Case File
efta-02002815DOJ Data Set 10OtherEFTA02002815
Date
Unknown
Source
DOJ Data Set 10
Reference
efta-02002815
Pages
4
Persons
0
Integrity
Extracted Text (OCR)
EFTA DisclosureText extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
The Atlantic Home
Friday, March 23, 2012
• Politic
Massoud Hayoun - Massoud Hayoun writes for and produces The Atlantic's International
channel.
How Jim Yong Kim, Obama's World Bank
Pick, Changed Global Health Aid
By Massoud Hayoun
Mar 23 2012, 2:04 PM ET
The international public health work that made Kim, now the president's nominee for World
Bank head, such a respected figure.
EFTA_R1_00500137
EFTA02002815
President Obama introduces Jim Yong Kim as his nominee to be the next president of the World
Bank / Reuters
President Obama announced today that he will nominate Dartmouth College President Jim Yong
Kim to head the World Bank. Although Kim is a physician by training, officials have observed
that Kim's role as a key player in global health and development, notably with his role in the
organization Partners in Health (PIH), makes him a key candidate to change the attitudes of
developing-world nations.
The following excerpts from Tracy Kidder's Mountains Beyond Mountains, a biography of
anthropologist and physician Paul Farmer, detail Kim's bold efforts to combat international HIV
and tuberculosis epidemics with PIH:
Some months after the official founding of PIH, [co-founder] Paul Farmer expanded the group,
adding a fellow Harvard anthropology and medical student, a Korean American named Jim
Yong Kim... Farmer offered what for Jim Kim was a convincing vision of the new organization.
The reality was less impressive -- a charity with a board of advisers and no hired staff...
They talked about issues such as political correctness, which Jim Kim defined as follows: "It's a
very well-crafted tool to distract us. A very self-centered activity. Clean up your own vocabulary
so you can show everybody you have the social capital of having been in circles where these
things are talked about on a regular basis." (What was an example of political correctness? Some
academic types would say to Jim and Paul, "Why do you call your patients poor people? They
don't call themselves poor people." Jim would reply: "Okay, how about soon-dead people?")
They talked about the insignificance of "cultural barriers" when it came to the Haitian peasant's
EFTA_R1_00500138
EFTA02002816
acceptance of modern Western medicine: "There's nothing like a cure for a disease to change
people's cultural values"...
By now Peru was taxing PIH's resources severely. On average, the drugs to treat just one patient
cost between fifteen and twenty thousand dollars. And the number of patients kept growing.
Already there were about fifty Carabayllanos in treatment. Their average age was twenty-nine.
They were students, unemployed youths, housewives, street vendors, bus drivers, health
workers. The actual numbers seemed small, but those fifty MDR [a form of tuberculosis that
does not respond to standard treatment] cases represented about 10 percent of all active cases of
TB in the slum, about ten times more than might have been expected. No telling how many
others they had been infecting as they'd traveled around Lima, coughing. No telling either how
many people in other parts of the city already had MDR, but [there were] reports of hundreds in
other neighborhoods. In Carabayllo itself, the Socios workers found entire families sick and
dying with what turned out to be genetically related strains of the disease--a phenomenon
common enough that the health workers gave it a name, familias tebeceanas, tuberculosis
families.
Kim's organization confronted Peru's MDR-form tuberculosis epidemic with what some have
called unorthodox practices -- borrowing and cajoling its way into medicine for its patients.
Howard Hiatt, a friend of Jim Yong Kim's and a former dean at the Harvard School of Public
Health, said he was concerned about how PIH was getting medicine to combat the epidemic:
"Sure enough. Paul and Jim would stop at the [Harvard-affiliated] Brigham pharmacy before they
left for Peru and fill their briefcases with drugs. They had sweet-talked various people into
letting them walk away with the drugs." [Hiatt] was amused, all in all. "That's their Robin Hood
attitude." In fact, they'd only borrowed the drugs...
Then one day the president of the Brigham stopped Hiatt in a corridor. "Your friends Farmer and
Kim are in trouble with me. They owe this hospital ninety-two thousand dollars." Hiatt looked
into the matter. "Sure enough. Paul and Jim would stop at the Brigham pharmacy before they
left for Peru and fill their briefcases with drugs. They had sweet-talked various people into
letting them walk away with the drugs." He was amused, all in all. "That's their Robin Hood
attitude."
To many seasoned managers of public health projects, what Fanner and Kim were doing would
have looked quite reckless--like a stunt, as some would later insinuate. They didn't have a
guaranteed supply of drugs, only the determination to obtain the drugs and the charm to get
away with borrowing. They were borrowing their laboratory services, too, from Massachusetts.
They lacked proper institutional support. The weight of expert opinion stood against them. Their
organization was small and it had other projects, in Haiti and Boston and elsewhere, and Peru
put a strain on everyone. Jim had to travel to Carabayllo at least once a month. Farmer had to go
there slightly more often.
Kim's audacious 'Robin Hood attitude' won him and PIH acclaim for their role in changing global
health and development.
In June 2002 ... the WHO adopted new prescriptions for dealing with MDR-TB, virtually the
EFTA_R1_00500139
EFTA02002817
same as PIH had used in Carabayllo. For Jim Kim this marked the end of a long campaign. "The
world changed yesterday," he wrote from Geneva to all of PIH. The prices of second-line
antibiotics continued to decline, and the drugs now flowed fairly smoothly through the Green
Light Committee to, among other places, Peru, where about 1,000 chronic patients were either
cured or in treatment. About 250 were receiving the drugs in Tomsk, and, largely because of the
efforts of WHO, the Russian Ministry of Health had finally agreed to the terms of the World
Bank's TB loan--150 million dollars to begin to fight the epidemic throughout the country.
The twin pandemics of AIDS and tuberculosis raged on, of course, magnifying each other, in
Africa and Asia, Eastern Europe and Latin America. Mathematical models predicted widening
global catastrophe--I00 million HIV infections in the world by the year 2010. Some prominent
voices, some in the U.S. government, still argued that AIDS could not be treated in desperately
impoverished places. But this view seemed to be fading. The prices of antiretrovirals were
falling, even more dramatically than the prices of second-line TB drugs.
This was thanks to a growing worldwide campaign for treating AIDS wherever it occurred. Jim
Kim had often said that the world's response to AIDS and TB would define the moral standing
of his generation. In 2003, a new director general took over at WHO, and he asked Jim to serve
as his senior adviser. Meanwhile, the example of Zanmi Lasante [PIH's Haiti-based project] was
growing, and Cange had become a favorite destination for global health policy makers and
American politicians.
EFTA_R1_00500140
EFTA02002818
Forum Discussions
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.
Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.