May 31, 2020
Dr. Shepherd has worked in key
areas like Botswana to address
infectious diseases.
He shares with listeners
Dr. James Shepherd is an
infectious disease physician at Yale, New Haven hospital. For the
past 20 years, he has advised and worked in TB and HIV global
treatment programs. For example, he worked in Nigeria to roll out
HIV treatment programs through the US-funded President's Emergency
Plan for AIDS Relief.
He also ran the CDC's TB and HIV research program in Botswana to
address HIV symptoms and curtail TB spread, which has one of the
most severe TB and HIV co-epidemics in the world, and worked with
the CDC WHO contingent in India, advising on their national TB
program.
He describes his work with governments and health issues in smaller countries, which have a lot more challenges. He comments that one has to get creative, adapt, and work around issues and prioritize because there isn't the luxury of picking and choosing. He adds that there's a lot of pragmatism: these parts of the world are limited by funds so they have to make very hard choices for their people.
He also tells listeners about the covid-19 shutdown's effects on some of these programs, how the lack of PPE, resources, and the "cold chain" supply of vaccines and medicines are no longer reaching places like Botswana. He adds how they handled the covid-19 precautions very well from the start and have very limited cases, but are suffering from this lack of other needs met. Therefore, Dr. Shepherd expresses his concern for the near future of TB and HIV symptoms relief, prevention, and treatments as well as the lack of vaccines like measles.
For more information on infectious diseases from a global perspective, he suggests seeing web pages from philanthropic organizations like the global health section of the Gates Foundation and the UK's Wellcome Foundation.