2025now- The Economist 1984 : 2025 = last year sustainability

Japanthanks.com August 8, Olympics Closing Ceremony - Why Bach Can't lose by announcing suspension of summer olympics until covid slayed

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

https://youtu.be/CqXgwKKk8aQ?t=320

Posted by chris macrae at 9:25 AM No comments:
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Saturday, May 16, 2020

why aren't there more videos for families learning health https://globalhealthmedia.org/videos/ -or if there are please tell us chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk  economistscotland.com
Posted by chris macrae at 9:37 AM No comments:
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Friday, May 8, 2020

50 missing curriculum/lessons www.zoomuni.net  #1 collaborate to end corona


technical resources/alumninetworks to friend pih.org boston doctorswithoutborders enginerswithoutborders brac university james grant school public health alibaba cloud open sourcing of wuhan nurses fieldbook

40 years ago i started co-writing a book- 2025 report published in 1984- the exponential rise in technology would, as orwell had feared, be spun by big brothrs to end our species unless we transformed education in time.

much of our work was co-published live in the economist by my father norman macrae. he reported different sector to look out for- if we missed the most vital curriculum of health, all other tech wizardry would be for nought. i have been alarmed for 15 years now how silicon valley got obsessed with big data for self-driving cars not for health even though all looked different when google.org made its first ceo the great immunologist larry brilliant. i look for universities whose vice chancellor or founding board members love immunology. i expect half of universities should be closed among those who dont. that's because as our book argued students working hard to be the first sdg generation should not be put in debt. its actually the elderly who have lost out in west because their 300 trillion dollars of pension funds has refused to make health or other sdg projects asset grade. its now 2 years sine the un has known that is the main financial gap preventing progress, yet each time i go to a un summit and ask what are you doing about this- the answer has been trust us but thats currently up to 5 financial genii to report back on. even since subprime 2008, financial geniuses have scared me as much as our basic last mile public health services, i come from 5 generations of diaspora scots who value adam smith texts on healthy scieties generate strong intergeberational economies not vice versa

anyway while we had hoped online education would be as widespread as any other online activity from the beginning of coding or of world webbing or of mobilising global apps or of compuyers crunching local data to the nth degree of natural diversity, you all are in 2020 suddenly doing everything online. so www.zoomuni.net and ww.alumnisat.com see  no surprise in naming end virus the number 1 missing curriculum

what is surprising is this challenge isnt just about how brilliant our health scientists are- its about if you dont design random stats surveys correctly ahead of time you can drown in data that gets more and more political- you may close down whole value chain components of peoples day to day livelihoods in blanket ways instead of targeting open and closed

there will be parts of the curriculum virus that can only be known when a few medical genii find the cure. but every child and teacher can least some 5th grade statistics online together about random sampling and requiring that mass media news anchors who have never passed 5th grade maths be banned from covering fear stories- as for what criteria we the peoples should demand from public servants- that is something people of different cultures and different stages of regional development must make up their own minds on. there are countries where eg closing even 20% of the food supply chain will kill people of famine - thats is one reason why adaptability to exponential risks that will face us all through the 2020s will not be about one nation having all the right answers. nature is more diverse than that. education systems designed round examination more than experiential learning was what the 2025 report asked elders not to trap youth in. we need to stop using the sdgs as ad stories- if elders cant live sdgs now they certianly should blame youth who dont understand corona




Posted by chris macrae at 3:02 PM No comments:
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missing curriculum how to beat corona virus

there are afew different reasons why the world
is destroying our species because
of missing curricula

we are for example dealig with a trillion times more data of what
we do witheach other in communities and
in worldwide herds - who we celebrate,
whose values we gospelise

but the simplest question with any mising curriculum
who are people you least want to be trained or ordered by
who do you most want to actin learning with

i would not recommend anyone outside ameruca to want fauci curriculum - americans can judge if they need it- i would recommend eg s korea curriculum -through the 2010s they designed changes needed where faucis rew did the opposite

think odf testing
the medical industry likes to charge atleast 100 dollars a test
a virus means the army or some public servant not commerce is needed
tests shoul be scaled at maximum 5 dollars
the ingredints needed to test 100 million are part of national security

thats why korea always knew the numbers- to this day fauci is using data which may be 20 times wrong- until he gets his data right he would prefer no american left their homes

-another issus is telehealth tiraging- when you have an infectious disease you dont want potential patients in a crowded waitng room - this disease can keep paricles in air for over 3 hours
so everyone is safer by telehealth tirage- this does assume a nation has broadband for all but the reason why almost no telehealth existed in usa before virus was commerce made more money with no telehealth

fauci got the connection betwen distance and masks wrong- if a particle can be sneexed 26 feet or hang in air where anyone has shouted fr 3 hours there is no more lgic for 6 feet than 3 feet- whatever distance minimises shouting without hugging up- the only rason the 6 foot was chosen was becuase at the time fauci teamdid not understand mask- they dont protect you much from catching, they do protect others from you spiiitting at them
Posted by chris macrae at 9:11 AM No comments:
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Wednesday, May 6, 2020

www.pih.org where the world goes first to value nursing, public health and virus combattants on front lines -pih epicentre of knowhow exchanges boston  -pih youtube channel
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https://www.pih.org/article/going-offensive-stop-covid-19


pih boston chose 1000 from 40000 applicants
triple role
talk to those identified as cases to see if they have all needed to isolate
talk to those identified as having beein in contact to see if they have all they need
c resource coordinator explaing local resources to help cases and contacts

may 2020 jim kim returns topih.org  boston - offensive covid

..................  CGIU 2020: video Combating COVID  


CGI  University 2020, President Clinton and Chelsea Clinton and leading voices in public health, ..go to 1 hr 56 min 50 sec video left for paul farmer at  CGIU april 2020


Upcoming webinars: 
The Role of Nursing in a Global Pandemic
Wednesday, May 6, at 3 p.m. EDT
Join a panel of PIH nursing experts as they explore what it means to be on the frontlines of a global pandemic like COVID-19, both in the United States and in the countries where PIH works around the world. You’ll hear from Cory McMahon, PIH’s director of nursing and midwifery; Marc Julmisse, PIH’s deputy chief nursing officer and chief nursing officer of University Hospital in Mirebalais, Haiti; and Dr. John Welch, PIH’s director of partnerships & operations for Massachusetts’ COVID Response and Boston Children’s Hospital’s senior nurse anesthetist and pediatric nurse anesthesia fellowship director.

A COVID-19 Primer, and How to Stop its Spread
Wednesday, May 20, at 3 p.m. EDT
Join PIH’s Director of Research Dr. Megan Murray as she explains the epidemiology of COVID-19, what we know about the disease, and how it informs our work. You’ll also hear from Dr. John Welch, PIH’s director of partnerships & operations for Massachusetts’ COVID Response, on PIH’s partnership with the state of Massachusetts through the Community Tracing Collaborative, in which we are using lessons learned from our 30 years of experience tracking down infectious diseases globally and applying that to stopping COVID’s spread in the Commonwealth.

PIH’s Global Approach to Tackling COVID-19
Wednesday, June 3, at 12 p.m. EDT
Join a panel of leaders from PIH-supported sites around the world to hear about the work being done, in partnership with local and national governments, to test, treat, and support patients dealing with COVID-19, as well as continue to provide the full range of care to the most vulnerable during this unprecedented time. You’ll hear directly from COPE Executive Director Nitumigaabow Champagne in Navajo Nation, Zanmi Lasante Senior Health and Policy Advisor Liz Campa, and PIH Director of Impact Emily Dally.
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Apr 16, 2020 - Charlie Baker that will require hiring nearly 1,000 additional staff. ... PIH is hiring contact tracers, resource coordinators, and case investigators to reach out to ... Partners In Health, 800 Boylston Street, Suite 300, Boston, MA.


Massachusetts Response | Partners In Health


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Partners In Health to Help State Trace Contacts of COVID-19 Patients in ... capacity for contact tracing through a new collaboration with Boston-based global health ... deploying hundreds of contact tracers, who will call people who have been in ... The COVID Community Team, a virtual support center of nearly 1,000 people, ...


Massachusetts Recruits 1,000 'Contact Tracers' To Battle ...


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Apr 14, 2020 - The state is partnering with the Boston-based nonprofit Partners in Health, and has begun hiring and training some of the 1,000, or so, people ...


Massachusetts Recruits 1000 'Contact Tracers' To ... - NPR


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Apr 13, 2020 - The state is partnering with the Boston-based nonprofit Partners in Health, and has begun hiring and training some of the 1,000, or so, people ...


An Army of Coronavirus Tracers Takes Shape in ...


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Apr 16, 2020 - BOSTON — Alexandra Cross, a newly minted state public health worker, ... contact-tracing program, budgeting $44 million to hire 1,000 people like ... The Massachusetts program is staged by the nonprofit Partners in Health, ...


Baker launches 'robust' contact tracing initiative ... - Boston.com


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Apr 4, 2020 - Reporter: Topic: –Blake Nissen for The Boston Globe ... about 1,000 virtual contact tracers who will reach out to COVID-19 patients to learn about their ... PIH is looking for Contact Tracers to join the COVID Community Team in ...


Inside an 'army' of COVID-19 contact tracers in Massachusetts


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Apr 27, 2020 - The virus tracers alert the contacts of their possible exposure, explain what ... Dr. Joia Mukherjee, chief medical officer of Partners in Health, which is hiring, ... The program in Massachusetts has a virtual workforce of 1,000 contact tracers. ... Cass connected them to the Boston Public Health Commission, ...


pih webinar briefing 6 may - erin sordy- We are looking forward to having you join our panel of nursing experts, today—May 6—to explore what it means to be on the front lines of a global pandemic like COVID-19, both in the United States and in the countries where PIH works around the world. Our panelists include Cory McMahon, PIH’s director of nursing and midwifery; Marc Julmisse, PIH’s deputy chief nursing officer and chief nursing officer of University Hospital in Mirebalais, Haiti, and Zanmi Lasante’s deputy director of quality programs, standardization of hospital care, odontology and oncology; and John Welch, PIH’s director of partnerships & operations for Massachusetts’ COVID Response and Boston Children’s Hospital’s senior nurse anesthetist and pediatric nurse anesthesia fellowship director.



Posted by chris macrae at 1:14 PM No comments:
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help! with top 20 Economist challenges - eg why china is world leader to partner on all youth's sustainability goal www.economistchina.net

what's purpose of spending thousands times more on communications technologies than 1948 unless health and happiness for all 10 times more affordable

when you look at the proposed 12 supercities of sustainability, i wonder what use dc-baltimore unless if leads on health

  • The Economist Saturday, 28 April 1984.
  • Pages 23,24. Vol 291, issue 7339.

also published in 1984 2025 report by norman and chris macrae- timelined how as an integral system a global village world could only result in 2 opposite end games - our stories on positive ways forward clarified opposite risks -

most popular chapter 6
x chapter 1 chapter 2
chapter 3 part 1 chapter 3 part 2 chapter 4 chapter 5
chapter 6 chapter 7 chapter 8 chapter 9 chapter 10 chapter 11 part 1 chapter 11 part 2 chapter 12 chapter 13 chapter 14 chapter 15 chapter 16 chapter 17 chapter 18 chapter 19 chapter 21

chapter 20 will optimistic economics lead local-global space 1984-2024


i note bloomberg march 2020 refers to a half time 2004 report on doomsday scenario of communities not being prepared to e resilient to virus

Bloomberg
FOLLOW US GET THE NEWSLETTER

For the prognosticators on the U.S. National Intelligence Council who sat down in 2004 to consider what the world might look like in 2020, the answer hinged heavily on one big question: What did the future of globalization look like?

Their answer: Not great.

By 2020, they predicted, globalization would face a political backlash in a world increasingly plagued by identity politics. Yet if anything was going to really derail economic integration, it would likely be the mass spread of a virulent new disease.

“Short of a major global conflict, which we regard as improbable, another large-scale development that we believe could stop globalization would be a pandemic,” the council warned in a report laying out the findings of its “Project 2020.” A death toll in the millions and a virus that “put a halt to global travel and trade during an extended period” would certainly leave globalization “endangered.”

Just a bit over two months into 2020 and it’s not hard to make the case for why that rings true.

There is an alternative view that holds globalization may actually be a lot more resilient today than it seemed in 2004, in the halcyon days before smartphones had taken over our lives.

But what would it take in the months ahead to get to Doomsday for globalization? It all hinges on the reaction from policy makers to the coronavirus crisis. So here are three things to watch for. If these happen, we should be ready for the shape-shifting in globalization we’ve seen in recent years to morph into a deep freeze.

  1. New barriers to exports. White House trade hawk Peter Navarro, in a recent Financial Times interview, criticized the export controls some countries have placed on medicines and medical supplies like face masks. His motivation may be pure. But Navarro tends to like anything that makes his argument for a shift away from globalization. So what if he used those export controls by others to argue for the U.S. to do the same? Navarro has said he wants to repatriate supply chains for national security reasons and advocated stricter controls on tech exports to China. What if he convinced President Donald Trump to ban exports of not just face masks or medicines but shipments of an eventual vaccine? And other countries followed suit? What if the controls shifted to food stockpiles?
  2. New import restrictions. Chinese trade data for January and February pointed to the damage so far from China’s industrial shutdown last month. Exports were down 17.2% in dollar terms. But what if the U.S. and other countries started limiting imports of goods coming by air and sea not just from China but from South Korea, Italy and other affected countries? And those countries retaliated and did the same? So far the focus on supply chain vulnerabilities has focused on China. But what if all trade was deemed contaminated?
  3. A collapse in global governance. The weekend emergence of a battle between Saudi Arabia and Russia over oil production caused crude prices to tumble dramatically on Monday. What if such discord spills to the G-7 or the G-20? What happens if, driven by fear of a virus, global economic policy makers can’t get on the same page? Or, worse, actively start working against each other in an area like, say, currencies?

Robert Hutchings, the former diplomat and Princeton academic who led the National Intelligence Council as it prepared its 2004 report, said in a recent email exchange that the point they were trying to make was “that globalization is a ubiquitous force that carries with it bad consequences as well as good.”

Ominously, he added: “We particularly wanted to argue that globalization is not irreversible.”

—Shawn Donnan in Washington


2013 has seen khanac labs spread from maths to coding to healthcare -please tell us the next billion jobs alumni app of khan labs

2014 sees first coursera of a social good summit- atlanta and 25000 youth have 22 months to work out how to turn its greatest ever youth celebration into an ongoing curriculum

help linkin Number 1 collaborations in Economics for Youth and millennium goal action networks

in 2013, The Economist celebrates its 170th anniversary as the world leading media of end hunger. Its end year xmas issue 2012 celebrated Free Education's comihg of Massive Open Online Curriculum.

Quiz - what need to be the top 10 MOOCS of 2013 to get youth back to work everywhere and so that the net generation can believe in collaboration around millennium goals?

entrepreneurialrevolution.avi

microeconomist

Transparency note: the last time The Economist carried as important a xmas issue contribution may have been 1976's Entrepreneurial Revolution (ER) by dad. The Economist. Saturday, 25 December 1976

ER's Ten green bottles

Breakthrough erroneous mindsets of macroeconomics before there is nothing left at all:

#1 Entrepreneurs-and good news media owners - are not political- they connect left right and centre dialogues

cm1.jpg

Verify Top 2 pro-youth economists: Norman Macrae 1923-2010 & the most exciting microeconomist of our epoch & net generation : Muhammad Yunus born 1940 ...


egs ECONOMIES OF HEALTH:
infant and maternal health services can be the world's most social and economical- benchmark bangladesh villages
wellbeing and infectious disease prevention markets ought to be worldwide and very affordable the more openly connected worldwide youth can map
markets that involve surgery are always going to be as expesnive as health gets; markets depending on global pharma need a total different coonstitutiuon if they are ever to be economical
markets specialising in elderly depend on how a plavce's communities and family valuing structures are designed

microeconomist

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About Me

chris macrae
chrismacrae.com youtube washington dc email chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk linkedin 9500 skype chrismacraedc co-author with The Economist's Norman Macrae 1984's 2025Report - 40 years to transform education and save our species
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