Close Menu
TheStories
  • Home
  • General News
  • TheStories
  • Business/Banking & Finance
  • Tech
  • More
    • Health
    • Entertainments & Sports
    • Agriculture
    • Investigation/Fact-Check
    • Law & Human Rights
    • International News
    • Interview
    • Opinion
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Advert Rates
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TheStoriesTheStories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • General News
    Featured

    Youth, women key to Nigeria’s democratic future – Dr. Jibril Tafida

    By TheStoriesNovember 24, 20250
    Recent

    Youth, women key to Nigeria’s democratic future – Dr. Jibril Tafida

    November 24, 2025

    ACF honours Sen. Wamakko with Distinguished Service Award at 25th Anniversary

    November 23, 2025

    UNICEF introduces feedback system to address child welfare gaps in Zamfara

    November 19, 2025
  • TheStories
    Featured

    Sweet genes: Why people are ‘practically programmed’ to love sugar

    By TheStoriesMay 14, 20230
    Recent

    Sweet genes: Why people are ‘practically programmed’ to love sugar

    May 14, 2023

    New genetic target for male contraception identified – Study

    April 19, 2023

    Energy: Nigeria will meet 60% of demand with renewables by 2050 – Report

    January 15, 2023
  • Business/Banking & Finance
    Featured

    Credite Capital grows revenue by 56.1% in 2024

    By TheStoriesAugust 9, 20250
    Recent

    Credite Capital grows revenue by 56.1% in 2024

    August 9, 2025

    FENRAD raises alarm over Abia’s ₦75bn debt profile

    August 4, 2025

    June 3 deadline for BDC recapitalisation non-negotiable – ABCON

    June 3, 2025
  • Tech
    Featured

    Why we’re banning drone use in the Northeast – NAF

    By TheStoriesJanuary 15, 20250
    Recent

    Why we’re banning drone use in the Northeast – NAF

    January 15, 2025

    Aliyu Aminu: A Nigerian Innovator Shaping the Future of Content Distribution

    December 7, 2024

    Effective ways to lead technology commercialization projects in Nigeria

    December 9, 2023
  • More
    1. Health
    2. Entertainments & Sports
    3. Agriculture
    4. Investigation/Fact-Check
    5. Law & Human Rights
    6. International News
    7. Interview
    8. Opinion
    Featured
    Recent

    Nigeria’s insecurity is a criminal economy, not a religious war, By Abubakar el-Kurebe

    November 27, 2025

    Assuring the terrorized: Reps in solidarity with abducted Kebbi students, By Abdul-Azeez Suleiman

    November 26, 2025

    Youth, women key to Nigeria’s democratic future – Dr. Jibril Tafida

    November 24, 2025
  • About Us
    1. Contact Us
    2. Advert Rates
    Featured
    Recent

    Nigeria’s insecurity is a criminal economy, not a religious war, By Abubakar el-Kurebe

    November 27, 2025

    Assuring the terrorized: Reps in solidarity with abducted Kebbi students, By Abdul-Azeez Suleiman

    November 26, 2025

    Youth, women key to Nigeria’s democratic future – Dr. Jibril Tafida

    November 24, 2025
TheStories
Home»Opinion»VIEWPOINT: Teaching someone to fish: the false dichotomy of relief and development, By Prof. Mark Shrime
Opinion

VIEWPOINT: Teaching someone to fish: the false dichotomy of relief and development, By Prof. Mark Shrime

TheStoriesBy TheStoriesOctober 26, 2022Updated:October 26, 2022No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

Over two-thirds of the world’s population doesn’t have access to safe, affordable, and timely surgical care

You know that phrase, “Give a man a fish, you feed him for a day; teach a man to fish, you feed him for life”?

Yeah, I hate that phrase; it creates a false dichotomy. Why not do both? After all, it’s easier to learn when you’re not hungry.

We often construct a similar dichotomy in global health, pitting relief against development, and assuming only one should happen. For many valid reasons, that one is development. It’s a reductionistic view of global health, and it can leave patients behind. Yes, systems must develop, for sure, but in the meantime, what happens to patients while they’re developing?

One person dies every two seconds from a surgically treatable disease. Over two-thirds of the world’s population doesn’t have access to safe, affordable, and timely surgical care, and nearly half the world’s population would face financial ruin if they accessed surgical care today. Strengthening surgical systems is a complex problem with significant health and economic effects: the lack of surgical access, for example, is estimated to decrease the gross domestic product of low- and middle-income countries by as much as 2%.

It can be tempting to approach this complex problem with a well-intentioned, if narrow, focus: say, building new infrastructure or training new providers. But, like any complex problem, this one resists simple solutions. The late Dr. Paul Farmer used to say that true access to care requires four things: space, stuff, staff, and systems—all of which are interlinked. New anesthetic machines, for example, are useless without people who know how to operate them, an operating theater in which they can work, and a public health system that acknowledges the need for surgery. Without all four things, improving surgical systems with surgical precision is bound to fail.

And then, to make it even more complex, all that interconnectedness also has to be close to the patient. Surgical care is unlike, say, a Covid-19 vaccine. As this pandemic taught us, the research, development, and production for the vaccine could be centralized. That is, once the vaccine was created, approved, and produced in large factories, the health system was only left with a logistical problem to solve: cold chains to maintain or delivery networks to bolster.

Not so in surgery. The entire means of production—the staff, the space, the stuff, and the system; the people, the electricity, the suction, the water, the infrastructure, the education, the oxygen—all of that has to be brought closer to the patient. Surgery can’t be packaged into a pill, can’t be boxed up into the back of refrigerated trucks. The entire surgical ecosystem, and the people that work in it, must exist near where patients live, or it might as well not even exist for them.

In my mind, that’s what makes surgical system strengthening such a fascinating—and sometimes frustrating—endeavor. It’s complex, it’s exciting, and it’s why I love working in this field. Transformative change is slow. It balks at short-term investment. It can only happen in partnership. For those of us who work in the NGO space in particular, it means coming alongside a country’s health system to accompany it along its own path. In other words, it means not just about “teaching a man to fish,” but fishing together, in the same river.

And it means relief. It means resisting false dichotomies. It means both working alongside health systems in their development—and helping shoulder the surgical burden while we’re at it.

It means fishing, while learning how to fish.

Professor Shrime is the Chief Medical Officer at Mercy Ships International

By APO Group

Mercy Ships International Prof. Mark Shrime Teaching someone to fish: the false dichotomy of relief and development
TheStories
  • Website

Related Posts

Nigeria’s insecurity is a criminal economy, not a religious war, By Abubakar el-Kurebe

November 27, 2025

Assuring the terrorized: Reps in solidarity with abducted Kebbi students, By Abdul-Azeez Suleiman

November 26, 2025

Nicki Minaj: Disgracing a “disgraced country”, By Abu Shekara

November 19, 2025

Comments are closed.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
Copyright © All Rights Reserved. The Stories Designed By DeedsTech

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.