
The 24th of April 2025 marked the historic Boston Declaration event, where over 500 representatives from 100+ countries joined to discuss the current landscape of global neurosurgery and celebrate 93 pledges aimed towards future progress in the field. The pledges represented specific, measurable and actionable commitments towards the advancement of timely, safe and affordable neurosurgical care worldwide. Stakeholder groups, ranging from neurosurgeons and researchers to industry leaders and policy makers, worked with the Boston Declaration Steering Committee over six months to formulate their pledges. These pledges included a wide variety of actionable plans — from training neurosurgical nurses in low-resource areas (Muhimbili Orthopaedic Institute) to building a Ugandan hospital (Duke) — that will be implemented and monitored for progress over the next five years.
This event, envisioned by the volunteer Boston Declaration Steering Committee and organized in collaboration with the Massachusetts General Brigham Department of Neurosurgery, opened with welcome remarks by Dr. Mohammad Ali Aziz-Sultan, who shared a moving account of how his journey from war-torn Afghanistan informed his deep sense of purpose in global neurosurgery. Dr. Kee Park then shared an update on the state of global neurosurgery informed by prior milestones in the field, such as the 2016 Bogotá Declaration and the 2024 Peshawar Statement. Highlighting the key focus of the Boston Declaration event, Dr. Gail Rosseau emphasized the power of global collaboration and resource consolidation. The day included over 50 speakers ranging from neurosurgeons and public health experts to policymakers, and patient advocates, who shared insights from a broad range of regional and global initiatives.
Against the symbolic backdrop of his grandfather’s namesake Edward M. Kennedy Institute in Boston — a full-size replica of the U.S. Senate Chamber — Joseph P. Kennedy III delivered a powerful keynote address. In his speech, Kennedy recognized the importance of global neurosurgery, reemphasizing the urgent need for collective action and celebrating the promise the Boston Declaration holds for expanding accessibility and affordability of neurosurgical care worldwide.
The event was structured into five thematic sessions: Challenges, Paradigms, Milieu/Support Pillars, Champions and Community/Neurosurgical Societies, each designed to explore the current landscape, innovations and systemic barriers to equitable global neurosurgical care and education. The first session defined challenges in the field, including insufficient sustainable financing mechanisms and deficits in workforce, research and education. Speakers shared powerful first-hand accounts of neurosurgical practice in conflict zones such as Haiti, Ukraine and Gaza.
The Paradigms session explored successful organizational efforts by leaders in global neurosurgery, such as Mission:BRAIN and Foundation for International Education in Neurological Surgery (FIENS). The Champions session highlighted inspiring progress in low-resource regions such as Tanzania, Pakistan, Syria, Sierra Leone and Bosnia. The Community session focused on contributions from neurosurgical societies representing each continent, including the American Association of Neurological Surgeons (AANS), the Congress of Neurological Surgeons (CNS), the European Association of Neurological Surgeons (EANS), the Asian Australasian Society of Neurological Surgeons (AASNS), the Latin American Federation of Neurosurgical Societies (FLANC), the Continental Association of African Neurosurgical Societies (CAANS) and the World Federation of Neurological Surgeons (WFNS).
The final session, a two-hour presentation of over 90 pledges, offered a platform for diverse stakeholder groups to share their organizational commitments towards advancing global neurosurgical care and education. To open the session, Dr. Alfredo Borrero, neurosurgeon and former vice president of Ecuador, shared a poignant reflection connecting the mission of global neurosurgery to the resilience of people and the lands who shape them:
“In the jungle, one does not walk in haste—one walks with purpose. Global neurosurgery, too, must move forward with intention, and today, we aim to build a new paradigm: one rooted in open dialogue between different forms of knowledge, grounded in collective action, and sustained by community and consistent reflection.”
The day concluded with a digital signing of the Boston Declaration document, symbolizing a collective commitment to address the substantial and persistent needs for global access to neurosurgical care and education. Unifying hundreds of international stakeholders, the Boston Declaration set the stage for this year’s theme of the 2025 AANS Annual Meeting: “The Ripple Effect: Power of One, Impact of Many.” The event was showcased on Friday, April 25, 2025, during the AANS opening ceremony when Dr. Gail Rosseau, who delivered the Charles L. Plante Lecture, shared a call-to-action to the broader neurosurgical community to join in this collective commitment to global neurosurgery.
The Boston Declaration is more than a ceremonial milestone — it is a catalyst for collaborative action.
To read the Boston Declaration document and sign on to this collective commitment to advancing global neurosurgery, please follow this link. To submit a pledge to the Boston Declaration, please follow this link. For further questions about how to get involved, email [email protected].







Authors: Nicole A. Perez1,2, Noor Alesawy3, Piper Tingleaf 1, Ramya Reddy4, Isabelle M. Germano5, Kenan Arnautovic6, Nirav Patel2, Wenya Linda Bi2, Mohammad Ali Aziz-Sultan2, Kee B. Park7, Gail Rosseau8
Affiliations:
1 Harvard Medical School (Boston, MA)
2 Department of Neurosurgery, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School (Boston, MA)
3 UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine (Los Angeles, CA)
4 University of Florida College of Medicine (Gainesville, FL)
5 Department of Neurosurgery, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (New York, NY)
6 Department of Neurosurgery, The University of Tennessee Health Science Center (Memphis, TN)
7 Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, Harvard Medical School (Boston, MA)
8 Department of Neurological Surgery, The George Washington University (Washington, DC)


