Join the African Diaspora Network (ADN) and invited diaspora scientists for the launch of the African Scientific Community Engagement (ASCE) Program, a four-year initiative (2024–2028) in partnership with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. This private convening will bring together leading diaspora scientists from North America, Europe and Africa to kick off a transformative effort to strengthen Africa’s health research and development (R&D) ecosystem. Participants will discuss the vision of the ASCE program, identify priority areas, and draft an action plan to harness diaspora expertise for Africa-led innovation. The half-day event will feature prominent diaspora voices from Africa, Europe and North America, and will set the stage for impactful global health collaborations.
Registration: By invitation only
Related event: There will be a related panel discussion on May 29th at 11:15am titled: Connecting the Dots: How can we Strengthen Collaborations to Drive Scientific & Economic Progress
Kelly Chibale is a Professor of Organic Chemistry at the University of Cape Town (UCT) where he holds the Neville Isdell Chair in African-centric Drug Discovery & Development. He is also a Schmidt Sciences AI2050 Senior Fellow, Full Member of the UCT Institute of Infectious Disease & Molecular Medicine, Founding Director of the South African Medical Research Council Drug Discovery Research Unit at UCT, Founder & Director of the UCT Holistic Drug Discovery and Development Centre (H3D), and Founder & CEO of the H3D Foundation.
Professor Julie Makani (MD, PhD, FRCP, FTAAS) is a physician scientist in Tanzania, Principal Investigator in the Sickle Cell Programme at Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) www.muhas.ac.tz and Sickle Pan African Research Consortium (SPARCO) Clinical Coordinating Centre (CCC), SickleInAfrica http://www.sickleinafrica.org. She is Provost Visiting Professor at Imperial College London, UK https://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/j.makani. She is Science advisor at the Tanzania High Commission in the UK.
She received the 2011 Royal Society Africa Award on genomic research for sickle cell disease http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sd17odE1YLs. She is Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, UK, Tutu Leadership www.alinstitute.org, and the Tanzania Academy of Sciences https://www.taas-online.or.tz/
Abdisalan Noor is a global health leader, epidemiologist and researcher who specializes in the use of data and analytics for effective public health programmes. He is currently a Visiting Professor at Harvard University and Executive Director of AHADI (www.appliedhealthanalytics.org). Prior to joining Harvard, he was the Head of Strategic Information for Response at the WHO Global Malaria Programme where he led the development of global normative guidance, global efforts to strengthen use of subnational data and evidence for malaria priority setting and the publication of the world malaria report. He was previously Director of the Nairobi Programme of the KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme and Chair of the Board of the Kenya National Council for Population and Development, providing leadership during critical growth phases. Noor has been awarded the AU National Scientific Award in Life and Earth Sciences and the Chalmers Medal by the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.
Dr. Masabho Milali is a computational research scientist leveraging mathematics and data science to develop cost-effective healthcare strategies in resource-limited settings. At NYU Grossman School of Medicine, he collaborates with interdisciplinary teams applying machine learning, data mining, and AI to tackle infectious diseases (HIV, TB, malaria) and non-communicable diseases (hypertension, cardiovascular disease). He also serves as a senior research scientist at the Ifakara Health Institute in Tanzania, where he applies quantitative methods to malaria research and mentors junior researchers in data science and modeling
Dr. André-Marie Tchouatieu is a medical doctor with over 20 years of experience in healthcare delivery and access in Africa. He currently serves as the Director of Access and Product Management at Medicines for Malaria Venture (MMV). In this role, he leads initiatives to increase access to high-quality antimalarial drugs in endemic regions through the design and implementation of programs or communities of practices as platforms where lessons can be learned and taking every members to a higher level. Driven by a passion for improving community health in Africa, Dr. Tchouatieu has focused on strengthening health systems and providing training and resources to healthcare workers
Gbenga Ogedegbe, MD, MPH is the inaugural and founding director of the Institute for Excellence in Health Equity (IEHE) at NYU Langone Health. He is the Dr. Adolph & Margaret Berger Professor of Medicine and Population Health at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. He is a leading NIH-funded scientist in health equity research. He has led numerous NIH-funded studies for cardiovascular disease risk reduction with a focus on developing and evaluating clinic-community linkage models of care to address inequities in health outcomes.
Dr. Ogedegbe is a member of the National Academy of Medicine and the United States Prevention Services Task Force (USPSTF). He is a Fellow of many scientific organizations including the American Heart Association, American College of Physicians and the Academy of Behavioral Medicine.
Okungu is a Calestous Juma Fellow and a career Health Economist serving in various technical leadership roles to advise on and produce policy documentation and presentations on health sector financing, planning, and evaluation. His research interests are focused around sustainable health financing, healthcare equity and access, and value for money. As a researcher, some of his notable achievements include forecasting costs for national strategy deployment and financing for sustainable public health interventions in Rwanda; improving the potential of domestic mobilization of resources and planning health expenditure using the cost model and sustainability plan (Kenya & Rwanda); and co-authored and produced a comprehensive global report on care quality improvements, policy reviews and evaluations. He consults for African governments and international agencies on innovative financing and policy formulation.
Prashant Yadav is a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR). He is a globally recognized expert in healthcare delivery and has published extensively on health product manufacturing, procurement, and distribution. Yadav’s writing has appeared in major print media outlets, including the Financial Times, The Economist, Nature, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and Foreign Affairs. He has frequently appeared as a supply chain expert on NPR, BBC, CNN, CBS, and CNBC. His research has received best paper awards from prominent scientific bodies. Yadav has held faculty positions at INSEAD, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology-Zaragoza Logistics Program, the University of Michigan, and Harvard Medical School.
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