the engine is you
It all started when…
I understood that to make a healthier population and reduce health care disparities we cannot think nor work in silos anymore. With societal specialization, we have been thinking inside the box for too long. Taking care of sick people or drug overdose patients, for instance, while using the infrastructure of modern hospitals, state-of-the-art clinics or pristine rehabilitation centers, seems relatively easy compared to our painful reality.
We can make patients clean and sane and relatively cured, only to put them back into insane, isolated or even dangerous environments not conducive to full recovery but relapse and readmission.
It is like treating lice in children successfully with common medicines, only to put them back into the same beds with the same dirty sheets; or treating tuberculosis in one patient without treating the contacts. To have adequate preventive medicine, adoption of healthy habits, and more exposure to intellectual stimulation, requires a fundamentally different mindset, more broadly thinking and a collaborative alignment. Indeed, a wholistic approach, whereby the whole is better than the sum of all parts.
Namely, it requires a three-prong approach of shared interests:
- First, to design safer streets, for taking a relaxed walk in the park with family to exercise and mingle is important; and to streamline complicated transportation systems that connect the community together faster and more reliably.
- Second, to leverage education toward much-needed critical thinking for high-stakes complex issues, because educated and diverse people tend to make better and wiser decisions, have more stable legal systems and greener societies, and education encourage our workforce to stay more relevant vis-a-vis disruptive technology.
- Third, to brake the vicious cycle of sick environment feeding sicker people into hospitals and other inpatient facilities, and convert these cycles into virtuous cycles. Because healthier environments produce healthier and more connected populations.
In summary, the synergy among safer streets, better education and healthier populations is called the efficient logical model. Their task, outcome and resource interdependence, feeds favorably one another, to create smarter and more sustainable societies.
Nakasato's Global Institute of Efficient Leadership (GIEL) rises to the challenge of building global modern and efficient societies following the same efficient logical model. GIEL brings together the best talents the world can offer to teach leaders and help societies learn how to think efficiently: Is there a faster, better, cheaper way to attain your goal?
GIEL is about to launch efficient leadership education through comprehensive workshops, different platforms for classes and personal coaching for future and modern leaders like you, willing to change the world and make communities more efficient. Armed with this knowledge and way of thinking, you would be equipped with the best the world can offer because the engine of change is about to get fueled: You!
So, go forth and leap into efficient leadership.
Yuri Nakasato