Keith Klugman, Emory University, Atlanta, Chair
Zulfiqar Bhutta, Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan
NK Ganguly, National Institute of Immunology, New Delhi, Chair of GARP India NWG
David L. Heymann, Health Protection Agency, London, UK
Dean Jamison, University of Washington, Seattle
Samuel Kariuki, Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), Nairobi, Chair of GARP Kenya NWG
Nguyen Van Kinh, National Institute of Infectious and Tropical Diseases (NIITD), Hanoi, Vietnam, Chair of GARP Vietnam NWG
Eric A.F. Simoes, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver
Professor Keith P. Klugman is the William H. Foege Chair of
Global Health at the Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University,
in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. He is also Professor of Epidemiology
and Professor of Medicine in the Division of Infectious Diseases of the
School of Medicine. He is a Visiting Researcher in the Respiratory
Diseases Branch of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
in Atlanta. He is also Co-Director of the Respiratory and Meningeal
Pathogens Research Unit, jointly sponsored by the University of the
Witwatersrand, the Medical Research Council, and the National Institute
for Communicable Diseases in Johannesburg, South Africa. Professor
Klugman is Treasurer of the Executive Committee of the International
Society of Infectious Diseases and Chair of the International Board of
the American Society for Microbiology, with more than 42,000 members
worldwide. He has chaired expert committees for the World Health
Organization in Geneva and the Wellcome Trust in London. He serves as an
editor or member of the editorial board of 8 journals. Professor
Klugman’s research interests are in pneumonia, meningitis, antimicrobial
resistance and vaccines for bacterial pathogens, particularly the
pneumococcus. He has published more than 375 papers on these subjects.
Dr. Zulfiqar A. Bhutta is Husein Laljee Dewraj Professor and Head
of the newly created Division of Maternal and Child Health, Aga Khan
University Medical Center, Karachi, Pakistan. He also holds adjunct
professorships in International Health and Family and Community Medicine
at the departments of International Health at Boston University and
Tufts University, respectively. He was designated a Distinguished
National Professor of the Government of Pakistan in 2007. Professor
Bhutta was educated at the University of Peshawar (MBBS) with a
doctorate from the Karolinska Institute, Sweden. He is a Fellow of the
Royal College of Physicians (Edinburgh), the Royal College of
Paediatrics and Child Health (London) and the Pakistan Academy of
Sciences. Dr. Bhutta has served as a member of the Global Advisory
Committee for Health Research for the World Health Organization, the of
Child Health and Nutrition Initiative of the Global Forum for Health
Research, and the steering committees of the International Zinc and
Vitamin A Nutrition Consultative Groups. He is an executive committee
member of the International Paediatric Association and on the Board of
the Global Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (PMNCH).
Dr. Bhutta is currently the Chair of the Health Sciences Group of the
Biotechnology Commission of Pakistan, a member of the WHO Strategic
Advisory Committee for Vaccines, the Advisory Committee for Health
Research of WHO EMRO, and its apex Regional Consultative Committee. He
is also Chairman of the National Research Ethics Committee of the
Government of Pakistan and President of the Commonwealth Association of
Paediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition (CAPGAN). Dr. Bhutta is on
several international editorial advisory boards including the Lancet,
BMJ, PLoS Medicine and PLoS ONE and has published three books, 45 book
chapters, and more 280 indexed publications.
Professor N.K. Ganguly is a Distinguished Biotechnology Fellow
and Advisor at the Translational Health Science and Technology Institute
in New Delhi. He is currently Chairman of the Immunology Foundation
and President of the Jawaharlal Institute of Post Graduate Medical
Education and Research (JIPMER). Major areas of research throughout his
distinguished career have been tropical diseases, cardiovascular
diseases and diarrhoeal diseases. Professor Ganguly has held top
leadership positions at the Indian Council of Medical Research, Indian
Science Congress Association, Post Graduate Institute of Medical
Education and Research, and National Institute of Biologicals.
Professor Ganguly is a Fellow of the Imperial College Faculty of
Medicine in London, Royal College of Pathologists in London,
International Academy of Cardiovascular Sciences in Canada, Third World
Academy of Sciences in Italy, International Medical Sciences Academy in
New Delhi, National Academy of Medical Sciences in New Delhi, Indian
National Science Academy in New Delhi, National Academy of Science in
Allahabad, and Indian Academy of Sciences in Bangalore. Professor
Ganguly trained in microbiology and medicine at the University of
Calcutta, Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education & Research,
Bundelkhand University, Chhatrapati Shahu Ji Maharaj University, and
Guru Nanak Dev University. He has published 734 papers and has been a
guide for 130 PhD students. He has won more than 100 awards, both
national and International. In January 2008, Professor Ganguly was
honored with the prestigious Padma Bhushan award by Her Excellency the
President of India for his work in medicine.
Dr. David L. Heymann is Chair of the Health Protection Agency,
United Kingdom, and Head of the Global Centre on Health Security at
Chatham House, London. Until April 2009 he was Assistant
Director-General for Health Security and Environment and Representative
of the Director-General for Polio Eradication at the World Health
Organization (WHO). From 1998 until 2003, he was Executive Director of
the WHO Communicable Diseases Cluster, which included WHO’s programmes
on infectious and tropical diseases, and from which the public health
response to SARS was mounted in 2003. Previously, he was Director of
the WHO Programme on Emerging and other Communicable Diseases, and the
Chief of research activities in the WHO Global Programme on AIDS.
Before joining WHO, Dr. Heymann worked for 13 years as a medical
epidemiologist in sub-Saharan Africa (Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire, Malawi,
and the Democratic Republic of Congo [formerly Zaire]) on assignment
from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Dr.
Heymann earned a BA from the Pennsylvania State University, an MD from
Wake Forest University, a Diploma in Tropical Medicine and Hygiene from
the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and had practical
epidemiology training in the Epidemic Intelligence Service of CDC. He is
a member of the Institute of Medicine of the U.S, National Academies;
and has been awarded the 2004 Award for Excellence of the American
Public Health Association, the 2005 Donald Mackay Award from the
American Society for Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, and the 2007 Heinz
Award on the Human Condition. Dr. Heymann has published more than 145
scientific articles on infectious diseases and related issues in
peer-reviewed medical and scientific journals and has written chapters
on infectious diseases in several medical textbooks.
Dr. Dean Jamison is Professor of Global Health at the University
of Washington where he co-leads the Disease Control Priorities Network
(DCPN) Study. Concurrently, he is Adjunct Professor at both the Peking
University Guanghua School of Management and at the University of
Queensland School of Population Health in Australia. Before coming to
the University of Washington, Dr. Jamison served as T & G
Angelopoulos Visiting Professor of Public Health and International
Development in the Harvard Kennedy School and the Harvard School of
Public Health, while holding a position as Professor of Development
Economics at the University of California, San Francisco. Prior to that,
Dr. Jamison was at the World Bank for more than a decade, where he was a
senior economist in the research department, division chief for
education policy, and division chief for population, health and
nutrition. In the early 1990s, he temporarily rejoined the World Bank to
serve as Director of the World Development Report Office and as lead
author for the Bank’s 1993 World Development Report, Investing in
Health. In 1994, Dr. Jamison was elected to membership in the Institute
of Medicine of the U.S. National Academies. He has served frequently on
advisory groups to national and international organizations. Dr.
Jamison holds a BA in Philosophy and an MS in Engineering Science from
Stanford University, and he received a PhD from the Harvard University
Department of Economics.
Dr. Samuel Kariuki is the Director of the Center for Microbiology
Research, Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), Nairobi. He is
also a course coordinator in Medical Microbiology at the KEMRI graduate
school, and is an honorary lecturer at the Department of Microbiology,
University of Liverpool. Dr. Kariuki is a member of the Kenya Society
for Microbiology, American Society for Microbiology, and the World
Health Organization Advisory Group on Integrated Surveillance of
Antimicrobial Resistance. He is an advisory board member of the
Association for Prudent Use of Antibiotics (APUA) and is on the faculty
of 1000 Medicine. His research interests include the epidemiology and
genetics of invasive salmonella infections in children and other enteric
pathogens, as well as surveillance, monitoring, and genetic basis for
antimicrobial resistance in enteric pathogens. Dr. Kariuki has
published over 60 papers in peer-reviewed journals, presented 68 papers
at national and international scientific conferences, and is co-editor
and author of chapters in two microbiology books.
Dr. Nguyen Van Kinh,
Director of the National Institute of Infectious and Tropical Diseases
(NIITD), Hanoi, is an infectious disease specialist. He is a lecturer at
the Hanoi School of Public Health, is head of the Infectious Disease
Department of Hanoi Medical University, and serves as an advisor to the
Vietnamese Ministry of Health on communicable diseases. Before becoming
Director of NIITD, he was Deputy Director General of the Vietnam
Administration for HIV/AIDS Control and senior expert on AIDS and
communicable diseases. His primary research activities focus on HIV/AIDS
control and infectious diseases in Vietnam. He received his medical
training in Vietnam and completed a post-graduate course on HIV/AIDS
management in France.
Professor Eric A. F. Simoes, MD, is a Professor of Pediatrics at
the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. Dr. Simoes earned
his medical degree from the Christian Medical College Vellore,
University of Madras, India. He completed pediatric infectious diseases
fellowship training at the University of Colorado at Denver School of
Medicine and then joined the faculty of the Department of Pediatrics and
The Children’s Hospital. From 1995 to 1999, Dr. Simoes directed the
Pediatric Infectious Diseases Fellowship Program. He was later
appointed as Professor of Pediatric Infectious Diseases and Tropical
Child Health with the Department of Paediatrics, Obstetrics, and
Gynaecology at the Imperial College of Science and Technology in
London. Dr. Simoes’ scientific interests include acute respiratory
infections and the development of guidelines for the management of
common pediatric conditions in developing countries. He studies genetic,
perinatal, and environmental risk factors for severe respiratory
syncytial virus (RSV) in developed and developing countries; the
RSV-asthma link; and pneumococcal vaccination. Dr. Simoes has played a
significant role in the World Health Organization’s initiative to reduce
childhood and infant mortality throughout the world with the
development of a strategy called “Integrated Management of Childhood
Illness.” He has worked on this initiative since 1989, including testing
and implementing its guidelines in many countries throughout Africa,
Asia, and Europe.