institutions and preeminent
health care organizations to participate in Dubai Healthcare City, including
Harvard Medical School and the Mayo Clinic, among many others. “We
have communicated with many health care organizations that share our
values and believe that DHCC represents an enormous mutual opportunity,” said
Al Muntafiq. “We are eager to welcome partners who are committed to
creating patient-centered care, making this care accessible to all, without
compromise, and creating and nurturing a community of professionals”
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| Joseph B. Martin, here pictured at Practi-Med
Dubai 2003: “DHCC has generated interest among health
care professionals both within and outside of the Gulf Region,
simply by building their mission around the real needs of the people
in the region.” |
This commitment on the part of the DHCC leadership is
what excites Martin the most about the project. “Dubai Healthcare City has generated interest
among health care professionals both within and outside of the Gulf Region,
simply by building their mission around the real needs of the people in
the region,” he said.
One of the challenges facing DHCC and HMI is developing a strong health
care infrastructure that not only serves its purpose in the near term,
but that is agile enough to meet health care needs as they evolve over
time. “Dubai
Healthcare City represents an opportunity to leverage Dubai’s successful
growth and development along with the region’s professional capital,” said
Dr. Mehul Mehta, HMI vice president of business development. “It is
a unique opportunity to create, from the ground up, a lasting health
care infrastructure that is enriched by the experiences of international
health
care providers, yet unhindered by legacy systems and practices.”
The total site comprises 435 acres, including disease prevention and
wellness facilities. DHCC’s services and facilities will be available
to the UAE, the whole of the Middle East, and surrounding regions. Health
care providers that become DHCC tenants will be required to meet international
building and quality standards, including accreditation within 36 months
of start-up. The licensing and quality management processes and decision-making
have been delegated by DHCC to autonomous boards with international representation.
“From the beginning, our focus has been on ensuring that quality is
one of the pillars of DHCC,” said Mehta. “What this quality
infrastructure provides is not only a way to measure progress, but also
a mechanism to
guide continuous improvement and chart a course to providing care of
the highest quality.”
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When HMI and DHCC initiated their partnership a year ago,
they determined that they could impact the Gulf Region’s health care
community immediately through educational programs that addressed some of
the area’s most pressing health care challenges. The first such program,
Practi-Med Dubai 2003, demonstrated the great thirst for knowledge among
the region’s physicians and nurses. In May, HMI and DHCC again collaborated,
this time with a program dedicated to stemming the tide of a single disease:
diabetes.
About 100 health care professionals converged in Dubai for
an interactive program that covered the full scope of diabetes-related issues.
A multidisciplinary faculty led by Dr. Martin Abrahamson, acting chief medical
officer of the Harvard-affiliated Joslin Diabetes Center, presented the
latest advances in prevention and treatment. The program, entitled “Specialty
Practi-Med: Advances in Diabetes,” also provided information about
specific complications, such as cardiovascular disease, lipid disorders,
diabetic kidney disease, and diabetic retinopathy.
The World Health Organization estimates that the Middle East
is home to more than 3.5 million Type 2 diabetes sufferers,
a number that could grow rapidly over the next two decades
if current trends continue. “Diabetes
is not only a chronic disease associated with significant
morbidity and mortality, but it is also a
major public health problem of epidemic proportions,” said Abrahamson.
The reach of diabetes across populations—which affects adults mainly,
with an increasing prevalence of diabetes among children—is analogous
to its wide-ranging impact on the human body. It is the leading cause of
both blindness or visual impairment and non-injury-related limb amputations
in the developed world. The Specialty Practi-Med program was designed not
only for physicians who treat diabetes in primary care practice, and the
endocrinologists and diabetologists who study the disease, but also for
the vascular surgeons, ophthalmologists, and podiatrists who play a large
role in helping to minimize the impact of diabetes.
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| Faculty and staff of Specialty Practi-Med |
“This program represents a great opportunity to get out ahead
of this disease, before it becomes a tremendous burden on
the health care system,” said Dr. Harvey Makadon, vice president of
health systems at HMI. “In the UAE, there is a concern that the advances
in technology and convenience that have helped this country evolve so rapidly
could negatively
impact the health of its people. Globally, there is a direct
correlation between decreased physical activity and increased overweight
and obesity.
And so while treatment of diabetes and its related conditions
is a large emphasis of this program, it is also crucial to enrich prevention
efforts
and encourage physicians to make patient education an integral
part of their practice.”
DHCC’s Suhail Al Ansari said that the specialists from the Gulf Region
who attended were eager to learn about diabetes research being performed
around the world—and excited about the opportunity to discuss real
cases with leading authorities. “We had a highly interactive two days,” he
said.
A second Specialty Practi-Med has been planned for September
in Dubai. A team of experts led by Dr. Charles Brown of Harvard
Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital will present the latest knowledge
in the field of musculoskeletal health and sports medicine. This will be
followed by Practi-Med Dubai 2004 in December. For more information,
please visit the Practi-Med website.
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