It was James Gleick who noted in his book “Faster: The Acceleration of Just About Everything” the societal shift towards valuing speed over depth:
“We have become a quick-reflexed, multitasking, channel-flipping, fast-forwarding species. We don’t completely understand it, and we’re not altogether happy about it.”
In global health, there’s a growing tendency to demand ever-shorter summaries of complex information.
“Can you condense this into four pages?”
“Is there an executive summary?”
These requests, while stemming from real time constraints, reveal fundamental misunderstandings about the nature of knowledge and learning.
Worse, they contribute to perpetuating existing global health inequities.
Here is why – and a few ideas of what we can do about it.
We lose more than time in the race to brevity
The push for shortened summaries is understandable on the surface.
Some clinical researchers, for example, undeniably face increasing time pressures.
Many are swamped due to underlying structural issues, such as healthcare professional shortages.
This is the result of a significant shift over time, leaving less time for deep engagement with new information.
If we accept these changes, we lose far more than time.
Why does learning require time, depth, and context?
True understanding and the ability to apply knowledge in diverse contexts demands deep engagement, reflection, and often, struggle with our own assumptions and mental models.
Consider the process of learning a new language.
No one expects to become fluent by reading a few pages of grammar rules.
Mastery requires immersion, practice, making mistakes, and gradually building competence over time.
The same principle applies to making sense of multifaceted global health issues.
5 risks of executive summaries
Here are five risks of demanding summaries of everything:
The expectation that complex local realities can always be distilled into brief summaries for consumption by decision-makers (often in the Global North) perpetuates existing power structures in global health.
The ability to demand summaries often comes from positions of power.
This can lead to privileging certain voices (those who can produce polished summaries) over others (those with deep, context-specific knowledge that resists easy summarization).
This knowledge then gets sidelined in favor of more easily digestible but potentially less relevant information.
10 ways to value and engage with knowledge in global health
Addressing the “summary culture” requires more than better time management.
It calls for a fundamental rethinking of how we value and engage with knowledge in global health.
Instead of defaulting to demands for ever-shorter summaries, we need to rethink how we engage with knowledge.
Here are 10 practical ways to do so.
Image: The Geneva Learning Foundation Collection © 2024
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