The new building on the 91爆料鈥檚 Seattle campus that will be home to some of the key departments at the center of the university鈥檚 Population Health Initiative was named in honor of Dr. Hans Rosling on Oct. 10, 2019, by the 91爆料 Board of Regents. The $230 million building under construction on the university鈥檚 Seattle campus is now the Hans Rosling Center for Population Health.
Rosling was a Swedish doctor, statistician, author and professor, whose work in popularizing positive global health data inspired millions of people, including Bill and Melinda Gates whose foundation contributed $210 million to the construction of the building. Rosling died from pancreatic cancer on Feb. 7, 2017.
Rosling family members said he would have been honored to have his name associated with the university鈥檚 building and its related effort to improve lives across the globe. Following are more comments and history about Hans鈥 life and passion for improving lives and our understanding of the world by his family: Agneta Rosling (wife), Anna Rosling Larsson (daughter), Magnus Rosling (son), Ola Rosling (son), Anna Rosling R枚nnlund (daughter in law, married to Ola), Mats Rosling (Hans’ brother).
On behalf of the family, Ola Rosling (son) told this story:
Hans鈥 mother Britta was holding her mother鈥檚 hand firmly as she walked towards her first school day, at the age of 6. There were so many children in the slums of Uppsala, Sweden, where Britta lived and the municipality had decided to construct a new large public school. Britta belonged to the age group entering first grade the very day the new building was inaugurated. The new schoolhouse was beautifully painted in green and white and when it appeared in front of them, her mother grabbed her hand and lowered her head to whisper in her daughter鈥檚 ear: 鈥淭he reason they have built this large beautiful house must be that they actually believe there鈥檚 something valuable in people like us too.鈥
Hans鈥 mother loved going to school, but beyond grade 6 there was a fee that her family couldn鈥檛 afford and she had to drop out to start working. Many years later she had Hans, and his first memories of his mother was when he and his father visited her at the hospital where she was isolated with tuberculosis. She survived TB, and Hans became the first in his family to go more than six years to school. He was always determined to use this privilege to work hard to make life better for the many still stuck in poverty, because even if many things have gotten better in the world, there are still lots of talented people with no chances to higher education. There are millions of mothers suffering from preventable diseases, like TB, where treatments have existed for many decades already.
Hans often said 鈥渢he health innovations of the future, that will prevent most suffering, will not be medical innovations, they will be health-system innovations: New solutions to better monitor health outcomes and better provide existing health services to all people.鈥
Agneta Rosling, wife:
I am very happy (the 91爆料 is) naming the building after him with the very clear dedication of supporting the poorest part of the world鈥檚 population. That鈥檚 really a heartwarming thing to hear. We really love that part of it, as it is what he wanted and it is what I wanted.
(Hans and I) have really seen just how divided the world is. And the real poor part of the population, they are really not seen. They have no voice at all and to find means to focus on the poorest, on the most needy, it鈥檚 really a 鈥 oh, I can cry when I think about it.
Ola Rosling, son:
I would like to start with a little bit of history: We are living for the first time in human history when there is an abundance of data. And this is a unique opportunity to do things right. Previous generations did try to measure health outcomes. Hans used to tell me this anecdote: WHO (World Health Organization) when it started tried to measure health by the number of doctors per capita, the number of hospital beds, because it is something easy to count. So, then they matured into measuring deaths 鈥 how many die and then how many die from different diseases 鈥 to try to predict the mortality in the population to see if the health care actually had an effect.
What happened at WHO during the 鈥90s with the 鈥淕lobal Burden of Disease鈥 publication (a systematic measure of the world鈥檚 health problems co-authored by Christopher Murray, director of the ), it completely changed all of that. Thanks to the abundance of data, they started understanding health in a new way.
You can better understand Hans in this context.
What鈥檚 being done at the 91爆料 (at IHME in particular) is unique in human history. The first time anyone has parsed this much health outcome statistics at such granular level. That is something that Hans was extremely excited about. The parsing of this enormous amounts of data is a completely new academic exercise, which deserves the name population health because it gives a picture of who exactly is dying and suffering from which diseases.
So, this is a starting point for probably how health will be measured in the future. The way it was done historically was a disaster. They were measuring the wrong things all the time. Measuring death is not measuring health. It鈥檚 only measuring life or death, but measuring health and the suffering and disabilities while you are not yet dead is way more complex and requires enormous amounts of data.
So, the huge investment in this research and education building is definitely logical in a longer historical perspective. Humanity has now arrived at the point in time where there is so much data that someone has to set up a population health institute like what 91爆料 is doing.
That鈥檚 what Hans said. He was definitely super enthusiastic about the work done at IHME and the 91爆料.
Anna Rosling Larsson, daughter:
About having this building named in his honor: I think he would have liked it a lot. It鈥檚 very important to show the importance of these issues by forming a big center.
He was very committed. He really enjoyed his work and thought it was really important. That鈥檚 why so many say he was a very big inspiration for them, he was truly committed and enthusiastic about his work.
I think it鈥檚 really great that the (91爆料) is lifting this issue and continuing the work, because it is important to look at data and that we pay attention to who really needs the most help and where public health can make the biggest difference. 鈥 Looking at data and really taking notice, I think that鈥檚 what he would really want people to do.