Mexican Health Official Keynotes Lecture
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| Enrique Ruelas Barajas, M.D. |
Improving the health of an entire country—from quality of
patient care to work force training—takes time, especially
when maneuvering in a large bureaucracy.
Enrique Ruelas Barajas, M.D., former undersecretary of health
for innovation and quality during the six-year administration of
Mexican President Vicente Fox, knows this lesson from first-hand
experience.
During his term, he helped lead the Fox administration’s “National
Crusade for Quality in Health Care.”
The broad effort aimed to improve services for the country’s
100 million people who receive their care in approximately 20,000
facilities. About 44 percent of people thought that the Mexican
health care system provided poor quality, he said.
“We wanted to convey the message that this was a vigorous
[initiative] to improve the care of the people,” he said.
On
March 25, Ruelas Barajas visited Georgetown University as the keynote
speaker in the McAuley Lecture Series—a regular event
hosted by the School of Nursing & Health Studies on topics
of health and health care.
“Enrique Ruelas is the individual in all of Latin America
who has had and continues to have the most impact on efforts to
improve quality of care,” Gary L. Filerman, Ph.D., chair
of the Department of Health Systems Administration at NHS, said
in his introduction.
Held in Copley Formal Lounge, the event included Georgetown students
and faculty and representatives from international organizations,
including the World Bank, the Pan American Health Organization,
the Joint Commission International, and the Inter-American Development
Bank.
According to Ruelas Barajas, now the secretary of the General
Health Council of Mexico, the country-wide strategy focused on
physical infrastructure, patient safety, personnel training, accreditation,
drug supply, human resources, and equipment.
Creating change was
not always easy or fast, Ruelas Barajas noted. For example, it
took about four years and 17 steps to restructure the Ministry
of Health in a way to support fully the government’s
health efforts.
Despite varying degrees of success—including
increased citizen participation and the training of thousands of
health care personnel—Ruelas
Barajas said more work needs to be done.
“We know that there
are still many communities in Mexico that deserve a lot better
care than they are receiving now despite all our efforts,” he
said.
“It remains to be seen what the real outcomes will be,
but at least we can say the platform is there,” Ruelas Barajas
said.
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