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Can American entrepreneurial know-how save lives in Africa?
Can the quality of healthcare in developing nations be
transformed by the same principal that makes fast food such a
success here? NOW travels to Kenya to investigate an enterprising
idea: franchising not burger and donut shops, but health services
and drugs in rural Africa. American businessmen are teaming with
African entrepreneurs to spread for-profit clinics around the
country in the hopes of providing quality, affordable medical care
to even Kenya's poorest people. But can they overcome obstacles
like extreme poverty, corruption, cheaper fraudulent services and
long distances to establish a sustained solution to a chronic
problem?
"If we had as many franchise outlets delivering health care in
developing countries as Subway has sandwich shops, we've estimated
that we could serve about 120 million people a year,"
businessman Scott Hillstrom, who conceived the idea, told NOW's
David Brancaccio.
This is part of a new beat on NOW and NOW online called
"Enterprising Ideas," which focuses on innovative solutions to
social problems around the world. For the next two years, NOW will
devote time to examining how people are applying business skills
toward a new kind of bottom line: making the world a better
place.
NOW has created an all-new Web site at www.pbs.org/now/enterprisingideas,
which has more innovator stories, tools and tips for starting new
programs and a contest to find a social entrepreneur for special
NOW coverage. The site launches Friday, May 25, 2007.