Ep 39: George Dyer

Ep 39: George Dyer

Update: 2022-02-05
Share

Description

Imagine if you arrived at your house and there were dozens of Amazon boxes at your door. None of which you had ordered. You open them only to find random items – a hairbrush, t-shirts that are way too big for anyone in your household, a toaster, and ice cream that is now all melted since you didn’t know it was there and should be refrigerated. Further, this doesn’t happen just once. It happens over and over again. Each time with a new set of items, all of which you didn’t order and may or may not even need. The items start piling up and boxes are everywhere. Despite your best efforts to keep up, stuff just accumulates and clutters your house. The items are unusable to you and impeding your access to your own space and effectively just becoming trash.



 



Now imagine if you got a knock at your door. It’s a random person unknown to you, claiming to be a contractor. They let themselves in and start accessing your home and telling you they need to tear down this wall, re-route a pipe, change light fixtures, etc. They may even start doing these things without consulting you first or getting your permission. They never present any type of license or ask your opinion “because they are the expert and know best”.



 



This is how it can feel in some global health situations. While people are trying to help, external aid can often be misdirected and create new, additional problems. The sending of supplies to resource-poor settings is often ill-informed and becomes like the Amazon analogy – trash. Incredible resources that are donated but unusable in their setting, incomplete material sets, not sorted, or frankly, not needed. The receiving institution may not be equipped to deal with the influx of these donations, and they become a burden rather than a help. This is compounded by physicians and surgeons offering their services regardless of the stated needs of the area, often leaving the local physicians to clean up the aftermath of post-operative checks, new medication management, and physical therapy needs. Join us as we talk with Dr. George Dyer, an orthopedic surgeon/professor at Harvard Medical School and orthopaedic advisor for Partners in health, about trash (disguised as donations) and the need for need-directed donations, education, and effective surgical support. You won’t want to miss this!

Comments 
In Channel
Ep 54: Patrick Miner

Ep 54: Patrick Miner

2025-10-0501:03:53

Ep 54: Patrick Miner

Ep 54: Patrick Miner

2025-10-0301:03:53

Ep 53: Rowa and Gladys

Ep 53: Rowa and Gladys

2025-04-0501:10:42

Ep 52: Meryl and Lucy

Ep 52: Meryl and Lucy

2025-01-0501:15:35

Ep 51: Metasebia Abebe

Ep 51: Metasebia Abebe

2024-03-0541:41

Ep 50: Myron Rolle

Ep 50: Myron Rolle

2024-01-0554:15

Ep 49: Zachary Enumah

Ep 49: Zachary Enumah

2023-10-0546:50

Ep 46: Clifton Ewbank

Ep 46: Clifton Ewbank

2023-04-0540:32

Ep 45: Thomas Monaghan

Ep 45: Thomas Monaghan

2023-03-0537:58

Ep 44: Anita Makins

Ep 44: Anita Makins

2023-02-0548:16

Ep 43: Steven Orr

Ep 43: Steven Orr

2022-06-0501:01:25

Ep 42: Joel Bervell

Ep 42: Joel Bervell

2022-05-0549:47

Ep 41: Marci Bowers

Ep 41: Marci Bowers

2022-04-0559:16

Ep 39: George Dyer

Ep 39: George Dyer

2022-02-0501:02:35

Ep 38: Fabio Botelho

Ep 38: Fabio Botelho

2022-01-0501:07:37

Ep 36: Kokila Lakhoo

Ep 36: Kokila Lakhoo

2021-11-0551:18

loading
00:00
00:00
x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

Ep 39: George Dyer

Ep 39: George Dyer

Taylor Ottesen, Riana Patel, and George Dyer