Sunday, August 10, 2025

Reflection on Emory Global Diabetes Research Center

 

Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—

I took the one less traveled by,

And that has made all the difference.”

 

When I joined Emory in August 2006 (naive to US academia, never having written a grant or supervised a doctoral student), I was suddenly a single member team with an office, and without the  national diabetes research operation (and security of a federal job) that I had just left behind. 

 

Going to my new office every morning at 7.00 am, I would sit and stare at a white board to chart ideas, and spent my first 3 months or more talking to people (at Emory and several other places) to get advice on what I might do and how.

 

I was very lucky to get some phenomenal and inspirational advice and support from the likes of Bill Foege, Jeff Koplan, Jim Curran, Rey Martorell. They simply gave me inspiration and none of them told me what to do or what not to do. 

 

My life was suddenly like an empty canvas on which I could draw anything. This was a very exhilarating feeling, and one that I long for! What a lovely idea - a vast landscape ahead, no restrictions, and one could do anything with the freedom to shape something and to fail or to succeed (on one's own terms).

 

Equally, in my various meetings, I met people ("experts", and "colleagues") who gave me advice (some unsolicited). Many of these was about barriers, challenges, and what I should and should not do.  I would prefer not attributing these items (although, I fully remember who said what and when). Some examples below:

 

 • “Getting global NCD (diabetes studies) funded is close to impossible. Gates is not interested. NIH won’t fund them. LMICs don’t have funds.”

• “Finding good fellows and faculty to work on global NCD will be hard; there is no career path for them.”

• “We don’t need research in Low and middle income countries (LMICs). We just need programs to implement all the science we have.”

. “Emory has no strength in diabetes, only one NIH-funded diabetes researcher. You should focus on other diseases”

• “Emory has no track-record in global NCDs.  You should join hands with the Harvard team and slowly grow your program.”

• “India is a very difficult country to work with. NIH has struggled. The country has too many restrictions, is proud and arrogant, and it is much easier to do work in other countries like China, countries in Africa, in other parts of Asia, or Latin America.”

• “All of diabetes is obesity-driven, and Indian populations are highly insulin resistant.”

• “Quality of care cannot be improved in LMICs until the governments invest in infrastructure.”

• “Interventions and quality improvement strategies that work in high income countries don’t work in LMICs.”

• “We should only focus on prevention of diabetes and NCD, as the LMICs don’t have the capacity to deal with care and will be overwhelmed.”

• “Only prevention that can work is societal and governmental action.”

• “Industries are the cause of NCDs, and public health should not collaborate with them”

• “We should only work with governments, not with private institutions”

• “Our focus in LMICs should be prioritized toward the poorest and least served areas, not big cities or strong institutions.”

• “Technology is the cause of health inequities, and public health should stop their growth.”

• “We should train large numbers of foot soldiers in LMICs, not doctoral and post-doctoral fellows or faculty researchers.”

• “Starting schools of public health in LMICs is risky. There wont be jobs for these people.”

• “Infectious diseases and undernutrition should be eliminated before we address NCDs in LMICs.”

• “Globalization and westernization are the “causes” of NCDs, and we should fight to stop them.”

 

Looking back, we seem to have turned every one of these barriers or negativisms (above) into opportunities!!  Of course, I was so lucky to be surrounded (in due course) by some amazing colleagues (faculty, fellows, students), and special thanks to all of them (only a handful of them are tagged; there are far too many to name them all).