#Sepsis #GlobalHealth #NASCAR
Sepsis almost killed me after a visit to a Connecticut doctor’s office for an unpleasant biopsy. This was after decades of working in some of the most dangerous parts of the world and contracting cerebral malaria, meningitis, two never‑before‑seen tropical diseases, and others, so it was not on my bingo card to contract sepsis in Connecticut.
One year later, the sudden death of two‑time NASCAR champion Kyle Busch from bacterial pneumonia and sepsis shows how fast this condition moves and how indiscriminately it strikes. To honor Kyle Busch’s passing and my own near‑death experience, I went to the best source I could find on a disease few Americans are aware of.
In this episode of The Unpopular View, I speak with Dr. Niranjan “Tex” Kisson, President of the Global Sepsis Alliance, co‑chair of World Sepsis Day, and endowed chair in acute and critical care for global child health at the University of British Columbia and BC Children’s Hospital. Tex helped push the World Health Assembly to recognize sepsis as a global health priority in 2017 and now co‑chairs the Global Sepsis Innovations Platform, coordinating research, diagnostics, and treatment across 36 organizations.
We break down what sepsis actually is, why it can arise from common infections, and why the world’s medical community took so long to recognize it as a distinct and deadly condition. Tex walks through staggering numbers: tens of millions of cases and millions of deaths, with sepsis implicated in one in five global deaths in 2020 and one in three during the COVID‑19 period.
We also explore why sepsis care is a “bellwether” of health system quality, how investments in sepsis programs in Australia and British Columbia generated extraordinary returns — including one program that delivered roughly 112 dollars in value for every dollar invested — and why decisions made in Washington, Paris, London, and Geneva will determine whether hundreds of thousands of mothers and newborns in the Global South live or die.
If you want to understand how a single condition can expose the strengths and failures of our health systems, connect local stories to global realities, and offer one of the highest‑ROI investments in modern medicine, this conversation is for you. This is segment 1 of 3. After discussing the facts around sepsis in the U.S. in particular, segment 2 focuses on the Global South, and segment 3 looks at what needs to happen to slow the dramatic pace of sepsis in North America and globally.
#KyleBusch #RorysRegulations #RoryStaunton #SepsisAlliance
#EndSepsis #SepsisLaw #PatientSafety #MaternalHealth #NewbornHealth
#GlobalSouth #GlobalSepsisAlliance #WorldSepsisDay #HealthSystems #HealthcareCosts #TheUnpopularView_MichaelBrown
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