Fellows

The Afya Bora one-year Fellowship runs from July to the following June. It was piloted for the year 2011-2012, and the full scale program was launched for the year 2012-2013. Fellows are listed below by year.

FELLOWS 2019-2020

Botswana

photo of Tshegofatso Maotwe

Tshegofatso Maotwe, BNS, MPH

Bio

Ms. Maotwe holds a Master’s in Public Health, with a specialty in sexual and reproductive health from the University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. She is a Principal Health Officer II coordinating the National Male Involvement in Sexual & Reproductive Health and Sexual and Gender Based Violence (MI/SGBV) Programme in the Botswana Ministry of Health & Wellness. In this position, she is responsible for monitoring and evaluating implementation of program policies, protocols, and service standards, as well as planning and conducting SRH/HIV capacity building workshops for healthcare workers. She also facilitates the design, development, and production of SRH/HIV policies, protocols, service standards and IEC materials. Tshego joined the Ministry in 2003 and coordinated the Family Planning Programme until September 2018. During this time, she led and participated in various ministerial projects including the introduction of contraceptive implants in 2016. In September 2018, she was redeployed to coordinate the MI/SGBV program in the same division.

photo of Phatsimo Masire

Phatsimo Masire, MPH, PhD

Bio

Dr. Masire is a psychologist and public health practicioner specializing in research and program monitoring and evaluation. After finishing her PhD in Population Health at Thomas Jefferson University, Pennsylvania in 2018, she completed a 1-year postdoctoral fellowship in Health Disparities Epidemiology Research at Nemours Al DuPont Children’s Hospital, Delaware. Dr. Masire currently serves as a research and monitoring and evaluation specialist with the African Comprehensive AIDS/HIV Partnership (ACHAP) in Gaborone, Botswana. This position builds upon her previous research experience in cancer disparities, looking at treatments and outcomes and what patient, hospital, and market characteristics might be associated with delivery of improved quality of cancer care.

photo of Keneilwe Molebatsi

Keneilwe Molebatsi, MMed, MBChB

Bio

Dr. Molebatsi is a psychiatrist and lecturer at the University of Botswana, Faculty of Medicine. She graduated with a Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery degree from the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN), South Africa and a Master of Medicine in Psychiatry from the University of Nairobi, Kenya. She is currently pursuing a PhD in psychiatry at UKZN, with a focus on trauma in patients with severe mental illness. Dr. Molebatsi's research interests include child and adolescent mental health, trauma and mental health outcomes, and interventions to improve management of depression across all levels of healthcare. She serves on the executive committees of the Botswana Psychiatric Association and Autism Botswana. She has also participated in the community project Arting Health for Impact, whose objective is to connect artists, scientists, and the general community to explore science and health through street art.

photo of Paul Motshome

Paul Motshome, BNS, MPH

Bio

Mr. Motshome is a nurse and a public health specialist who currently works as a Health Education Officer at the University of Botswana, Health and Wellness Centre. He has over 15 years of clinical, programmatic, research, and community health experience in various regions of Botswana. He currently oversees the design and implementation of the University of Botswana health promotion programmes. Prior to this, he worked as an ARV nurse focal person in the Kweneng District, Botswana where he was responsible for the ART roll-out in the district and providing technical support to satellite clinics in the rural areas. Mr. Motshome is also a board member sub-committee chairman for the Anti-Tobacco Network (ATN) organization. His research interests include road accident trauma, pediatric HIV/AIDS and HIV/AIDS non-communicable diseases co-morbidity.

photo of Seitebatso Odiseng

Seitebatso Odiseng, MNSc, BNSc

Bio

Ms. Odiseng is a nurse employed by the Ministry of Health and Wellness in Botswana. In 2015, she was awarded the Botswana Insurance Holdings Limited - Thomas Tlou scholarship to pursue a Master’s in Adult Health Nursing with a subspecialty in critical care, emergency and trauma nursing. Odiseng has been instrumental in developing quality improvement tools for nursing management and clinical care, for which she received a Clinical Excellence Award in 2013. Currently, Ms. Odiseng conducts clinical work with people living with HIV/AIDS and is involved in research on HIV and non-communicable diseases. She is also actively involved in a support group for teenagers on ART.

photo of Mary Banyana Tiro

Mary Banyana Tiro, MNS

Bio

Ms. Tiro holds Bachelor of Nursing Science and Master of Nursing Science degrees from the University of Botswana. She is a Community Health Nurse Specialist with a sub-specialty in Occupational Health Nursing, and is involved in campaigns and projects on non-communicable diseases and HIV. Since 2017, Mary has worked as a coordinator for the May Measurement Month (MMM) Botswana campaign on hypertension. Her work on this project earned her the honor of MMM Investigator in global studies. Ms. Tiro is a Trainer of Trainees for palliative care nursing and an active volunteer with the Cancer Association of Botswana.

Cameroon

photo of Nkongho Nchong Achere

Nkongho Nchong Achere, BNS, MPH

Bio

Ms. Achere holds Master of Public Health and Bachelor of Nursing Science degrees from the University of Buea. She is a public health specialist and humanitarian worker specializing in emergency global health issues of developing countries. She is interested in leading health programs of international organizations with the goal of fostering health equity for all and ensuring health resources go to those truly in need, while also enhancing accountability. Achere worked with the International Rescue Committee (IRC), Cameroon as a Program Officer and Country Emergency Team Lead. Achere's goal in enhancing health equity led her to run several community health promotion TV and radio programs and to work on community health and hospital-based projects to solve issues of maternal health, HIV/AIDS and child health. In 2017, her community engagement earned her a position as associate fellow of the Royal Commonwealth Society.

photo of Nicole Mbarga

Nicole Mbarga, MD, MSc

Bio

Dr. Mbarga is a medical doctor and public health specialist from Cameroon, where she works as the Assistant Medical Coordinator for Medecins Sans Frontieres. Since 2017, she has been a fellow of the Young African Leadership Initiative for the study of public policy and administration. Dr. Mbarga initiated the Women in Global Health Cameroon National Chapter in 2019 – the same year she received the Glasgow Caledonian University Alumni of the Year award. She is currently working towards her PhD in public health and focusing her research efforts on risk prediction of sickle cell complications using genomics.

photo of Doreen Mbuli

Doreen Mbuli, BNS, MPH

Bio

Ms. Mbuli holds a Master of Public Health degree from the University of Buea. She is a Research Assistant who is committed to curbing maternal and infant mortality from HIV/ AIDS and other infectious diseases in resource-challenged communities in Cameroon and in third world countries. Doreen works with the Cameroon Baptist Convention Health Board to implement randomized control trials by assessing HIV positive pregnant women for eligibility and enrolling them into various studies, counselling them on safe feeding options for their babies, and conducting follow-up phone calls to ensure adherence to treatment and antenatal visits. She also ensures prompt data collection and entry into the REDCap database and reporting of any adverse events to the IRB.

photo of Flora Neh Njei

Flora Neh Njei, BNS, MPH

Bio

Ms. Neh holds a Master of Public Health degree from the Catholic University of Central Africa. Her interests lie at the intersection of public health and research. She specialized in epidemiology and has been involved with community health as a technical trainer with the United States Peace Corps. In this position, she tailors the program for pre-service training of volunteers and designs hands-on activities on community-based prevention of HIV, malaria, and malnutrition as well as the promotion of maternal and child health. Flora has also worked at the Training School for Health Professionals where she handled a number of courses including Epidemiology and Research Methods, and supervised academic projects of students and final course examinations. In the past, Ms. Neh worked with the Department of Family Health where she took part in planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of maternal and child health programs including HIV prevention.

photo of Nambawarr Chantine Pegh

Nambawarr Chantine Pegha, BNS, MPH

Bio

Ms. Pegha holds a Master’s of Public Health from the University of Rwanda and a post-graduate diploma in Women and Gender studies from the University of Buea, Cameroon. She is a nurse specializing in children and adolescent health program management. Her main interests are in project management, policy, and applied health research for adolescents, women and children in resource limited settings. Chantine has over 10 years of experience in HIV program implementation, coordination, and capacity building in Cameroon and Rwanda within maternal, child and adolescent health. She has expanded PMTCT, pediatric, and adolescent HIV clinical and psychosocial management from central to district and community levels, capacitated healthcare providers, and supervised and monitored progress using real-time data. She currently works as a supervisor of pediatric and adolescent HIV Care and Treatment at the Cameroon Baptist Convention Health Services.

Kenya

photo of Jemima Kibira

Jemima Kibira, MSN

Bio

Ms. Kibira holds a Master of Science in Nursing from Tohoku University, Japan. She is a palliative care nurse specialist with interest in education and research of palliative care in Kenya. Jemima works with the National Nurses Association of Kenya (NNAK) as a Programs Officer for professional development and advocacy for increased opportunities for nurses in the areas of clinical practice, leadership and mentorship. She solicits, manages, evaluates and provides feedback for partner-funded programs under NNAK. Jemima has a passion for nursing informatics and development of metrics for measuring the work done by nurses, thus helping their work become visible and equally remunerated.

photo of Evelyn Kimani

Evelyn Kimani, MBCHB, MPH

Bio

Dr. Kimani holds a Bachelor’s in Medicine and Surgery from University of Nairobi and a Master’s in Public Health from Hebrew University, Israel. She is a medical doctor and head of TB and Malaria Programs in Kiambu County, Kenya. Her specialty is in TB, TB-HIV and malaria with interests in improving patient care, health systems and policy. As a leader in the county health department, Dr. Kimani offers technical assistance, planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of the programs. In addition, Dr. Kimani chairs a committee that reviews and follows up drug resistant clients to ensure they have good progress. Dr. Kimani uses programmatic databases to analyze the progress of the disease burden in her county to analyze progress of interventions in her county.

photo of Viola Kipturgo

Viola Kipturgo BSN, MSN

Bio

Ms. Kipturgo holds a Master of Science in Nursing degree from the University of Nairobi. She is a clinical nurse specialized in medical surgical nursing with 18 years of experience in preventative, curative and rehabilitation services. In her position as a surgical unit manager at the National Referral Hospital, Viola is involved in planning, coordinating and offering leadership and guidance to a team of nurses and students. She also works as a part-time lecturer at Kenya Medical Training College – Nairobi campus and is an active member of the National Nurses Association.

photo of Maxwell Murage

Maxwell Murage, MBChB, MSc

Bio

Dr. Murage is a medical doctor with Bachelor’s of Medicine and Surgery and Master’s of Science in Public Health degrees. He is a specialist in chronic disease control and management with a special interest in patient education programs, health promotion, health systems strengthening and leadership. Dr. Maxwell Murage has 10 years of experience in health care management spanning across clinical work in primary care, project implementation and supervision/management. He currently serves as the Director of Medical Services in Kiambu County where he supports and coordinates implementation of the Kiambu County government programs. He has acquired great understanding and experience in government and donor financial regulations and management in poor resource settings.

photo of Florence Kerubo Ogero

Florence Kerubo Ogero, BSN, MPH

Bio

Ms. Ogero is an established nurse and public health professional. In 2000, as a Nursing Officer in charge of a sub-county referral hospital, she was awarded the national Pharmacia Upjohn Nursing Award for her outstanding performance and contribution to workforce improvement. Her interest in HIV programming and research led Ms. Ogero to establish and run a home-based care HIV program for five years. In addition to running this program, she has coordinated comprehensive reproductive health training for health workers, mentored three health facilities in integrated quality management system and worked as a nursing manager for the Kisii County Referral Hospital. Currently, Ms. Ogero is the Kisii County AIDS/STI Coordinator (CASCO), where she leads HIV testing, prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV and care and treatment programs.

photo of Patricia Onguti

Patricia Onguti, MBChB, MPH

Bio

Dr. Onguti is a medical doctor based in Kajiado County in Kenya. She received her Master’s in Public Health from the Institute of Tropical Medicine in Antwerp, Belgium in 2016. She is a public health specialist who has worked for over ten years in the government sector at provincial, district, sub-district and now sub-county levels. Her years of service include a managerial role at a sub-county MOH, overseeing health service delivery at more than 30 health facilities. She currently works as a Senior Medical Officer at a sub-county hospital in Kajiado County, where she is involved in managing inpatients, overseeing services at the maternity unit, and conducting weekly special clinics (hypertension and diabetes). Her passion is in HIV care and treatment, and she is currently in charge of the HIV Comprehensive Care Centre (CCC). She is also a member of one of the country's regional HIV technical working groups (TWG) and was recently appointed as the Kajiado County HIV clinical mentor.

Tanzania

photo of Monica Alex Bugomola

Monica Alex Bugomola, RN, BScN, MSc

Bio

Ms. Bugomola holds a Master’s of Science in Midwifery and Women’s Health from Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences. She is an Assistant Lecturer at Hubert Kairuki Memorial University specialized in maternal and child health. She teaches maternal and child health, nursing research and nursing leadership and management. Ms. Bugomola has both quantitative and qualitative research experience and supervises research projects for undergraduate nursing students. Further, she is a member of a number of committees both at the school- and university-level. Her research interests are in the areas of maternal, adolescent, and child health, and reproductive and health promotion.

photo of Tausi S. Haruna

Tausi S. Haruna, RN, BSN, MBE

Bio

Ms. Haruna is a registered nurse in Tanzania and an Assistant Lecturer and Head of Department at Hubert Kairuki Memorial University (HKMU) in the Faculty of Nursing. She received a Master of Science degree in Bioethics from Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) in 2017. For over five years, Ms. Haruna has been teaching basic foundation courses in nursing students to undergraduate students. She also serves on the Hepatitis B Virus Vaccination Committee and is secretary of the committee at HKMU to prepare operational guidelines, supervise and monitor implementation of the HBV vaccination.

photo of Florence Aphida Milando

Florence Aphida Milando, MD, MPH

Bio

Dr. Milando is a medical doctor and a public health specialist working with the malaria research group within the Interventions and Clinical Trials Department at Ifakara Health Institute. She has participated in the evaluation of pre-erythrocytic and blood stage malaria vaccines and malaria treatments for regulatory licensure. She has experience in the conduct of phase I-IV Good Clinical Practice (GCP) compliant clinical trials. Her scientific knowledge and clinical expertise ranges from diagnosis, treatment, and care to conducting advanced clinical research with volunteers of varying ages (6 months to 45 years), both HIV statuses, and different dose regimes in excellent study designs.

photo of Beatrice Erastus Mwilike

Beatrice Erastus Mwilike, BScN, RNM, MN – MWH, PhD

Bio

Dr. Mwilike is a lecturer in midwifery and women’s health and is the head of the Department of Community Health Nursing at Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences. She is a professional midwife and nurse, and holds both a Master’s and Doctoral degree in midwifery and women’s health. She has conducted research in maternal health with a focus on pregnancy and supporting pregnant adolescents. In collaboration with the Ministry of Health, she has been involved in the development of training materials and competency-based curricula for diploma, Bachelor’s and Master’s level education to improve nursing and midwifery education in Tanzania. She has been passionately involved in improving midwifery education, practice and regulation in the country in collaboration with Tanzania Midwives Association. Dr. Mwilike is a member of Tanzania Midwives Association (TAMA) and a registered practitioner with the Tanzania Nursing and Midwifery Council (TNMC). She has a strong interest in maternal, newborn and child health research, adolescent health, nursing and midwifery education and global health research.

photo of Linda Simon Paulo

Linda Simon Paulo, MD, MSc

Bio

Dr. Paulo is a medical doctor and assistant lecturer at the Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) School of Public Health. In 2018, she received a Master of Science degree in Global Health Nutrition from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Her research interests are in food systems, climate change, non-communicable diseases, and policy. In addition to teaching, Linda coordinates short courses in hospital management, policy briefs writing and policy analysis. As part of community work, she advocates for girls and community education, meal access for school children and access to HIV/AIDS treatment and prevention.

Uganda

photo of Harriet Chemusto

Harriet Chemusto, MS

Bio

Ms. Chemutso is an epidemiologist and technical head of the Mildmay Uganda Research Center. She has a Master’s of Science degree in Epidemiology and Biostatistics from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Bachelor’s of Science in Health Systems Approaches to HIV and AIDS care and management from the University of Manchester, Bachelor’s of Arts in Social Sciences from Makerere University and 4-year diploma in registered comprehensive nursing that includes community health and midwifery. Harriet has 12 years of professional experience in public health interventions, research, and evaluations. She is the chairperson of the Mildmay Uganda Research Ethics Committee and vice chairperson of the Uganda National Council of Science and Technology, a committee of the Research Ethics Committee (REC) Chairpersons in Uganda. She advocates for improved performance of RECs in protecting human research participants and ensures RECs do not deter research development in Africa. Ms. Chemusto’s research focuses on sexual and reproductive health for marginalized and deprived populations including refugees, HIV-positive individuals and adolescents.

photo of Alphonsus Kityo

Alphonsus Kityo, MBChB, MPH

Bio

Dr. Kityo is a physician and Program Officer for the Uganda People’s Defense Forces’ (UPDF) Comprehensive HIV/AIDS project. In 2000, he received a Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery degree from Mbarara University and in 2014, a Master of Public Health degree from Makerere University. Dr. Kityo has 15 years of experience in supporting the implementation of HIV/AIDS programs at both the district and national levels. He successfully led the implementation of male circumcision services for HIV prevention for the UDPF. His passion for community strengthening to improve health outcomes led him to develop initial data collection tools and key guiding documents that contributed to the success of the male circumcision component of the project. Even at the district level, he provided technical assistance in planning, organizing, coordinating, coaching, and mentoring colleagues in healthcare delivery in addition to his responsibility to diagnose, treat and ensure proper management of patients.

photo of Fiona Musiime

Fiona Musiime, MBChB, MMed

Bio

Dr. Musiime holds a Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery as well as a Master of Medicine in Pediatrics and Child Health degree from Makerere University, Uganda. She currently coordinates pediatric and adolescent HIV programs at the Baylor College of Medicine Children’s Foundation in Uganda. In this role, she oversees planning, implementation, and monitoring of a project which focuses on closing the gaps in pediatric and adolescent HIV care. Through implementation of this project, there have been notable gains along the HIV care cascade for children and adolescents in mid-Western Uganda. Examples of these include increased identification of children and adolescents living with HIV, improving their linkages into HIV care, retention in HIV care, and improving their viral load suppression in the targeted districts. She has a keen interest in implementation research to generate evidence on interventions that best address health challenges.

photo of Sylivia Nalubega

Sylivia Nalubega, PhD

Bio

Dr. Nalubega holds a PhD in Nursing Studies from the University of Nottingham, UK. She is a general nurse and currently works as a lecturer and the head of the Nursing Department at Soroti University. She has a long-term background in HIV care and research, and her research interests include HIV ethics and policy, HIV co-infections, evidence-based practice, and health care training. Dr. Nalubega hopes to contribute to the streamlining of HIV research policies in low-income countries.

photo of Wasswa William

Wasswa William, MMed, PhD

Bio

Dr. William is a lecturer and head of the Department of Biomedical Sciences and Engineering at Mbarara University of Science and Technology (MUST), Uganda. He has a Master’s degree in Biomedical Engineering from the University of Cape Town and PhD in Biomedical Engineering from MUST supported by the African Development Bank and a PhD split site at the University of Strathclyde supported by the Commonwealth Commission. He recently developed a digital pathology platform dubbed PapsAI for automated diagnosis and classification of cervical cancer from pap-smear images. He is interested in digital health innovations that provide universal health coverage, especially those reaching LMICs. He has expertise in biomedical data modelling and simulation, biomedical data science, medical image analysis, medical device innovation, health informatics and the application of AI and machine learning for disease diagnosis, surveillance, prognosis and prediction. Dr. Wasswa has a keen interest in health policies, cancer, TB and HIV/AIDs research.


ALUMNI

Year 2018-2019 (year 07)
Year 2017-2018 (year 06)
Year 2016-2017 (year 05)
Year 2015-2016 (year 04)
Year 2014-2015 (year 03)
Year 2013-2014 (year 02)
Year 2012-2013 (year 01)
Year 2011-2012 (pilot)

2018-2019

Botswana

photo of Bokwena Moali, MBBS, MPH-HM

Bokwena Moali, MBBS, MPH-HM

Bio

Bokwena holds a bachelor’s degree in Medicine and Surgery from the University of the West Indies, Jamaica. She also completed her Master’s in Public Health and Health Management from the same University. She worked as a clinician in the Department of Emergency Medicine and Department of Psychiatry at Cornwall Regional Hospital in Jamaica. She currently works as the Chief Medical Officer and Head of Preventative services at Okavango District Health Management Team. She oversees the overall functions of Gumare Primary Hospital by coordinating the functions of the major departments (Human Resources, Accounts, Laboratory, Radiology, OPD, etc.). She is also in charge of the planning, budgeting and implementation of the all preventative programs (HIV, TB, Malaria, EPI). She is the chairperson of the Emergency Preparedness Committee and oversees all activities geared towards elimination of malaria in the district.

photo of Nokuthula Majingo, MSc Public Health, BNS, RN

Nokuthula Majingo, MSc Public Health, BNS, RN

Bio

Nokuthula is a nurse by profession who holds a Master of Science in Public Health from the University of Bedfordshire (UK), obtained through the Commonwealth Scholarship. She is Chief Health Officer in the Department of Public Health at Botswana Ministry of Health and Wellness where she heads the Disease Control Division comprising National Malaria, TB, NCD, Disease Surveillance and Eye Health Programmes.

Subsequent to her clinical practice, she worked as Nursing Lecturer at the Institute of Health Sciences. She later joined the HIV/AIDS department at Ministry of Health serving in the antiretroviral therapy, HIV (KITSO) Training, Performance Improvement and HIV Testing Services Programmes. Ms. Majingo has vast experience in designing national health policies, programmes and monitoring health programme implementation at both national and district levels.

photo of Ketshepile Taylor, MBBS

Ketshepile Taylor, MBBS

Bio

Taylor is a practicing Senior Medical Officer with the Ministry of Health Botswana. In 2008, he was awarded a full scholarship to study medicine at Monash University in Australia. Since completing his studies, he has worked for Ministry of Health (MOH) Botswana in a referral hospital, two district hospitals and a rural clinic. Starting in 2016, he has been working for MOH-Jhpiego (a Johns Hopkins University Affiliate) partnership in the National Cervical Cancer Prevention Program where he is a trainer of trainers on cervical cancer prevention interventions.

photo of Lebapotswe Tlale, MBBS, MMed

Lebapotswe Tlale, MBBS, MMed

Bio

Tlale is a Public Health Specialist at the Ministry of Health & Wellness in Botswana. He manages and monitors surveillance of under-five mortality and childhood illness. He provides technical support and develops evidence-based strategies to reduce national under-five mortality. Supervising 10 junior officers, he is currently leading the expansion of two programs, one focused on immunization and another focused on early childhood development.

Cameroon

photo of Mborong Relindis Berry, BSc, BA, MSc

Mborong Relindis Berry, BSc, BA, MSc

Bio

Kinsa nee Mborong Relindis is a nurse specialized in Reproductive Health. She holds a Master of Science in Reproductive Health and a Post Graduate diploma in supply chain management. Ms. Berry is now a PhD student in Public Health at the Texila American University. Her interest is implementation research with a focus on improving mother and child health. She is the Regional Focal Point for Reproductive Health and PMTCT for the North West Region, Ministry of Public Health Cameroon. She is responsible for planning, supervising and monitoring activities at the district level.

photo of Busi Anissette Ngum, BNS, MW, MPH

Busi Anissette Ngum, BNS, MW, MPH

Bio

Busi Anissette is a Public Health Nurse at Mbingo Baptist Hospital in the Cameroon Baptist Convention Health Services. She holds a Master’s Degree in Public Health from the University of Buea and she is a recipient of the Adolphe Monkiedje Academic Scholarship. She coordinates the Women’s Health Program, where she deals with cervical cancer management and family planning. She is a trainer in Advanced Life Support in Obstetrics certified by the American Academy of Family Physicians. She trains midwives in evidence-based midwifery.

photo of Nsoh Marius, BNS, MPH

Nsoh Marius, BNS, MPH

Bio

Nsoh Marius is a public health professional who majored in epidemiology and earned his Master’s in Public Health at the Catholic University of Central Africa (CUAC), Cameroon. As an Afya Bora fellow, he conducted research on the Predictors of Antiretroviral Therapy Interruptions and Factors Influencing Return to Care in the Nkolndongo Health District. Prior to his time with Afya Bora, Mr. Marius worked as a Quality Improvement Officer with the HIV Free Project, a program funded by PEPFAR through the CDC to support the MoH in effective reporting, monitoring and assessment of progress made in the national HIV clinical cascade. He served as the Bamenda Health District supervisor for Expanded Programs for Immunization Activities. Mr. Marius’ interests are in environmental and occupational health and has authored papers within this domain. Currently, he maintains a teaching position at CUAC while working towards his PhD with anticipated graduation in 2021.

China

photo of Yan Guo, PhD

Yan Guo, PhD

Bio

Yan Guo is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Biostatistics and Epidemiology in Sun Yat-sen University School of Public Health, Guangzhou, China. After receiving her PhD in Sociology at Utah State University, US, she continued 2-year post-doc training at Wayne State University, US. She has successfully landed several grants from the National Science Foundation of China and other international organizations. Her research focuses on utilizing mobile health to improve the mental health and quality of life of people living with HIV and cancer patients.

Kenya

photo of Michael M. Gichangi, MBChB, MMed, FRCOphth, MSc

Michael M. Gichangi, MBChB, MMed, FRCOphth, MSc

Bio

Michael Gichangi is an Ophthalmologist and the head of Ophthalmic Services at Ministry of Health Kenya, where he facilitates the implementation of Eye Health policies. He holds a Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery and a Master of Medicine in Ophthalmology from the University of Nairobi. He also obtained a Master of Science in Public Health for Eye Care from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. His focus is on Health policy issues in Kenya.

photo of Peris Kiarie KRCHN, BSCN, MSCN, DNP

Peris Kiarie KRCHN, BSCN, MSCN, DNP

Bio

Peris Kiarie has been the principal of Kijabe College of Health Sciences since 2013. She is a nurse who holds a master’s degree in Health Systems Management and Leadership and a Doctor of Nursing Practice from Vanderbilt University in the USA. As a leader, she spearheads development of innovative programs to meet the changing needs of Kenya’s health system. She served as an appointed board member of the Nursing Council of Kenya from 2016 to Dec 2018. She has a keen interest in the management of victims of gender-based violence at the facility level.

photo of Paul Kisia Malalu, MBChB, MPH, MBA

Paul Kisia Malalu, MBChB, MPH, MBA

Bio

Paul Kisia Malalu holds a Bachelor of Medicine degree (MBChB) from Nairobi University, Master’s in Public Health (MPH) from Moi University and Master of Business Administration (MBA) from the Catholic University of Eastern Africa. He has more than ten years of experience in public health program management with a specific focus on primary health care, HIV, TB, Malaria, Child Health/Immunization and health supply chains. He currently works as a Senior Child Survival Technical Adviser in a program that seeks to improve health outcomes of mothers and children in hard to reach and underserved rural populations in Kenya. In the past, he has worked with the Ministry of Health and a number of NGOs in various capacities. His interests are in strengthening health systems, improving maternal and child health, and implementation sciences.

photo of Moses Otieno, BScN, MSc

Moses Otieno, BScN, MSc

Bio

Moses Otieno is an Afya Bora fellow in Global Health Leadership currently attached at the National Aids and STI Control Programme (NASCOP), Kenya focusing on costing HIV management. He holds BSc in Nursing and MSc in Health Economics and Policy from the University of Nairobi. Mr. Otieno has 10 years of experience in clinical nursing and 7 years as a Public Health Consultant. He has also worked as a faculty fellow, research assistant, and adjuvant consult in costing and health finances with various organization and institutions in Kenya. Moses is a Trainer of Trainers in TB, Leprosy, and other Lung diseases and is passionate about HIV/AIDS and cancer. He has been working in a cancer ward at Kenyatta National Hospital for the last 5 years.

Tanzania

photo of Gladys Mahiti, PhD

Gladys Mahiti, PhD

Bio

Gladys Mahiti is a Lecturer at the Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) School of Public Health and Social Sciences. She holds a bachelor’s degree in human nutrition and a master’s degree in Rural Development. She previously worked as a nutritionist with refugee settlements in western Tanzania Burundian Camps. Subsequently, she worked with the Ministry of Lands in Tanzania as a Community Development Officer. Later, she joined MUHAS and currently works as a coordinator for development studies in undergraduate programmes. She is attached at an NGO called the Management and Development for Health (MDH), under the Afya Kwanza project (Viral Suppression). Her interests are in health systems, maternal health, HIV, Nutrition, and One Health.

photo of Wilhellmuss Isael Mauka, MD, MPH, MScEAB

Wilhellmuss Isael Mauka, MD, MPH, MScEAB

Bio

Mauka holds a Doctor of Medicine (MD) and has a master’s degree in Public Health (MPH) and Epidemiology and applied Biostatistics (MScEAB). He has more than 5 years’ experience as a Manager in Blood Transfusion services and works at the Zonal Blood Transfusion Service Centre under Ministry of Health of Tanzania. He has done research in the Blood Transfusion Services in Tanzania. He is interested in implementation research focusing on monitoring and evaluation for best sustainability of health-related programs/projects.

photo of Avelina Paschal Mgasa, MD, MMed

Avelina Paschal Mgasa, MD, MMed

Bio

Avelina Mgasa is a medical doctor and internal medicine specialist at the Ministry of Health, Tanzania. She received her Master of Medicine degree from Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) in 2013 and a fellowship in Capacity Building in Blood Transfusion in South Korea in 2018. She has trained in human genetics and genomics at National Institute of Health, USA (2017). She is currently a zonal manager at the National Blood Transfusion Service in Tanzania, and an honorary lecturer at MUHAS. Her career interests include global health and clinical research in HIV complications of hematopoietic stem cells. She researched the factors contributing to anemia among people living with HIV and presented at MUHAS first scientific conference in 2013 in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.

photo of Joel Seme Ambikile, BScN, RN, MSc

Joel Seme Ambikile, BScN, RN, MSc

Bio

Joel Seme Ambikile is an Assistant Lecturer at the Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences in the School of Nursing. He received his bachelor’s degree in Nursing from the University of Dar es Salaam and Master of Science with a focus on Mental Health at Muhimbili University. He is engaged in research regarding Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) and Mental Health Care. He is the Vice President of the Tanzania Addictions Nursing Chapter of the International Nurses Society of Addictions. He is also an HIV/AIDS National Trainer of Trainers for Nurse Initiated Management of Antiretroviral Therapy in Tanzania. Joel is currently an Afya Bora Fellow focusing on HIV Index case testing for the year 2018-2019.

photo of Nathanael Sirili MD, MSc, PhD

Nathanael Sirili MD, MSc, PhD

Bio

Nathanael Sirili is a Medical Doctor working as an Assistant Lecturer at the School of Public Health and Social Sciences at Muhimbili University, Tanzania. He received his Master of Science in Health Systems from Muhimbili University in 2014 and PhD in Public Health from Umeå University in Sweden in 2018. Mr. Sirili has seven years of experience in conducting research, consultancies and capacity building programs in health systems (health workforce), maternal health, and HIV/AIDS. He has published several research articles in international referred journals from the latter. Nathanael was a recipient of the African Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship (2015-2017) by APHRC and IDRC-Canada. He also coordinates a five-university consortium project for transforming Health Professions Education in Tanzania (2018-2023) funded by the Fogarty International Centre.

Uganda

photo of Mary Gorreth Nabukenya-Mudiope, MBChB, MSc

Mary Gorreth Nabukenya-Mudiope, MBChB, MSc

Bio

Mary Gorreth Nabukenya-Mudiope is a current Afya Bora Fellow in a Global Health Leadership Program focusing on improving retention in HIV care at urban and peri-urban public health centres. She is a public health physician with over 10 years’ experience in TB and HIV program implementation at sub-national and national levels. She received an MBChB at Makerere University and MSc at the University of London. She previously worked as a Capacity Building Manager at Uganda’s National TB Program. She currently leads a team of 50 officers at the Infectious Diseases Institute, Uganda to deliver quality HIV treatment services to 300,000 clients in 18 districts.

photo of Sylvia Kusemererwa, MBChB, MPH

Sylvia Kusemererwa, MBChB, MPH

Bio

Sylvia Kusemererwa holds a bachelor’s degree in Medicine and Surgery and a Master of Public Health from Makerere University. Her past experience with leadership was in leading two clinical trials on HIV prevention. She currently leads two trials in other infectious diseases with the Research Institute and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Uganda Research Unit. Dr. Kusemererwa is currently an Afya Bora fellow attached at the Uganda Research Unit. Her project will focus on a systematic review of strategies that improve retention of heterosexual men in HIV care in sub-Saharan Africa.

photo of Phoebe Monalisa Namukanja-Mayambala, MBChB, MPH

Phoebe Monalisa Namukanja-Mayambala, MBChB, MPH

Bio

Phoebe Monalisa Namukanja-Mayambala obtained her medical degree from Makerere University, Uganda and MPH degree from University of Limpopo, Medical University of South Africa (MEDUNSA), SA. As a Public Health specialist at CDC Uganda, she leads the MCH/PMTCT team, providing technical and administrative oversight on MCH/PMTCT topical issues and implementing partners of CDC funded HIV programs. In partnership with the Uganda Ministry of Health (MoH), interagency teams and MoH bilateral partners, Phoebe contributes to formulation of HIV policy guidelines and plans for HIV prevention; specifically, the care and treatment of adults, children, adolescents, and pregnant and breastfeeding women in HIV/TB programs.

photo of Violet Okaba Kayom, MBChB, MMed

Violet Okaba Kayom, MBChB, MMed

Bio

Violet O. Kayom is a Pediatrician and Lecturer in the department of Pediatrics and Child Health at Makerere University in Uganda. She holds a master’s degree in Pediatrics and Child Health from Makerere University. She also leads the undergraduate training program in Pediatrics and mentors medical students and other health professionals. She is a member of the Uganda Pediatric Association and an active advocate of child health to the public and political leaders. Her research focuses on prevention of newborn infections. Currently, she is focusing on promoting the essential newborn care practices to prevent newborn sepsis.

USA

photo of Susan Jacob, PharmD

Susan Jacob, PharmD

Bio

Susan Jacob holds a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the University of Washington. She has more than 20 years of experience as a pharmacist. Most recently, she was the Manager for the Investigational Drug Service department at Seattle Children’s Hospital where she coordinated all aspects of research drug management. She is passionate about advancing the practice of pharmacy in global health as pharmacists are a critical link in optimizing therapy and ensuring continuity of care. Her research interests include drug resistance, vaccines and antimicrobial stewardship.

photo of Neil Sircar, JD, LLM

Neil Sircar, JD, LLM

Bio

Sircar is a human rights lawyer and Fogarty/Northern Pacific Global Health-Afya Bora Fellow from Georgetown University Law Center and the O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law. He is a principal investigator on a study for developing human rights-based approaches to HIV testing and notification in Kenya with the prominent Kenyan non-governmental organization Kenya Legal and Ethical Issues Network. His focus is in further developing the legal dimensions to global health and, in particular, human rights-based approaches to health. Sircar’s previous experience includes working with major national and international health organizations.

2017-2018

Botswana

photo of Virginia Letsatsi-Modise

Virginia Letsatsi-Modise, MD, MSc

Bio

Virginia holds a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBChB) from the University of Free-State, South Africa and completed a Master of Science (MSc) in Clinical Tropical Medicine at Nagasaki University, Japan. She has extensive clinical experience and program management skills in HIV medicine from her experience as a clinician and site manager at the Princess Marina Hospital, Infectious Disease Care Center, which is the first and largest HIV Clinic in Botswana. She managed inpatient and outpatients with infectious diseases, mostly HIV/AIDS and its complications, tuberculosis and hepatitis. She also managed the HIV treatment failure clinic for treatment-experienced patients. Virginia also holds a Diploma in HIV Management from Colleges of Medicine of South Africa, Clinical Management of HIV from University of Washington, and a Diploma in Research and Development of Products from Nagasaki University. She was awarded the Bristol-Myers Squibb Exchange Fellowship (United Kingdom) in 2012 and the Arthur Ashe Endowment for the Defeat of AIDS Fellowship (New York, USA) in 2013. Currently, she is the manager of the Botswana National Cancer Registry within the Non-Communicable Diseases Program, Public Health at the Ministry of Health headquarters. She oversees cancer registry information management, develops policies and strategies, and is involved in maintaining uniformity and continuity of surveillance and registration of cancers. Her interests include clinical and operational research in HIV and malignancies, program development, and management to reduce the burden of non-communicable diseases, especially cancers, in low resource settings.

photo of Mophuthi Liwambano

Mophuthi Liwambano, MNSc, BNSc, RM, RN

Bio

Mophuthi is a Senior Lecturer in the Midwifery Program at the Institute of Health Sciences in Gaborone, Botswana. She is interested in health systems research and the health policy towards promotion of the sexual and reproductive health of communities, especially for vulnerable groups such as youth, the elderly, and people living with disabilities. She led a team that won a research grant from the Tertiary Education Council of Botswana which aimed to build capacity for the Health Training Institutions. Mophuthi has participated in the Midwifery Program Curriculum Review where she successfully led a team that analyzed the Needs Analysis Data and spearheaded organization of content for the development of a Community Midwifery Care course plan. She participated in the secondary data analysis of the Botswana Impact Survey IV (BAIS IV), an initiative of the Ministry of Health, the University of Botswana and Ohio University to build capacity for the health professionals of Botswana. She has participated as a member of the scientific committee in preparation for the SENNAM BIENNIAL Conference in Botswana and the Health Training Institutions’ International Research Conference. She serves as a mentor for the newly appointed Midwifery Lecturers and has participated as a member of the taskforce to draft the Item Writing Manual for the Institute of Health Sciences Gaborone. Mophuthi is a member of the Botswana Nurses Union and Sigma Theta Tau International.

photo of Onkgopotse Kgomotso Oduetse

Onkgopotse Kgomotso Oduetse, MD, MPH

Bio

Oduetse holds a dual MD/MPH degree from St. George’s University, Grenada. She previously worked as a medical officer in Nyangabgwe Referral Hospital in Botswana. She is currently working as Head of Preventive Services in Serowe District Health Management Team (SDHMT) in the Ministry of Health in Botswana. In her current position, Oduetse oversees the planning, implementation, and evaluation of programs geared towards disease prevention. She actively took part in the national STEPS survey for non-communicable diseases in 2014 as a district supervisor for three districts, Palapye, Serowe, and Boteti. Oduetse believes in empowering the community with health issues and engaging them in designing of interventions relevant for their settings. She is also trained as a Trainer of Trainers (TOT) in different preventive programs. She also chairs several district committees involving health and other stakeholders.

photo of Kabelo Monicah Samuel

Kabelo Monicah Samuel, MSc, BSN

Bio

Monicah holds a Master in Nursing Science (MSc) and Honours in Advanced Midwifery and Neonatology from Stellenbosch University in Cape Town, South Africa. She is currently a Senior Lecturer at Bamalete Lutheran School of Nursing teaching midwifery specialty. Monicah is interested in neonatal care research. She is interested in promoting research findings and evidence in health care policy and practice in neonatal care in Botswana. She aims to investigate and address major bottlenecks that impede effective implementation, to test new approaches to improve health programming, and to determine causal relationship between the intervention and impact. She has worked as a research midwife at the Effective Care Research Unit in collaboration with the World Health Organization. She researched the effectiveness of Misoprostol in prevention of Post-Partum Hemorrhage and presented it at the 2014 International Nursing Conference in Cape Town, South Africa.

Cameroon

photo of Nsong Akono Minlo Antoine

Nsong Akono Minlo Antoine, MD

Bio

Nsong has a Doctor of Medicine (MD) from the University of Buea. He has significant experience in family planning and reproductive health, maternal, newborn and child health, and integrated management of childhood illnesses in both development and humanitarian public health contexts. He has carried out community health interventions including supervising vaccination campaigns and health education on diseases of public health interest. He put in place a health reporting and data collection system in a subdivision hospital, set up and organized mobile clinics and temporary health units, and managed a primary medical facility. Nsong has served on the working group for planning, design, and implementation of immunization projects on a district and regional scale. He participated in the national working group led by the Ministry of Health on malaria for the nationwide distribution of long-lasting insecticidal bed nets. He was part of the working group that developed policies on integrating refugees into the indigenous public health coverage in the three northern and the eastern regions. As the Deputy Coordinator of the Women’s Health Project, a reproductive health and family planning project with ACMS Cameroon (an affiliate of PSI and a USAID-funded project), Nsong led a team to increase health coverage resulting in a measurable decrease in maternal mortality. Nsong is currently pursuing an online Master of Public Health (MPH) from the University of Roehampton.

photo of Gladys Ngwafong Mukere

Gladys Ngwafong Mukere, BNS, MPH

Bio

Gladys holds a Master in Public Health (MPH) from the University of Buea. She is a nurse and public health practitioner. Her interests lie in project management, implementation science, and development of adolescent-friendly health policies. Gladys worked with the HIV Free NW/SW project implemented by Cameroon Baptist Convention Health Services to organize, coordinate, and supervise service delivery and implement innovative strategies, PITC, and family model of care to increase identification, initiation, retention and ART uptake for children/adolescents living with HIV in South West Region of Cameroon. She also worked with Baptist Hospital in Mutengene to plan, coordinate, and supervise nursing care services.

China

photo of Wenjuan Zhou

Wenjuan Zhou, PhD

Bio

Wenjuan holds a PhD from Central South University Xiangya School of Nursing. She completed postdoctoral training in pathology at Central South University School of Basic Medicine. She is junior faculty at the Central South University Xiangya School of Nursing. Her area of focus is prevention and health promotion for cervical cancer. She did research in quality of life for cervical cancer survivors and predictors of recurrent risk for early stage cervical cancer. Currently, she is conducting research in promoting cervical cancer screening among the rural Chinese population and investigating cervical cancer risk factors in patients from rural areas. She is also co-mentoring an African graduate student from South Sudan to develop a study in promoting cervical cancer screening for low-income women.

Kenya

photo of Lucy Kinanu Joseph

Lucy Kinanu Joseph, BScN, MScN

Bio

Lucy is a Nursing Officer with a Master of Science in Nursing (MScN) Pediatrics from the University of Nairobi, Kenya. She is currently pursuing a PhD in the same field from the University of Nairobi. She is a Clinical Instructor of nursing students from the surrounding higher learning institutions and stationed in Bahati Sub-County Hospital in Nakuru, Kenya. Lucy also coordinates community activities at the hospital and serves as the community link.

photo of Serah K. Ngugi

Serah K. Ngugi, MBChB, MMed

Bio

Serah holds a Master of Medicine (MMed) in Pediatrics and Child Health from the University of Nairobi and is currently undertaking a PhD in Epidemiology at Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology. She is a practicing pediatrician and a Senior Assistant Director of Medical Services in the Ministry of Health, currently working in Nyandarua County. Her roles include planning, implementation, and supervision of pediatric and child health services and the provision of clinical services in the JM Kariuki County and the North Kinangop Mission Hospitals. Her interests are in epidemiological and implementation research especially in the field of maternal, newborn, and child health. Serah is also very passionate about patient safety, especially in regard to the prevention of healthcare-associated infections. She is a member of the North Kinangop Hospital Patient Safety Committee which is responsible for spearheading the WHO-African Partnership for Patient Safety (APPS) Program. She is an advocate of hand hygiene, and in 2012 introduced the local production and use of an alcohol-based hand rub in her workstation, which led to improved hand hygiene compliance and a marked reduction in the incidence of nosocomial infections.

photo of Thomas Andale Okwaro

Thomas Andale Okwaro, MBChB, MPH, MMed

Bio

Thomas is a physician and public health specialist with interest in chronic disease management and policy formulation. His research interests include diabetes mellitus, hypertension, HIV/AIDS, and oncology. In addition to being a general physician conducting daily clinical ward rounds, teaching medical students, and running outpatient clinics in chronic disease, Thomas also works on several chronic disease community outreach programs covering the entire western part of Kenya. Thomas is part of the teams that develop program work plans, performance indicators, clinical management training manuals, and disease management algorithms. Thomas is the main physician mentor on these programs and consistently evaluates the programs’ performance based on the work plan performance indicators. Since November 2013, he has regularly provided reports to the top managers of the programs.

Tanzania

photo of Aisa Mhalu

Aisa Mhalu, MD, MPH

Bio

Aisa holds a Doctor of Medicine (MD) and has a Master in Public Health (MPH) from Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Science. She has more than 10 years’ experience in HIV and AIDS services. She currently leads the Quality Improvement Unit at Management and Development for Health guiding program planning and strengthening regional and district management teams to coordinate quality improvement (QI) activities and Training of Trainers (TOT) in HIV/AIDS. She is also a member of National QI Technical working group. She has done a number of research and operational studies in HIV care in the clinical monitoring of patients, patient and health workers satisfaction, retention, supportive supervision, and mentorships and community facility services.

photo of Eliaichi Romina Minja

Eliaichi Romina Minja, MBChB, MMed

Bio

Eliaichi is a current Afya Bora Fellow in Global Health Leadership at the Management Development for Health and a dermatologist and venereologist at Muhimbili Hospital in Tanzania. She holds a Master’s from the Regional Dermatology Training Centre in Kilimanjaro, Tanzania in 2007, and a diploma in tropical medicine from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. She specializes in sexually transmitted infections, leprosy, and prevention of cutaneous malignancies in persons with albinism. She lectures for two programs in Tanzania and is a member of the National STI Control Program committee of the Ministry of Health.

photo of Baraka Morris

Baraka Morris, BSN, MSc

Bio

Baraka is a registered nurse and a Bioethicist. He earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Nursing from the Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) in 2009 and a Master of Bioethics from the University of Pennsylvania (USA) in 2012. At MUHAS, he participates in developing, conducting, and disseminating research findings, supervising undergraduate students’ clinical practices, and supervising students in their research projects and fieldworks. He also coordinates the International Exchange Program at the School of Nursing. Baraka is a member of School of Pharmacy Board and a representative of School of Nursing in the Department of Quality Improvement at MUHAS. He teaches courses on therapeutic communication skills for BSc. Nursing, midwifery for BSc. Nursing & BSc. midwifery, nursing leadership & management for BSc. Nursing & BSc. Midwifery, professionalism and ethics for all first years at MUHAS. He also supervises nursing research for BSc. Nursing & BSc. Midwifery and MBE students in their research projects.

photo of Emmanuel Mpolya

Emmanuel Mpolya, BSN, MMedSci, PhD

Bio

Emmanuel has a PhD in Theoretical Epidemiology and Biostatistics from the Graduate University for Advanced Studies (SOKENDAI), Japan. He holds a Master in Medical Sciences (MMed) in Public Health and Health Economics from the Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, Japan and a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) from the Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences in Tanzania. Before venturing into research and academia, he worked as a Curriculum Assistant with the International Training and Education Center for Health (I-TECH) Tanzania. Currently, he is a Lecturer in Biostatistics and Applied Epidemiology in the Department of Global Health and Biomedical Sciences of the Nelson Mandela African Institution of Science and Technology (NM-AIST) in Arusha, Tanzania. His research focus is in the area of One Health with a strong quantitative focus. He works with a number of partners working in One Health from Africa, Europe, and the United States. From 2014 to 2016 he analyzed the health and economic impact of Aflatoxins in Tanzania for the African Union Commission’s Partnership for Aflatoxin Control in Africa (PACA).

Uganda

photo of Scovia Nalugo Mbalinda

Scovia Nalugo Mbalinda, PhD, MSc, BSN

Bio

Scovia is a Lecturer in the Department of Nursing, Makerere University. Scovia is finalizing her PhD studies in reproductive health and has a Master in Population and Reproductive Health from Makerere University. Her research interests and experience are in adolescent health, sexual and reproductive health, HIV, quality of life, working environments, and medical and nursing education.

photo of Patience A. Muwanguzi

Patience A. Muwanguzi, BSN, MSN, PhD

Bio

Patience holds a PhD from the University of Leeds, UK and a Master of Nursing Science from Mbarara University of Science and Technology, Uganda. She also holds a post graduate qualification in Project Planning and Management (PPM) and another in Higher Education Leadership and Management (HELM). She is a Lecturer in the School of Health Sciences at Makerere University and a practicing trauma and critical care nurse specialist. She is passionate about designing and affecting capacity building programs for nurses and midwives. She is also interested in implementation research with a focus on innovation, clinical evidence-based practice, curriculum development for emerging diseases, continuous professional development (CPD) for nurses and supporting students in development of low cost phone and web based applications for improvement of treatment and care of infectious diseases including HIV.

photo of Esther Nasuuna

Esther Nasuuna, MBChB, MPH

Bio

Esther holds a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBChB) from Makerere University, Uganda and a Master of Public Health (MPH) from the University of Melbourne, Australia. Esther is currently a program manager for the pediatric and adolescent HIV care project in the outreach department at the Infectious Diseases Institute. Her main interests are in implementation research with a focus of translating research into policy and strengthening health systems in both the public and private health sector. Esther has worked in program design, research and implementation of TB/HIV programs, elimination of mother to child transmission of HIV and most recently scaling up pediatric and adolescent HIV programs. Recent efforts have seen the number of HIV positive children in care increase by 30% in focus districts and a great improvement in the quality of services that children receive.

USA

photo of Alida Maria Gertz

Alida Maria Gertz, MD, MPH

Bio

Alida holds a Doctor of Medicine (MD) and a Master in Public Health (MPH) from Case Western Reserve University. She is currently pursuing a Master in Epidemiology (MSc) through the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine distance learning program. Alida completed two years of internal medicine residency at Johns Hopkins University and two years of family medicine residency at the University of Pennsylvania. She is a board certified family medicine physician. She has been practicing in Washington State for the past two years working with King County Public Health and Swedish Family Medicine Residency.

photo of Florence Gicheru

Florence Gicheru, MSN, BSN

Bio

Florence is a current Afya Bora Fellow in Global Health Leadership in Nairobi, Kenya. In 2010, she received her Master’s degree in Nursing from the University of Washington, Seattle. She is an Advanced Registered Adult Nurse Practitioner specializing in acute and chronic pain. In the past, she worked at the University of Washington’s Department of Anesthesia & Pain Medicine on the inpatient pain service. She is interested in merging technology and evidence-based practice to improve the delivery of quality care, improving pain management using non-opioid options, and forming interdisciplinary networks.

photo of William Tanyi

William Tanyi, DHSc, MPH

Bio

William holds a Doctor of Health Science (DHSc) in Global Health from the A.T. Still University in Mesa, Arizona, and a Master of Public Health (MPH) from A.T. Still University in Kirksville, Missouri. He is also a trained physician, and has 10 years’ experience working as a senior medical officer with the Specialist Hospital Sokoto, Nigeria participating in clinical work and teaching medical, nursing, and community health students. His passion for disease prevention led Tanyi to partner with the Ministry of Health of the Sokoto State of Nigeria in the fight against the spread of HIV, TB, guinea worm and polio, a position that helped him gain experience in disease surveillance, tracking, and reporting. While in the United States, Tanyi has worked in various capacities as a geriatric care coordinator and supervisor, where he demonstrated in-depth understanding of local, state, and federal laws and regulations regarding quality patient care. He has extensive experience providing excellent hands-on health education, promotion, and patient care both locally and internationally. His passion for infectious disease prevention has inspired him to continue to seek ways of improving vaccine uptake within underserved communities through community outreach programs.

2016-2017

Botswana

photo of Kefalotse Dithole

Kefalotse Dithole, D Litt et Phil, MSc, RN

Bio

Dr. Kefalotse Dithole is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Nursing at the University of Botswana. She obtained her Doctor of Philosophy and Literature from the University of South Africa, Pretoria in 2014. She received her MSc degree in Critical Care Nursing at University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg in 1999. For the past 29 years she has been teaching nurses at diploma, undergraduate, and graduate levels in Botswana. Her research focuses on improving nurse–patient communication in intensive care units in order to improve quality of care. She also focuses on HIV and AIDS prevention in the community. She received the University of Botswana Community Engagement in HIV and AIDS Award in 2016. She is a member of Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society and Botswana Nurses Union.

photo of Mooketsi Molefi

Mooketsi Molefi, MBChB, MSc

Bio

Mooketsi Molefi holds a Master of Science in Clinical Epidemiology from the University of Pretoria, South Africa. He is a Medical Doctor and Lecturer in the Department of Family Medicine & Public Health, Faculty of Medicine at the University of Botswana. He focuses on teaching Epidemiology and Biostatistics principles. He also does Epi-info and STATA workshops for the trainees. His research interests are HIV/AIDS, TB, Cryptosporidium and infectious disease modelling and survival analyses. Dr. Molefi has worked with the AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) and is now involved in a Gilead sponsored multi-site Crypto clinical trial. He also has recently ventured into time-series analyses for health programs /policy evaluation in Botswana.

photo of Gontse Tshisimogo

Gontse Tshisimogo, MD, MPH

Bio

Gontse Tshisimogo is a trained physician and received her MD and MPH from St. George’s University in Grenada, West Indies in 2009 and 2007 respectively. She works as a District Program Manager in Bobirwa District Health Management Team in the Ministry of Health in Botswana. In her role, she oversees the implementation of disease prevention, treatment and care programs for the Ministry of Health. She was formally a Medical Officer at Princess Marina Hospital, the largest referral hospital in Botswana. Dr. Tshisimogo research interests are implementation science and reduction of the maternal and child morbidity and mortality through clinical audits of proven interventions at district and national level. Her other interests are project management and health systems strengthening to improve health outcomes.

Cameroon

photo of Lily Haritu Foglabenchi

Lily Haritu Foglabenchi, BSN, MIPH-SRH

Bio

Lily Haritu Foglabenchi is a Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) Nurse in the AIDS Care Prevention Program of the Cameroon Baptist Convention Health Services. She has over seven years of clinical, programmatic, research and community health experience in Cameroon and India. She currently oversees the implementation of a PEPFAR funded project that seeks to evaluate the change in unmet contraceptive need among women living with HIV following the integration of family planning into HIV care in Cameroon. Prior to this, she led the design and implementation of mobile clinic projects that provided cervical cancer screening, family planning, HIV counselling and syndromic management of sexually transmitted infections across 55 communities in rural Cameroon. Her work has earned her the Ministry of Health recognition for an Outstanding Contribution to Women’s SRH, the Moremi Initiative Leadership Award and the US Department of State Women in Public Service/Global Health Award. She holds a Master in International Public Health with specialization in SRH from the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, England.

China

photo of Yi-Han Lu

Yi-Han Lu, MD, PhD

Bio

Yi-Han Lu holds a PhD of Epidemiology and Biostatistics and a MD of Preventive Medicine from Shanghai Medical School, Fudan University in China. He is continuously interested in the epidemiology of infectious diseases. As an Associate Professor at Fudan University School of Public Health, Dr. Lu works in collaboration with clinicians, lab technicians, and CDC staff in diverse areas to study viruses widespread in China. He is undertaking several grants, including molecular epidemiology and evolutionary dynamics of zoonotic Hepatitis E virus, molecular characterization of Hepatitis C in key populations, and epidemiological pattern of enterovirus causing HFMD and Herpangina. Dr. Lu teaches teaches applied epidemiology to medical and non-medical undergraduates and a molecular epidemiology to graduates students.

Kenya

photo of Peter Maturi Mwamba

Peter Maturi Mwamba, MBChB, MMed

Bio

Dr. Maturi is a Senior Lecturer at the School of Medicine, University of Nairobi where he has taught for the last nine years. He holds a Bachelor of Medicine Bachelor of Surgery (MBChB) from Nairobi University. He is a Clinical Pathologist qualified from the University of Nairobi. He has fellowships in Hematology/Oncology and blood transfusion from West Virginia University USA and Emory University USA respectively. He is a member of the College of Pathologist East, Central and South Africa. He was the Lead Technical Advisor for a country wide Center for Disease Control (CDC) project supporting blood safety in Kenya. His research interests are in HIV associated cancers and blood transfusion. He is involved in clinical work at the Kenyatta National Hospital.

photo of Rosa Chemwey Ndiema

Rosa Chemwey Ndiema, MBChB, MMed

Bio

Rosa currently works at Kenyatta National Hospital as a Gynecologist and Honorary Lecturer with University of Nairobi. Her interest primarily focuses on quality of maternal health care where she heads the departmental Quality Assurance and Performance Contract Appraisal that ensures promises made to Kenyan women as regards to delivery of maternal health are met as per hospital objectives. Her research interest in evaluating guideline uptake in management of Antepartum Hemorrhage at Garissa County Hospital that showed adherence levels of 36.1% led to sensitization of health workers on the know-do-gap in clinical practice.

photo of Collins Owek

Collins Owek, BSc, MS

Bio

Collins Owek holds a Master’s degree in Community Health and Development from Great Lakes University of Kisumu, Kenya. In 2012 he completed a Bachelor in Health System Approaches from the University of Manchester in the United Kingdom. He received a diploma in nursing in 1997 from Medical Training College-Kisumu, Kenya and Post-graduate Diploma in Project Management in 2013 at Kenya Institute of Management, Kenya. Mr. Owek has over 14 years of experience in primary health care and HIV program implementation with district health systems and non-governmental organizations in Western Kenya. Currently he is the Program Manager for the Partnership for Innovative Medical Education Program in Kenya (PRIME-K) at the University of Nairobi. In addition, Mr. Owek is a Consultant on MNCH group at the Program for Appropriate Technology in Health (PATH) and is a Lecturer at Jaramogi Oginga Odinga University of Science and Technology in Kenya. He’s a member of the Eastern Africa Health Professional Educator’s Association (EAHPEA) as well as a member of Kwanza Kenya Toastmasters Club whose mission is to empower individuals to become effective communicators and leaders.

Tanzania

photo of Neema Jimmy Kyamba

Neema Jimmy Kyamba, BSc, MPhil

Bio

Ms. Neema Kyamba is a Registered Nurse and a Regional Reproductive, Maternal and Child Health Coordinator working with the Regional Health Management Team of the Kagera Region in Tanzania. She is a public health nurse with a Bachelor’s degree from the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania in 2004 and Masters’ degree in International Health from University of Bergen, Norway in 2008. Neema become a leader in reproductive, maternal and child health services coordinating Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission (PMTCT) of HIV, family planning, maternal health, new-born health and child health services in the Kagera Region. Under her leadership she has been a great support in promoting family planning services and data quality improvement on reproductive health services and in Kagera Region. Neema is passionate and highly involved in PMTCT programs, family planning interventions, new-born health programs and in-service trainings.

photo of Stella Mushy

Stella Mushy, BSN, MSc

Bio

Ms. Mushy is an Assistant Lecturer at Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences in the School of Nursing. She holds a Master’s degree in Midwifery and Women’s Health from Makerere University, Uganda since 2014 and received her BSN from Muhimbili University in 2009. Since 2015 Ms. Mushy is also working with Johns Hopkins Program for International Education in Gynecology and Obstetrics (Jhpiego) as a lead trainer in the Helping Babies Breathe and Helping Mothers Survive Bleeding after Birth trainings. Her research work is focused on reproductive health issues he most recent project looked “Factors Associated with Underutilization of Emergency Contraception among Young Women in the University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.”

photo of Denis Mzaga

Denis Mzaga, MD, MPH

Bio

Denis Mzaga is the Monitoring and Evaluation Officer at National AIDS Control Program in Tanzania. He is a Medical Doctor by training and received his MD from Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences in 2009. He received his Master’s degree in International Health at Boston University School of Public Health in 2013. At National AIDS Control Programme he provides assistance both programmatic and in clinical direction in implementation of monitoring and evaluation in HIV management. He works as Global Fund Monitoring and Evaluation Officer for the Program. He researched on the improvement on access to HIV care and treatment in Tanzania and presented the results in 20th International AIDS Conference.

photo of Bruno Fokas Sunguya

Bruno Fokas Sunguya, MD, MSc, PhD

Bio

Dr. Sunguya is a Lecturer at the Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences, Tanzania and a Visiting Lecturer in the University of Tokyo, Japan, and University of Western Cape in South Africa. He is a medical doctor, graduated in 2006 at the University of Dar es salaam, and holds Masters degree in International Health and Doctoral degree in Global Health from the University of Tokyo. He has a ten years’ experience in nutrition, health systems, and HIV/AIDS research. He has disseminated his research work widely in 21 peer reviewed research articles, 3 book chapters, and international conferences in Africa, Asia, and Australia. He has worked with the Ministry of Health and World Health Organization in the revision of National policies and implementation guidelines in nutrition, maternal and child health, and infectious diseases in Tanzania.

Uganda

photo of Elizabeth Ayebare

Elizabeth Ayebare, BSN, MN-MWH

Bio

Ms. Ayebare is a Lecturer at the Department of Nursing, Makerere University. She received a Bachelor’s of Nursing degree in 2004 and a Master of Nursing (Midwifery and Women’s Health) degree of Makerere University in 2014. She holds a Post-Graduate Diploma in Child Nursing from the University of Cape Town, South Africa. She has special interest in maternal and child health, particularly preterm birth and newborn care. She is a member of the Sigma Theta Tau International Nurses Honor Society and the Deputy Country Lead for the Lugina Africa Midwifery Research Network (LAMRN). Ms. Ayebare has worked with nurses and midwives in Uganda to improve clinical care for patients through audits, skills training and mentorship.

photo of Hanifah Nantongo

Hanifah Nantongo, BSN, MSc

Bio

Ms. Hanifah Nantongo holds a Bachelor of Nursing Science and a Master of Science in Pharmacology from Mbarara University of Science and Technology (MUST) in Uganda. She is a Teaching Assistant at MUST in the Department of Nursing and has 5 years teaching experience in nursing education which involves a community health aspect. Her involvement in the teaching of students in the community and interaction with the local people has contributed to her engagement in research to address community challenges. She has carried out research on retention of community health workers (also known as village health teams [VHT]) that mobilizes the community for HIV/AIDS care and providing care for children under-five years of age with diarrhea, pneumonia and fever. Hanifah has special interest in improving the use of medicines in communities as a strategy to the fight against antimicrobial resistance.

photo of Connie Olwit

Connie Olwit, BSN, MSN, MPhil

Bio

Ms. Olwit Connie is a Nurse and a Lecturer at in the Department of Nursing, Makerere University in Uganda. She holds a Master’s degree in Mental Health Nursing from Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences and a Master’s degree in Public Mental Health from University of Cape Town. Ms. Olwit received her Bachelors’ degree in Nursing from Makerere University. Her research work is focused on Chronic Sorrow among caregivers of patients with chronic conditions and stigma towards patients living with chronic mental disorders. Ms. Olwit desires to improve mental health service delivery in Uganda.

photo of Eleanor Namusoke-Magongo

Eleanor Namusoke-Magongo, MBChB, MMed

Bio

Dr. Namusoke-Magongo holds a Master’s degree in Pediatrics and Child Health from Makerere University in Uganda. She is currently the Program Officer for Pediatric HIV Services at the AIDS Control Program, Ministry of Health. Her role includes policy development, planning, coordinating, and supervising pediatric HIV services in the country. In 2014, she led the team to implement the national policy for the Test & Treat approach for all HIV infected children. In 2015, she led the process of developing the national mentorship framework for HIV services. She is a member of the National Pediatric ART Subcommittee that provides technical assistance to the Ministry of Health in pediatric and adolescent HIV services. In 2012, she was trained as an “Emerging Voice for Global Health” in China by a global program that mentors young researchers.

USA

photo of Radha Karnad

Radha Karnad, MBChB, MSc

Bio

Dr. Radha Karnad is a UK trained doctor (from the University of Southampton) with a Masters in Public Health (Health Service Management) from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. She is passionate about maternal and reproductive health, and believes that it is only by improving health systems that we will find solutions to global public health problems and improve access to health. Most recently, she worked for three years as Clinical Programs Manager at Jacaranda Health, a chain of maternity hospitals offering low cost and high quality maternity services. At Jacaranda, Dr. Karnad was responsive for organizational health systems strengthening through addressing the quality of service delivery, cutting costs, developing quality improvement programs, and capacity building for health service providers. She is an experienced project manager and team leader, and has built and maintained local and international stakeholder relationships. Her wide breadth of experience encompasses clinical medicine in hospital and community settings, health care management, quality of care program development, clinical training and education, and healthcare consulting.

photo of Sarah Puryear

Sarah Puryear, MD

Bio

Dr. Sarah Puryear is a physician with interests in global health and infectious disease. She completed medical school and the Osler Internal Medicine residency at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. She has worked in Botswana, South Africa, Kenya, and Ghana. Her research interests have ranged from tuberculosis contact tracing in Botswana to HIV care cascades in Baltimore to complications of HIV/TB coinfection in South Africa. During residency, she completed clinical rotations in Klerksdorp, South Africa and Pune, India and helped to develop a global health track within the residency program.

photo of Katherine Reed

Katherine Reed, MSN, MPH

Bio

Katherine Reed holds a Master’s in Nursing from the University of Pennsylvania and a Masters of International Public Health from Boston University. She is a Nurse Practitioner, board certified in Family Practice and Orthopedics. Katherine has spent the last 5 years in specialty clinical practice in orthopedic surgery, primarily joint replacement in Boise, Idaho and pediatric orthopedics in Tacoma, Washington. Prior to that, she worked providing primary care services in a community health center in Hilo, Hawaii as part of her work commitment to the National Health Service Corps. In 2014-15, she spent 4 months volunteering for CURE International in Kijabe, Kenya; Lusaka, Zambia; and Blantyre, Malawi. CURE is an American Christian mission organization that specializes in providing orthopedic and other surgical services to children with injuries and disabilities. Katherine has specific interests in trauma care, access to affordable surgical services in resource poor settings, injury prevention, and the impact of HIV/AIDS on recovery from surgery.


2015-2016

Botswana

photo of Wame Dikobe

Wame Dikobe, MD, MPH
Ministry of Health

Bio

Dr. Wame Dikobe has over 3 years experience working in the Botswana health sector in both rural and urban settings. She holds a dual MD/MPH degree from St. George’s University, Grenada, and is currently working towards registering as a Public Health Specialist, by fulfilling a two year attachment gaining practical experience in the Botswana context. Prior to this, she worked as an Accident and Emergency Medical Officer at Princess Marina Hospital, the largest referral public hospital in the country. Dr. Dikobe also has a passion for operational research, especially in TB/HIV. During her studies in the US, she co-authored a publication under the mentorship of Freya Spielberg, RTI International and University of Washington, that had programmatic implications for the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) HIV testing recommendations. In her current role, as the district program manager she provides oversight of implementation of all national public health programs. This involves planning, budgeting, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of all the programs to ensure delivery of essential services. She is also conducting a community project aimed at improving community TB care (CTBC), in collaboration with the Botswana National TB program (BNTP) and CDC Botswana. She is also a member of the National Malaria Technical Working Group. Dr Dikobe’s interests are health systems strengthening, health policy , program management and operational research.

photo of Bayengemali Rosemary Munyere

Bayengemali Rosemary Munyere, MPH, BSc, RD
I-TECH

Bio

Bayengemali Rosemary Munyere holds a Master of Public Health from Medical University of Southern Africa and BSc Nutrition & Dietetics with State Registration in Dietetics from the Robert Gordon University. She is a Clinical Dietitian at Nyangabgwe Hospital, Francistown. She currently heads the department which comprises of inpatient, outpatient and a nutrition rehabilitation program. She was part of the team that started a nutrition rehabilitation program for care of children with malnutrition infected and affected with HIV/AIDS at Princess Marina Hospital and Nyangabgwe Hospital. The program enrolls children from 0-18 years with malnutrition. Ms. Munyere was appointed as a health quality surveyor (inspector) for licensing health facilities and for compliance with the good standards of practice.

photo of Malebogo Pusoentsi

Malebogo Pusoentsi MBBCH, MPH
Ministry of Health

Bio

Malebogo Pusoentsi holds a Masters of Public Health degree from University of Newcastle Australia with a primary basic training in Medicine. She is a Public Health registrar having specialized in chronic disease epidemiology and global health, and her interest is effective and sustainable integration of chronic Non-Communicable Disease through continuum patient care in primary health care, focusing on cancer control. Malebogo currently works in the Ministry of Health as the manager of Botswana National Cancer Registry within Non Communicable disease program. She has worked at national level in developing policy, strategies and monitoring implementation of various programs within the Disease control division, health promotion and sexual and reproductive health, and worked with various non-governmental organizations such as Cancer association of Botswana in improving and raising priority for Non communicable disease. Currently she is working on improving surveillance and registration of cancer at all levels of care for improved patient care and public health planning.

photo of Miriam Sebego

Miriam Sebego PhD, MNS, RN
I-TECH

Bio

Dr. Miriam Sebego is a Lecturer at the University of Botswana, School of Nursing. She holds a PhD in Nursing from the University of Rochester, Rochester, New York. Miriam also obtained a Master of Nursing Science (MNS) from University of Pennsylvania and Bachelor of Education in Nursing from the University of Botswana. She is currently serving as the Vice Chairperson of the Botswana Hospice and Palliative Care Association (BHPCA), a member of Sigma Theta Tau International Society, and the Botswana Nurses Union. Her research interests are palliative care, family care giving and road traffic Injuries. Miriam has special interest in program development, project management and research.

Kenya

photo of Evaline Langat

Evaline Langat, BSN, MPH
I-TECH

Bio

Evaline Langat holds a Master of Public Health from Flinders University, Australia. She chairs the research coordinating unit within the department of health, Kilifi County where their goal is to provide leadership for the use of evidence based research as an integral component for decision making within the department of health. Her interests lies in the use of research evidence and data in health policy formulations. Evaline has a passion for maternal and child health where apart from conducting researches that influenced maternal health service delivery at the facility level, she has worked as a midwife in a level 4 facility for a period of 5 years.

photo of Drusilla G. M. Makworo

Drusilla G. M. Makworo, BScN, MScN, PhD
Kenyatta National Hospital, Comprehensive Care

Bio

Drusilla Makworo holds a PhD in Pediatric Nursing from the University of Nairobi. She is a paediatric nurse specializing in family centered care. Dr Makworao’s interests are in partnership in care between the healthcare providers, the sick children and their families with a major focus on involvement of siblings and peers in the care of the sick child. Drusilla worked with the Ministry of Health, the Nursing Council of Kenya where she steered the initiation and development of the distance learning programme for the training of nurses in Kenya and also the start of the paediatric training programme for nurses. Dr. Makworo worked with Kenyatta University and currently she is working with Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology where she is the Chair, Department of Community Health Nursing. Further, Dr. Makworo is a fellow with the African Population Health Research Centre (APHRC) and a committed member of the Seventh Day Adventist Church. Other research interests’ areas include neonatal, child and adolescent health and the care of the people with special needs.

photo of Lilian Mbau

Lilian Mbau, MBChB, MPH, GEMBA-H
AMREF

Bio

Lilian Mbau is a Medical Doctor with extensive experience working in public, private and faith-based institutions. She is a public health practitioner with specialization in epidemiology and disease control. Her area of interest is Non-communicable Diseases (NCDs) specifically focusing on developing evidence based interventions to decrease the burden of NCDs in low resource settings. Dr. Mbau currently works with African Medical and Research Foundation in Kenya (AMREF) initially managing a comprehensive HIV Prevention, Care and Treatment project in Kibera. She is now managing a project on hypertension specifically looking at ways to leverage on the existing resources in the HIV program to expand non-communicable disease prevention and treatment in low resource areas. She has also successfully completed a Master Degrees program on Global Executive Master of Business Administration in health (GEMBA- Health) at the United States International University (USIU) where she graduated top in her class. With the shift of focus and disease burden to non-communicable in low resource countries, Dr. Mbau hopes to contribute to increasing the capacity of local global health leaders to manage and reverse this alarming trends.

photo of Samuel K. Ng’arng’ar

Samuel K. Ng’arng’ar, MBChB, MMed
Kenyatta National Hospital, Comprehensive Care Centre

Bio

Dr. Ng’arng’ar holds a Masters Degree in Medicine in Paediatrics and Child Health (MMed) from the University of Nairobi. He is a a practicing Sonsultant Paediatrician working with the Ministry of Health in Kenya at the position of Senior Assistant Director of Medical Services currently seconded to Vihiga County government and stationed at the County Referral Hospital. Dr. Ng’arng’ar is a member of the Executive Hospital Management team and deputize the County Hospital in-Charge (medical superintendent). is a member of the Kenya Paediatric Association (KPA) Policy and Advocacy Committee through which they champion child health and peadiatrics issues in the Kenyan healthcare system. He also has interest in operational research and has participated in such studies which are done through a collaboration of the KEMRI-Wellcome Trust, Kenya Paediatric Association and some Kenyan public hospitals including Vihiga County Referral Hospital.

Tanzania

photo of Stephen S. Kishinhi

Stephen S. Kishinhi, BSc, MSc, PhD
Ministry of Health, PMCTC program

Bio

Stephen holds a PhD in Environmental Science from Jackson State University. He is a Lecturer at Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS), and his interest is in environmental factors associated with cancer. Stephen worked at Meharry Medical Center in Nashville Tennessee investigating the role of Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor (AhR) in Breast Progression by validating the AhR as a new predictive clinical marker and a unique target for designing novel selective inhibitors for therapeutic intervention of metastatic breast cancer. Previously Dr. Kishinhi worked in the area of water quality assessment where he established a biomarker in evaluating possible sources of human fecal contamination in Pearl River/Ross Barnett Reservoir and Grand Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve, Mississippi.

photo of Edward Kumakech

Edward Kumakech BSN, MPH, PhD
Ministry of Health, Non-Communicable Disease Program

Bio

Edward Kumakech is an Advanced Nurse Practitioner who gaind PhD degree in Medical Science with specialization in Health and Caring Sciences from Örebro University Sweden. He does research in HIV, HPV and cervical cancer prevention by post-exposure prophylaxis, screening integration and vaccination in Uganda. Dr. Kumakech has worked for Programme for Appropriate Technology in Health (PATH) in Uganda Multi-Project Office, where he was heavily involved in designing, implementing, operations research and evaluating HPV and cervical cancer prevention through HPV vaccination, cervical precancer screening by VIA and preventive treatment by Cryotherapy and HPV DNA-based cervical cancer screening programs in Africa. As PATH he has provided technical assistance in HPV and cervical cancer prevention by HPV vaccination, screening by VIA and preventive treatment by cryotherapy and HPV DNA testing program design to Ministry of Health of Uganda and other African countries including Rwanda. Before joining PATH, Dr. Kumakech worked as a Lecturer in Mbarara University of Science and Technology, Uganda for 6 years. Dr. Kumakech received his Master of Public Health degree from Lund University Sweden and Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree from Makerere University College of Health Sciences, Uganda.

photo of Magdalena Lyimo

Magdalena Lyimo, MD, MMed, PhD
Ministry of Health, NACP

Bio

Magdalena Lyimo holds a Doctor of Medicine degree from the University of Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania. She completed her residency in Internal Medicine at Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS, before joining graduate school at Darmouth College, USA. For her PhD, she studied HIV pathogenesis and immunology with a focus on mother to child transmission of HIV through breast milk. She works in the Department of Haematology and Blood Transfusion in MUHAS where she facilitates the curriculum for both undergraduate and postgraduate students. Dr. Lyimo has an interest in transfusion medicine and works closely with the National Blood Transfusion Service in Tanzania. She has been involved in developing of transfusion policy and guidelines as well as research in this area. In addition, Dr. Lyimo is the secretary of the Medical Women’s Association in Tanzania whose main focus is advocating for and provision of health services to women, and the advancement of women health professionals.

photo of Paul Magesa Mashauri

Paul Magesa Mashauri, BSN, MScN
MDH, Dar es Salaam

Bio

Paul Magesa Mashauri holds a Masters of Science in Nursing (MScN) degree from Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) in Tanzania. He is a general Nurse Practitioner specializing in mental health, and he is interested in global health and providing leadership for change in the health sector. Magesa has worked with the Ministry of Health in a number of activities to mention some he participated in reviewing the Nursing and Midwifery act 2010 and its regulations, reviewed the scheme of service 2009, establishment of intern nurses’ regulation. Magesa is also serving as the president of the Tanzania National Nurses Association for the past three years at voluntary basis through election, in this period several changes in the nursing fraternity has happened including the re-establishment of the directorate of Nursing at the Ministry of Health, active participation of nurses in policy development, unifying nurses with audible voice. Furthermore, Magesa is currently serving as the Head of school of Nurse Teachers also as a board member to represent the East, Central and Southern Africa in the Commonwealth Nurses and Midwifery Federation.

photo of Shally Z. Mwashemele

Shally Z. Mwashemele, MD, MPH
Ministry of Health, PMCTC Program

Bio

Shally Mwashemele is a medical doctor with a Master's Degree in Public Health from Umea University, in Sweden. Her interests lie at the junction of health, systems and technology. She worked with the Emergency Medical Department at Muhimbili National Hospital where she attended to patients with emergency conditions for more than two years. Dr. Mwashemele has been a volunteer to several organizations and currently is a volunteer at Kiota Women Health & Development Association (KIWOHEDE) where she uses her knowledge in health to educate young girls in vulnerable conditions.

Uganda

photo of Irene Biraro-Seguya

Irene Biraro-Seguya, BSN, MPhil
Ministry of Heath, AIDS Control Program

Bio

Irene Biraro-Seguya holds an MPhil HIV/AIDS Management from the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa and a Bachelor of Science degree in Nursing from the University of Eastern Africa, Baraton in Kenya. She has over 20 years’ experience working as a nurse in various roles including medical-surgery, staff development, management and leadership in Uganda, Australia, and Botswana. She currently works as Health Systems Strengthening Advisor for the USAID funded Strengthening Uganda’s Systems for Treating AIDS Nationally Project (USAID/SUSTAIN), based in Kampala, Uganda. Her work focuses on enhancing human resource planning and implementing strategies to improve employee engagement. She also supports the hospitals to improve their HR management practices, utilizing quality improvement approaches to improve workforce productivity. She is keenly interested in performance management and finding innovative ways to work with available resources to improve the quality of health service delivery.

photo of Phillip Kasirye Gitta

Phillip Kasirye Gitta, MBchB, MMed
Makerere University College of Health Sciences, Department of Pediatrics

Bio

Phillip Kasirye Gitta holds Masters Degree of Medicine in Paediatrics & Child Health from Makerere University-Kampala, Uganda. He is a Specialist Paediatrician who has worked in several urban and rural, government and nongovernment organization clinical settings. He has specializes in a with a wide range of paediatric disease conditions over the past 9 years including HIV, Malaria, diarrhea and respiratory tract infections, genetic/ hereditary conditions, research and preventive medicine. He currently heads the Mulago Sickle Cell Clinic which is the oldest and largest centre for sickle cell in Uganda. He has participated in many health improvement drives campaigns that have included radio and TV programs on specifically on HIV, sickle cell and hemophilia. He also works as an Honorary Lecturer in the Department of Paediatrics at the national referral and teaching hospital, Mulago Hospital. He has also participated in newborn health programs and trained several workers in both rural and urban areas in Uganda.

photo of Stella Zawedde-Muyanja

Stella Zawedde-Muyanja, MBChB, MPH
Infectious Diseases Institute, Research Department

Bio

Stella Zawedde is a Medical Doctor with 12 years experience in public health. She holds a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBChB) degree from Mbarara University of Science and Technology and a Master’s in Public Health (MPH) from Makerere University Kampala, Uganda. Stella has a special interest in Implementation Science and Health Systems Strengthening. She has worked on several projects to improve healthcare delivery for TB, HIV and Malaria both in the public and the private sector in Uganda. Over the past 3 years, she has become particularly interested in improving care processes for patients with tuberculosis and has worked on two different projects to improve TB Case Detection and Treatment in rural Uganda. She has also worked with a project in Kampala that focused on improving access to TB care services for vulnerable populations living in the slum areas of Kampala and four surrounding districts. Dr. Stella managed all these projects and was responsible for designing and overseeing implementation of interventions, human and financial resources management and creating monitoring and evaluation frameworks.

United States

photo of Ogechi James

Ogechi James, BSN, M.B.B.S, MPH
KEMRI/CDC

Bio

Dr. Ogechi James holds a Bachelor of Nursing degree from Johns Hopkins University Maryland, MD degree from the University of Maiduguri Nigeria, an MPH from New York Medical College Valhalla and a Certificate in Global Health delivery Effectiveness from Harvard University Massachusetts. Dr. James practiced as an MD in the Primary Care setting in Nigeria and Libreville Gabon for several years where she was engaged in Health systems comparism, health education, health promotion and disease prevention especially in HIV/AIDS before going into Public health. As the International Program Manager of an NGO, she designed and implemented extensive health promotion, disease prevention and health education awareness programs intended to reduce HIV/AIDS related stigma that still hold people from getting treatment. Dr.James also, started and managed a health care agency that educated people on effective disease management and health promotion. She is interested in the Task Shifting model of the World Health Organization in order to provide care effectively and efficiently in areas that need it most (maternal and child health and HIV/AIDs). She is as well, interested in monitoring and evaluating programs in order to ensure accountability and positive outcome.

photo of Rache Mureau-Haines

Rache Mureau-Haines, DNP, AGNP, ACCNS
KEMRI/CDC

Bio

Rache Mureau-Haines holds a doctor of nursing practice (DNP) degree from the University of Washington. She is certified as an adult nurse practitioner and critical care clinical nurse specialist. Dr Mureau-Haines has specialized in pain management and delirium prevention and screening. Her interests are in nursing education, and training nurses in implementing evidenced based practice in acute and critical care settings. Dr. Mureau-Haines has also served as an elected officer in the University of Washington Graduate and Professional Student Senate, and as the DNP representative on the School of Nursing Council. Her work there included establishing a mentorship program to foster connections between students and nurses in the community to strengthen nursing visibility.

photo of Joel Njah

Joel Njah, MD, MPH

Bio

Dr. Njah, holds an MD from the University of Yaoundé I and an MPH from the University of Pittsburgh, PA. He has over six years of extensive hospital and community clinical experience working as a primary care physician in Cameroon and as an Obstetrics and Gynecology resident in Zimbabwe. He is currently a PhD candidate in Clinical and Translational Science with appointments as a clinical and translational research associate in the Graduate School of Public Health at the University of Pittsburgh. His research area of interest is on the role of nano-sized extracellular vesicles in health and disease with a focus on idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. This is a progressive, debilitating lung disorder of unknown etiology that currently lacks an effective therapy.

photo of Elizabeth “Liz” O’Hara

Elizabeth “Liz” O’Hara, PharmD

Bio

Liz O’Hara holds a Doctorate of Pharmacy (PharmD) degree from the Medical University of South Carolina, and has completed 3 years of clinical residencies. She is a pharmacist specializing in global health, and her interests revolve around community and public health strategies for health systems strengthening. She has worked extensively in Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs), Maternal Neonatal and Child Health (MNCH), and supply chain management. Liz has practiced in Kenya for the last two years and worked closely with the Chronic Disease Management (CDM) and Pharmacy teams of AMPATH and Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital (MTRH). There she implemented a mobile medication supply for rural clinics, helped expand access to NCD care, as well as worked with novel group care models in both MNCH and NCD management that integrated microfinance, mobile medication and commodities, and health education. In her time with AMPATH she mentored both American and Kenyan students and interns, rounded in the inpatient general wards at MTRH, worked in the anticoagulation and diabetes clinics, and helped grow the Revolving Fund Pharmacy (RFP) model.


2014-2015

Botswana

photo of Gotsang Tshepo Garechaba

Gotsang Tshepo Garechaba, MBChB

Bio

Dr. Garechaba holds a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBChB) from the University of Kwa-Zulu Natal in South Africa. He works as a Principal Medical Officer in the Sbrana Psychiatric Hospital dealing with a whole range of psychiatric conditions. At Sbrana he has served as the coordinator of the Continuing Medical Education (CME) program. His research interests are related to psychiatric patients and public health issues that are currently ravaging Botswana. He is interested in leadership and is a member of a variety of different committees. He is also the chairperson of the Botswana Junior Doctors Association (BOJUDA). He has used his leadership skills to advocate for changes in administration of calls when junior doctors have done call duties.

photo of Tiny Masupe

Tiny Masupe, MBChB, MPH, MSc

Bio

Dr. Masupe is a Lecturer in the Department of Public Health Medicine, School of Medicine at the University of Botswana (UB). She holds a Bachelor’s of Medicine and Surgery (MBChB) from the University of Cardiff and a MPH and a MSc in Occupational Medicine from the University of Manchester. She has worked extensively as a clinician in internal medicine and family medicine before specializing in public health. Her focus at UB has been teaching public health to both undergraduate Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery (MBBS) students and occupational health to postgraduate residents specializing in Public Health Medicine. Her subject areas of interest are occupational health, global health care delivery, and quality improvement within health systems through clinical audits and bioethics. She currently has 5 peer reviewed journal publications and 2 conference papers. She holds the following fellowships: Global health care delivery, Harvard School of Public Health, July 2012; Bi-Fogarty Fellowship in intensive course on bioethics and research ethics, John Hopkins University, July 2011; AusAid Fellow: Building health systems research capacity to evaluate and monitor the implementation of the millennium development goals, University of Newcastle, Australia, November 2013.

photo of Bakhola Motswagole

Bakhola Motswagole, RMRN, MPH

Bio

Ms. Motswagole is a nurse by profession and holds a Master’s degree in Public Health from the University of Leeds. She joined the Health Training Institutions in 1989 as a Staff Development Fellow and then obtained a Bachelor’s Degree in Nursing Education. She has taught at basic and post-basic levels. She was the Head of Department for Advanced Diploma in Community Health Nursing. This program graduated four cohorts and the curriculum is now under review with an aim to upgrade it to Degree level. Ms. Motswagole holds a Diploma in Quality Audits and has been very instrumental and resourceful in establishing quality structures. She is currently Deputy Principal at Institute of Health Sciences-Molepolole.

Kenya

photo of Minnie W. Kibore

Minnie W. Kibore, MBChB, MMe

Bio

Dr. Kibore is a pediatrician with an interest in implementation science particularly in the field of Maternal Neonatal and Child Health. She currently works as the University of Washington (UW) program coordinator for the Medical Education Partnership Initiative (MEPI) program in Kenya, a collaborative partnership with the University of Nairobi that aims to develop a multidisciplinary program focused on medical education, capacity building and strengthening of implementation science research in Maternal Newborn and Child Health (MNCH) in Kenya. She has previously engaged in clinical research on HIV/AIDS and childhood pneumonia, and research in medical education. She is a part of the team that was awarded a USAID Partnerships for Enhanced Engagement in Research (PEER) grant which is studying the impact of a simulation based training program in emergency obstetric and neonatal care on neonatal mortality.

photo of Merina Lekorere

Merina Lekorere, RN, MPH

Bio

Ms. Lekorere is a professional nurse with a master’s degree in public health; specialized in health promotion and international health. She has also completed courses in Epidemiology and Biostatistics and Evidence-Based in Public Health interventions (Japan). Ms. Lekorere worked in a Provincial General Hospital mainly in the Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (MNCH) Department and in the HIV &AIDS Comprehensive Care Center (CCC). Currently, she is working in the National AIDS &STI Control Programme (NASCOP) in Kenya. Her duties involve the development of HIV &AIDS policies, training curricula, implementation manuals and Information, Education and Communication (IEC) Materials. She trains, mentors and supervises health care workers on HIV &AIDS prevention, care and treatment as well as prepares activity budgets and implements them at the national level. Her main interest is strategic leadership in public health programming informed by evidence.

photo of Nzisa Liku

Nzisa Liku MBChB, BSN, MPH

Bio

Dr. Liku received a Bachelor’s in Medicine from the University of Nairobi, Kenya in 2007 and a Master’s in Public Health from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland in 2012. She has worked in both public and private institutions in the Kenyan health system, predominantly in emergency care and general practice. She is the program manager for the Kenya Trauma Registries where she collects data to determine burden of injuries, with a focus on how to improve trauma-related health outcomes and public policy.

photo of Nora Obudho

Nora Obudho, MBChB, MPH

Bio

Dr. Obudho is a public health specialist in HIV programming with a health systems strengthening approach. She is experienced in project cycle management; grant proposal development; HIV technical support; knowledge, policy and advocacy evaluation; and research. She has managed projects funded by USAID, CDC, EU, GF and World Bank. Dr. Obudho has worked as the Deputy Country Director – Programs for Mildmay Kenya (MK); Program Manager/HIV Technical Advisor for Mildmay International Kenya (MIK); Medical Officer – TB/HIV with the International Rescue Committee (IRC); Research Assistant at the Centers for Disease Control and Surveillance/Kenya Medical and Research Institute (CDC/KEMRI); Medical Officer for Ministry of Health (MOH) in Kitale District Hospital and Rift Valley General Provincial Hospital. She attained her Bachelor’s degree of Medicine and Surgery from the University of Nairobi and a Master’s degree in Public Health from Hebrew University, Israel. Other specialized training includes an Executive Health Care Management (EHMP) from Strathmore Business School; Monitoring and Evaluation of Population and Health programs, Population Studies and Research Institute (PSRI) from the University of Nairobi; Gender mainstreaming in health programming- HERAF/KNHRC. Dr. Obudho has also served as a Technical Working group member in various Ministry of Health, HIV-focused working groups.

photo of Edna Tallam

Edna Tallam, BSN, MPH

Bio

Ms. Tallam holds a Master’s of Public Health from Kenyatta University in Kenya and a Bachelor’s degree in Nursing from University of East Africa, Baraton in Kenya. She is a Senior Nursing Officer working at the Orthopedics Department of Kenyatta National Hospital. She provides nursing care to orthopedic patients, coordinates with health care teams to assess, plan, implement and evaluate patients care plans. She is also engaged in the hospital clinical audits in quality improvements and supervises junior staff and nursing students on clinical placement. In addition, she performs administrative and managerial functions, including budget planning, and facilitates continuous professional development through National Nurses Association of Kenya.

Tanzania

photo of Edward Mgelea

Edward Mgelea, MD, MMed

Bio

Dr. Mgelea received his Doctor of Medicine degree in 2007 and his Master’s degree in Paediatric and Child Health from Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences in 2012. He practices as a paediatric physician at Muhimbili National Hospital. His work is focused on leading multiple quality improvement teams to foster quality of care. Dr. Mgelea has over 7 years of clinical experience with concentrations in Maternal and Newborn Care and Paediatrics and Child Health. He previously worked with multiple international partners including Johns Hopkins Program for International Education in Gynaecology and Obstetrics -Tanzania and the Clinton Health Access Initiative-Tanzania as a technical advisor. Currently, he is technical advisor to the Tanzania Health Promotion Support Organization supported by Centres of Disease Control.

photo of Nkundwe Mwakyusa

Nkundwe Mwakyusa, MD, MMed, MPH

Bio

Dr. Mwakyusa is a Medical Doctor with a Master’s of Medicine in Ophthalmology from the Muhimbili University College of Health Sciences, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. She also holds a Master’s of Public Health from the Royal Tropical Institute in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. She is the Manager of the National Eye Care Program with the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare in Tanzania and has extensive experience in the control of Neglected Tropical Diseases. Dr. Mwakyusa was the Focal Point of the Ministry of Health in the National Trachoma baseline survey, which was conducted from 2004 to 2006 in 50 districts in Tanzania. She also facilitated training of teams consisting of eight health workers each from 43 trachoma endemic districts on Mass Drug Administration with Azithromycin, one of the components of the SAFE strategy for trachoma control (SAFE: S=Surgery to correct in-turned eye lashes, A=Antibiotic for treating active infection, F=Face washing, E=Environmental improvement). Dr. Mwakyusa led the process of developing the first (2004-2008) and the second (2011-2016) National Eye Care Strategic plans as well as the designing of two eye care projects in Tanzania: (a) Strengthening Eye Care Coordination, and (b) Strengthening of Child Eye Health. These two projects have contributed significantly in raising the profile of eye care within the health care system in the country. She has also spearheaded the designing of an eye care services management information system including its incorporation into the National Health Management Information System.

photo of Joan Rugemalila

Joan Rugemalila, MD, MMed, DTM&H

Bio

Dr. Rugemalila is a physician working with the Infectious Diseases Unit, Internal Medicine Department at Muhimbili National Hospital. She graduated from Tumaini University with Doctor of Medicine degree in 2006 and qualified as a specialist in Internal Medicine (MMed) in 2013 from Tumaini Makumira University. She also holds a postgraduate diploma of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene from London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Dr. Rugemalila has 6 years’ experience working in clinical practice in management of medical cases, supervising junior doctors in the clinical care of inpatients and outpatients in the Internal Medicine Department. She also participates in research. Dr. Rugemalila has a special interest in clinical research addressing challenges of HIV therapy in resource-limited settings.

photo of Adellah Sariah

Adellah Sariah, BSN, MSc

Bio

Ms. Sariah is an Assistant Lecturer in the Faculty of Nursing at Hubert Kairuki Memorial University (HKMU), Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. She has been involved in classroom and clinical teaching; supervising students during their mental health field work as well as conducting research. She earned her Nursing Degree from Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) in 2007. She acquired her MSc Nursing (Mental Health) from the same university in 2012. She is also a fully registered by the Tanzania Nursing and Midwifery Council. Her interests lie in research, policy development, and mental health promotion.

Uganda

photo of Isaac Kigozi

Isaac Kigozi, MBChB, MMed

Bio

Dr. Kigozi is interested in HIV prevention and management. He is specifically interested in program management and research in HIV and in the use of data generated by clinics and programs in Africa to influence clinical care, inform policy and improve health systems in the African setting. He has experience in drug regulation and research and has coordinated studies on alcohol use in HIV, HIV drug adherence as well as working in a busy HIV clinic. His experience has inspired him to develop advanced research skills so that he can help lead Africa towards improved HIV care, prevention and treatment.

photo of Monica Kuteesa

Monica Kuteesa, MBChB, MIPH

Bio

Dr. Kuteesa a Bachelor’s degree in Human Medicine and Surgery from Mbarara University of Science and Technology in Uganda and a master’s degree in International Public Health from the University of Sydney, Australia. Dr. Kuteesa has 8 years’ experience in the field of HIV/AIDS with expertise in clinical care, program implementation, operational and scientific research. She has conducted studies focusing on gender mainstreaming in PMTCT programs nationally and HIV and ageing. She has conducted various programmatic assessments for reproductive health, TB, malaria and health system strengthening programs sponsored by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. Dr. Kuteesa currently works with the Medical Research Council Uganda/UVRI Research Unit on AIDS as the project leader for the HIV Combination Prevention trial among fisher folk. Her research interests center on the nexus between issues of ageing and HIV, with a focus on age based inequalities in prevention, treatment and care of HIV, access to care and treatment services. She is also interested in HIV prevention among MARPS and underserved populations as well as the association between chronic infections and non-communicable diseases.

photo of Sophie Namasopo

Sophie Namasopo, MBChB, MMed, MPH

Bio

Dr. Namasopo holds a Master’s of Medicine in Paediatrics and Child Health and a Master’s of Public Health from Makerere University. She is a Hospital Director and Consultant Paediatrician involved in policy implementation, public health delivery, program management, advocacy and leadership. Her interests are paediatric infectious diseases, neonatology, health policy adolescent and global health. Dr. Namasopo worked at Jinja Regional Referral Hospital to establish paediatric HIV clinic, special care unit for preterm babies and an Early Infant Diagnosis Care point for follow up of children born to mothers living with HIV. Dr. Namasopo also supported the newly constructed China Uganda Friendship Hospital-Naguru to establish the Department of Paediatrics and Child Health. Currently, in collaboration with researchers from University of Alberta, we are conducting a study on use of Solar Powered Oxygen delivery to children requiring oxygen. We hope this will help to provide life saving oxygen to children in rural areas that are not able to get electricity for oxygen concentrators or with bad roads that make delivery of oxygen cylinders difficult.

United States

photo of Alphoncina J. Kaihura

Alphoncina J. Kaihura, PhD

Bio

Dr. Kaihura received a PhD in Nursing from the University of California San Francisco in 2013. She trained in Tanzania as a registered nurse and midwife from Bugando School of Nursing in 1983, and a Nurse Educator at Muhimbili University of Allied and Health Sciences in 1996. Her research focuses on self-care management of chronic diseases in women living with HIV, especially stigma and quality of life related topics in African women living with HIV. From 1997 to 1998 she was the Principal of Rubya School of Nursing.

photo of Mark Tenforde

Mark Tenforde MD, MPH

Bio

Dr. Tenforde completed his medical school training (MD/MPH) at the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine. He recently finished residency training in internal medicine at The Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland. In medical school, he was involved in HIV education and prevention in Latin America, worked at the GAVI Alliance in Geneva researching vaccine funding mechanisms in low-income countries, and worked with the CDC in Southeast Asia developing a TB infection control package. During residency, his interest continued in TB and HIV. His resident research was in biomarker predictors of incident TB in adults with HIV/AIDS in low- and middle-income countries and included work in Pune, India. He is interested in healthcare delivery systems, disease prevention, and improving disease diagnostics.

photo of Joycelyn Thomas

Joycelyn Thomas, DNP

Bio

Ms. Thomas holds a Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) degree from the University of Washington. She is a nurse practitioner specializing in the care of persons of all ages. Her interests include HIV prevention and care to HIV/AIDS infected individuals, specifically individuals of African descent, pregnant women and children exposed and or infected with HIV/AIDS, and patient provider communication with African Americans. Ms. Thomas worked with the International Maternal Pediatric Adolescent AIDS Clinical Trials at a University of Washington clinical trials site specifically working with seropositive pregnant women and seropositive/exposed infants, children, and youth where she worked to successfully recruit and retain over several years hard to reach populations into NIH clinical trials. For her doctoral project, Ms. Thomas collaborated with a large northwest medical center focusing on improving provider communication with African American patients. As a result of this collaboration, Dr. Thomas developed evidence-based recommendations for implementation into an existing communication-training course for providers to be utilized by the collaborating agency.

photo of Gift-Noelle Wango

Gift-Noelle Wango, BSN, MPH

Bio

Ms. Wango is a Healthcare Management and Policy-trained Critical Care Registered Nurse. She is a member of Sigma Theta Tau International, an honor society for excellence in nursing based on academic or professional excellence. Apart from clinical experience, she has experience in supervising roles as a charge nurse and nurse supervisor. Ms. Wango graduated with honors from California State University Northridge and has a Master’s of Public Health degree in Healthcare Management and Policy from University of California, Los Angeles. For her Master's degree project, she had the opportunity to not only learn what Internal Control Systems are, but also evaluated the Internal Control Systems of Impact Research and Development Organization (IRDO), a local Kenyan Non-Governmental Organization. The subsequent report informed decisions made as IRDO made the transition into their proposed newly restructured operations. Ms. Wango's interests are in Project Management, Policy, Quality/Performance Improvement and Health Systems Strengthening.


2013-2014

Botswana

Thandi Katlholo
Ministry of Health, Botswana

Bio

Thandi Katlholo is a Program Officer for the Botswana National TB Program (BNTP) in the Ministry of Health, where she was charged with coordination of social marketing and communication plans to support the Program’s Strategic Plan. Among her achievements was the development and dissemination of the first BNTP Communication Strategy, 2013-2017, which she managed. Thandi has more than seven years experience in public health practice in behavioral change communication with the United Kingdom National Health Service within the Public Health development service and Ministry of Health, Botswana. She also volunteered with George House Trust, UK, an HIV/AIDS support NGO, from 2006 to 2010. Thandi obtained her Bachelor of Science degree from Manchester Metropolitan University in 2004 and her Master of Science in Public Health and Society from Salford University in 2007 as well as a Certificate in Community Health Training from Blackburn College (2010). Thandi’s interests include program development; behavioral change communication programs and public health policy development.

Onalenna Seitio-Kgokgwe
Ministry of Health, Botswana

Bio

Onalenna is currently based at the Botswana Ministry of Health headquarters, where she supports the development and implementation of the Health Leadership and Management Development Program (HLMDP). HLMDP is a CDC funded program designed to strengthen leadership capacity at various levels of the health system in order to improve health outcomes at a system level. Prior to this assignment, she functioned in various capacitities in the public health sector including lecturer, head of the department for the Family Nurse Practitioner Program, and Deputy Prinicipal at the Institue of Health Sciences-Gaborone, where she was overseeing curriculum implementation for 8 mutlidisciplinary health training programs. Onalenna is a graduate of the University of Botswana (BSn), Johns Hopkins University, USA (MSn), University of Limpopo, South Africa (MPH), and University of Otago, New Zealand (PhD). Her primary research interest lies in the area of health sector reforms and health system performance.  

Rose Sianga
Ministry of Health, Botswana

Bio

Rose Motlalepula Sianga is a Head of Department for the General Nursing Programme at Kanye SDA College of Nursing in Botswana. She is also a registered nurse & midwife and is one of the few Child health nurses in the country. Ms. Sianga obtained her Bachelor of Nursing education from the University of Botswana in 1992 and her Master of Nursing (Child Health) from The Flinders University of South Australia, in 1998. She has a total of 29 years of experience in nursing, including 21 years as a Nurse-Educator. Ms. Sianga has been involved in both classroom and clinical teaching and has taught courses such as Parent and Child health Nursing, Child Health Nursing, Leadership and Management, Family Assessment, and Research. She has also served in various functional committees of the college, including the Institutional Research Review Board, the Research and Publication Committee, and the Examinations Committee. For the past 6 years she has served as a board member of the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Botswana, and she has also been involved in the Workplace Violence Prevention Project, which is run by the Nurses Association of Botswana, as one of the District Team Leaders.  She is very interested in strengthening her skills in research and policy development.

Kenya

Patrick Mburugu,
Kenyatta National Hospital, Kenya

Bio

Patrick M. Mburugu is a consultant paediatrician at Garissa Provincial General Hospital in the Northeast Province of Kenya, where he has served since 2011. He earned his Paediatrics and Child Health specialty from the University of Nairobi (MMed), where he currently serves as adjunct faculty in the College of Health Sciences. He participates in a variety of activities, including clinical work, teaching, research and mentorship. Dr. Mburugu has special interest in program development and implementation, health innovations and research. He hopes to participate in program development and facilitate innovations that will improve health outcomes and shape health policy throughout the region.

Mary Matilu
AMREF, Kenya

Bio

Mary Inziani Matilu is a research officer at the Kenya Medical Research institute (KEMRI), and working towards her specialist registration as a pediatrician at Mbagathi District Hospital. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in Medicine and Surgery and a master’s degree in Medicine, Pediatrics and Child health from the University of Nairobi. She also holds a master’s degree in Tropical Medicine from Nagasaki University, Japan. She has eleven years of experience in clinical medicine. Mary is an early career scientist at the Centre for Virus Research at KEMRI. Her interests are in infectious diseases, especially pediatric HIV and arbovirus research. Currently, she is practices clinical medicine in the Department of Pediatrics at Mbagathi District Hospital where she trains and mentors junior doctors, clinical officers, nurses and nutritionists. She is a co-PI on a proposal seeking to determine factors that hinder adherence to treatment for children with clubfoot, a study that will be funded with seed money by the Micro-Research group. Mary is also involved in developing a protocol for a study that will assess innate immune functions in children with moderate acute malnutrition during nutritional recovery. Through participation in the Afya Bora Fellowship, she hopes to form networks and collaborations, as she establishes her research and mentoring career.

Samson Mugane
Family Health International (FHI), Kenya

Bio

Dr. Mugane is a Paediatrician working with the Kenyan Ministry of Health. He is currently stationed in Mwingi District Hospital, where he has been working for nearly three years. In addition to his clinical work, Dr. Mugane has much experience in hospital administration and leadership. He served as Medical Superintendent of the hospital for a period of one and half years from October 2011 to May 2013. During his tenure, he was credited with forging strong partnerships with NGOs and other partner organizations working in the health sector. These collaborations have led to improved service delivery in the facility and recognition of the hospital as a Centre of Excellence in HIV/AIDS Care by the International Center for Aids Care Program (ICAP). Prior to his work at Mwingi District Hospital, he served as Medical Officer in-charge of a hospital and later as District Medical Officer for 3 years, where he was responsible for overseeing health services in Tigania West District. His interests lie in project management and clinical and operational research.   

Caroline Kosgei
Ministry of Health, National AIDS & STI Control Program (NASCOP), Kenya

Bio

Dr. Kosgei is a paediatrician practicing at Gertrude’s Children’s Hospital in Nairobi, Kenya. She graduated from Moi University, Eldoret, in 2004 with an MBChB and subsequently completed a yearlong internship at Kenyatta National Hospital. She then began working with the Academic Model for the Prevention and Treatment of HIV (AMPATH) at the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital for three years. Thereafter, she pursued her Master of Medicine (MMed) degree in Pediatrics and Child Health. Her main interests currently are in paediatric HIV.

Richard Cherutich
Centers for Disease Control, Nairobi, Kenya

Bio

Richard Cherutich currently serves as a Nursing Officer working at Kenyatta National Teaching and Referral Hospital (KNH), where he coordinates research and mentors junior research colleagues. He holds a Master’s in Public Health from Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology and a Bachelor’s of Science in Nursing from Aga Khan University – Kenya campus. In addition, he has undertaken training and short courses in Principles of HIV research at the University of Nairobi, Clinical Management of HIV from the Department of Global Health at the University of Washington, and Fundamentals of Project Management from the organization Project Management for Development Organizations. Since 2009, Richard has been involved in array of tasks, including analysis and written reports concerning voluntary testing and counseling and clinical audits and policy changes at KNH. He also has taken part in orientating and mentoring the newly posted staff, coordinating and facilitating continuous education and professional development among the staff in seminars/workshops, and writing standard operating procedures and research protocols. Richard’s main interests are in HIV/AIDS, disease control, epidemiology and the use of computer technologies in health care and research.

Tanzania

Noor Ramadhani
Management and Development for Health (MDH), Tanzania

Bio

Dr. Ramadhani Abdallah Noor is a physician with a background in Public Health. Noor is currently working as a Research Associate with the Africa Academy for Public Health (AAPH), a partner organization to Management Development for Health (MDH) in Tanzania. In this position, he manages a clinical trial unit for the Harvard School of Public Health’s (HSPH) collaborative trials, focusing mostly on Malaria prevention. He studied Public Health at HSPH and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. He is internationally certified by the Association of Clinical Research Professionals (ACRP, USA), demonstrating his ability to be actively involved in clinical trial sites, development, coordination, and leading international research consortia. He has worked as a coordinator and manager of various integrated projects focusing on health research; Noor has acquired capacity and capabilities to manage tightly regulated multi-centered international trials in Africa, in conformity with applicable international standards. Previously, he served as a research associate with the Departments of Nutrition and, later, Global Health & Population at the Harvard School of Public Health. He has experience in Nutrition, Vaccinology, Malaria, TB and HIV-related research. 

Alfred Meremo
AMREF, Tanzania

Bio

Alfred Meremo is a lecturer in the Internal Medicine Department at School of Medicine at University of Dodoma (UDOM) in Tanzania. In his current position, he is involved in teaching, supervising elective studies and offering bedside teaching to medical students, as well as conducting research. He also heads the UDOM Haemodialysis Unit and conducts ward rounds and manages specialty clinics at the UDOM Medical Center. He earned his medical degree (MD) from Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences in 2008.  He acquired his Internal Medicine specialty (MMed) from the Catholic University of Health and Allied Sciences in 2012 and is fully registered as specialist physician with the Medical Council of Tanganyika. Her research interests include infectious diseases, especially HIV and STDs, and Global Health research ethics.Her research interests include infectious diseases, especially HIV and STDs, and Global Health research ethics.Her research interests include infectious diseases, especially HIV and STDs, and Global Health research ethics.His research interests include Nephrology and Infectious Diseases, such as HIV/AIDS, TB, and Malaria.

Benedicta Masanja
Ministry of Health, Tanzania

Bio

Benedicta Masanja is the Technical Director at Tanzania Health Promotion Support (THPS), an indigenous Tanzanian NGO which supports the Government of Tanzania, through the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare in delivering comprehensive quality HIV and AIDS prevention, care and treatment services currently in Pwani and Mtwara regions. She provides technical guidance and oversees clinical HIV and AIDS care, including adult and paediatric HIV care and treatment, pharmacy and laboratory systems, reproductive and child health, namely PMTCT and Early Infant Diagnosis of HIV. Additionally, she supervises cervical cancer screening, adherence and psychosocial support, and tuberculosis/HIV and monitoring and evaluation. She received her Doctor of Medicine degree in 2001 from the University of Dar es Salaam and qualified as a specialist in Internal Medicine (MMed) during 2008 at Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS). Benedicta also holds a Masters in Public Health Methodology from Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB) in Belgium. She has over 10 years experience within the health sector in Tanzania and has worked in various capacities in rural and urban settings to promote health through clinical and public health work. She initially managed the first PMTCT Plus program in Mbeya, one of the first regions in Tanzania to implement a PMTCT program. Before joining THPS, Benedicta served as Senior Technical Officer for Quality Improvement of Clinical Services with Family Health International (now FHI360), where one of her primary efforts was a Quality Improvement program to strengthen the continuum of care for HIV/AIDS patients.

Joshua Garrison
Management and Development for Health (MDH), Tanzania

Bio

Dr. Joshua is an Obstetrician/Gynaecologyist with a background in Public Health, serving with the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare of Tanzania. He was educated at three different universities in Tanzania, including the Hubert Kairuki Memorial University (MD), International Medical and Technological University (MPH) and Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MMed-OB/GYN). He serves in a Ministry of Health attachment post at Machame Hospital in the Kilimanjaro Region of Northern Tanzania were he is a Program Manager for the HIV/AIDS control program and a Clinician in the OB/GYN Ward. Dr. Joshua is also a full time lecturer at Machame Clinical Officers’ Training College. 

Uganda

Cordelia Katureebe
Ministry of Health, Uganda

Bio

Cordelia Katureebe-Mboijana is a Paediatrician with 12 years of experience in HIV/AIDS care with expertise in the areas of PMTCT, early infant diagnosis, pediatric and Adolescent HIV care and ART. She has engaged in program planning, implementation, and monitoring for PMTCT and Peadiatric HIV programs. She received her MBChB from Mbarara University of Science and Technology and Masters of Medicine (Pediatrics and Child Health) from Makerere University in Uganda. She also holds a Post Graduate Diploma in Clinical Trials from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. She is currently working as a Senior Technical Advisor for EMTCT and Peadiatric HIV with the SUSTAIN project, a USAID funded project supporting 16 public hospitals in Uganda in comprehensive HIV care and treatment. Here, she provides strategic technical guidance for strengthening hospital health systems for the successful implementation of EMTCT and Peadiatric HIV services in line with the National standards as well as leading quality improvement initiatives and operations research. She also carries with her experience in training, mentoring and developing of clinical protocols and has served as a national trainer and member of the National EID sub-committee.

Tom Ngabirano,
Infectious Disease Institute, Research Department

Bio

Tom Ngbairano is a lecturer in the Department of Nursing at the Makerere University College of Health Sciences.  Tom has also worked at Program for Accessible Health, Communication and Education (PACE) in the Women’s Health Program. At PACE, he coordinated a Reproductive Health Program in 13 districts of central Uganda, which trained Health Workers in long-term methods of family planning. Through this program, family planning services were availed to thousands of women, especially those in semi-urban and rural areas.  Tom is a specialist in adult health Nursing and has had additional trainings in Public Health Leadership, Health Systems Research, and Family Planning. Tom is interested in conducting research to determine the psychosocial adaptation and coping abilities in persons living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) and how these abilities can be enhanced to improve the quality of life of PLWHA. He is also interested in developing tools for use in health sciences research and teaching.

Dan Senjovu
Infectious Disease Institute, Training Department

Bio

Dan Senjovu is a senior medical doctor at the Infectious Diseases Institute where he is responsible for steering institutional development and the coordination of trainings. He has more than 5 years of training in malaria and HIV, and he is also a project manager for a health system strengthening project that is purposed to improve the capacity of mid-level health practitioners to properly manage TB and HIV. He previously served as the medical superintendent of a district hospital and a health coordinator in refugee settlement. He is an international trainer and has been involved in policy formulation on integrating the use malaria Rapid Diagnostic Tests in the routine service delivery.  He is interested in system strengthening research and entrepreneurship.

Hilda Tibenderana
PEPFAR, UPDF ART Program

Bio

Hilda Tibenderana earned her MBChB from Mbarara University in 2001 and her MPH from Melbourne University, Australia, in 2008. She is currently working as a Senior Program officer with Research Triangle Institute International (RTI). RTIs activities are aimed at increasing access to and utilization of comprehensive HIV care and treatment services among Ugandan military personnel and their families. She supports the planning, budgeting, implementation and evaluation of a number of program activities at RTI. She is also involved in capacity building, health system strengthening and quality improvement initiatives. Hilda has also been involved in HIV/AIDS research activities and has presented her findings at both local and international forums.

United States

Olivia Bahemuka
Ministry of Health, Uganda

Bio

Olivia Bahemuka received her Doctor of Nursing (DNP) at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) and has been employed at UAB Hospital in the capacity of the Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS) for Hematology-Oncology & Bone Marrow Transplant. She has expertise in nursing practice and nursing education, including staff development and patient education. She has also been involved in nursing leadership, administration, preceptor development and nursing mentorship programs in the inpatient setting at various hospitals. As a CNS she has managed, trained and developed nurses at the bedside in evidence-based practice and process improvement projects. While at the North Carolina Area Health Education Center Program, she worked to develop a regional curriculum for continuing nursing education and was also involved in grant management and community program development. She has led numerous interdisciplinary medical teams to work on a voluntary basis in Uganda for over 15 years, starting from her nursing school days. She has held positions on the North Carolina Nurses Association, Central Alabama Chapter Oncology Nurses Association (CACONS) and has served one term as board member on the Uganda North American Association (UNAA) national board. She is a member of Sigma Theta Tau International Society, Transcultural Nursing Society, American Nurses Association, and the Healthcare Educators of Alabama (HEAL).

Alexander Billioux
Ugandan Virus Research Institute/RAKA

Bio

Alex is a physician with an interest and experience in public health and human rights work. He has worked in India, Haiti, Guatemala, and South Africa, and his research has ranged from studying HIV-related stigma amongst rural and urban Indian men to TB surveillance through post-mortem case finding in South Africa. He completed medical school and the Osler Internal Medicine Residency at Johns Hopkins Hospital. Prior to his medical training, he conducted his doctoral research on tumor growth factors and chaperone proteins at the University of Oxford, through the Marshall Scholarship. Through the Afya Bora Fellowship, Alex hopes to gain experience in working with ministries of health and donors to scale up and evaluate effective public health projects.

Kristen Hosey
I-TECH, Kenya and ESACON, Kenya

Bio

Dr. Hosey is a Fellow with the Afya Bora Consortium in global health leadership. She received her Doctorate of Nursing Practice in Community Health Nursing at the University of Washington in 2013, and her Bachelor of Science in Nursing in 2007 from UNC Charlotte. She is an experienced nurse educator, and has demonstrated leadership in policy and advocacy through her appointment as the Secretary of the University of Washington Graduate Student Senate and as the Vice President of the University Bookstore Board of Trustees. Dr. Hosey is currently working in Kenya with I-TECH on the development and implementation of a gender-based violence information system.


2012-2013

Botswana

Mabel Magowe
I-Tech Botswana

Bio

Mabel Magowe is a lecturer and coordinator for the integration of HIV and AIDS into UB curricula in the School of Nursing at the University of Botswana (UB). She conducts workshops for lecturers in HIV/AIDS content and in curriculum integration to enable them to integrate and teach relevant HIV/AIDS content in their respective programmes. Dr. Magowe obtained a Diploma in General Nursing (1979) and Midwifery (1980), a Bachelor of Nursing Education (1986), Master of Nursing Science with specialty in Midwifery (1992), and a PhD in Nursing (2008) with research focus on HIV prevention and behavior change. Her dissertation focused on development and psychometric evaluation of instruments on safer sex communication for young Botswana women and their male sexual partners. She is currently involved in a risk reduction and HIV/STI and Pregnancy prevention intervention for adolescents in Botswana, which replicates a “Being a Responsible Teen” (BART) intervention that worked for adolescents in the US.

Ludo Nkhwalume
I-Tech Botswana

Bio

Ludo K. Nkhwalume is the Head of Department for the General Nursing program in the Institute of Health Sciences Francistown in Botswana. She holds a Master of Philosophy in International Community Health from the University of Oslo and a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) from Howard University in Washington DC. Ludo has worked for over 12 years in Nyangabgwe Referral Hospital as a Registered Nurse-Midwife up to 1999; there after she joined the Institute of Health Sciences Francistown as a Lecturer to date. As Head of Department, her responsibilities include ensuring that all programmes are planned for, implemented and evaluated in accordance with the Ministry of Health‘s policies and goals in order to meet the set targets within the National Development Plan.

Vincent Setlhare
Ministry of Health

Bio

Vincent Setlhare received his MD from the University of Dar es Salaam and interned at Princess Marina Hospital in Botswana. After internship, Dr. Setlhare set up a private practice in rural Botswana providing primary health care. He then received his Masters in Business Administration (MBA) from University of Botswana. Later he enrolled as a Family Medicine resident at the University of the Witwatersrand. During this time, the HIV/AIDS epidemic became fully blown in Botswana, and it inspired Dr. Setlhare to choose the research topic “The experiences of people living with HIV/AIDS” for his Masters degree. Two years ago, Dr. Setlhare joined the University of Botswana School of Medicine, where he is currently the Acting Head of the Department of Family Medicine.

Neo Tamuhla
Ministry of Health

Bio

Neo Tamuhla is from Botswana, and is a nurse by profession (General Nursing and Midwifery) and has a Master’s of Public Health Degree. Neo Tamuhla currently works for Botswana-UPenn Partnership as a Programme Research Coordinator for Bisson Studies, and has recently been given the position of BUP Research Compliance Officer.

Kenya

Amos Ayunga
Kenyatta National Hospital, CCC

Bio

Dr. Amos Ayunga is a consultant physician at Garissa Provincial Hospital, and has been working with the Ministry of Health in Kenya since completing his undergraduate degree at the University of Nairobi in 2002. He also holds a Masters degree in internal medicine which he completed in 2009. He has been adjunct faculty for the University of Nairobi students rotating through the hospital under the programme of PRIME-K, and teaches at Mt Kenya University on a part-time basis. Dr. Amos is interested in sub-specializing in international public health and carrying out major international research programmes on HIV/AIDS and non-communicable diseases.

Angeline Chepchirchir
Family Health International

Bio

Angeline Chepchirchir is a lecturer at the school of Nursing Sciences, University of Nairobi. She completed her undergraduate degree (Bachelor of Science in Nursing) in 2000 and Master’s degree in Medical Microbiology in 2007, both from the University of Nairobi. She is a nurse practitioner, trainer and researcher. Angeline has a wide exposure in research methods through training, academic work and community diagnosis. She has been involved in teaching and supervision of students for the last seven (7) years to include clinical work, community diagnosis and research projects. Angeline has undertaken research in the fields of mycology (superficial fungal infections), intimate partner violence, nursing informatics, and community awareness on vesico vaginal fistula. Her interest is to build on the scientific research skills and to undertake quality research to improve health outcomes and shape policy.

Harun Kimani
Ministry of Health Kenya, NASCOP

Bio

Harun Kimani is a lecturer in the School of Public Health in Kenyatta University, Kenya where he teaches community health and biostatistics to medical students. He is also a graduate student in the Institute of Tropical Medicine and Infectious Diseases (ITROMID) at JKUAT. His PhD thesis is entitled ‘Determinants of delivery by skilled birth attendants: A cohort study of pregnant women in Mbooni district’. Kimani studied medicine in Nairobi University between 1987 and 1992 and did a Masters in Public Health at Moi University in 2000. He has worked for many years in the ministry of health in Kenya rising to the level of District Medical Officer of Health. Kimani is interested in designing affordable maternal health programmes in resource poor setting, and his research interest is in the area of maternal health.

Koki Muli–Kinagwi
AMREF-Kenya, HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria Programme

Bio

Koki Muli-Kinagwi is a medical doctor with over 11 years experience in health care. She also holds a Master’s degree in Public Health from the University of Nairobi. She works with the African Medical Research Foundation (AMREF), the largest non-governmental health organization based in Africa, as the Kenyan HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria programme manager providing administrative and technical leadership and management of projects. Prior to this she was the project manager for the CDC-funded Kibera HIV prevention, care and treatment project based in the Kibera slums of Nairobi. She also previously worked as the director of AfriAfya- a Kenyan health knowledge management organization. Koki has experience in project management and leadership as well as knowledge management and documentation. Her interests are in programme management and health systems strengthening.

Dennis Magu
Family Health International

Bio

Dennis Gichobi Magu is a researcher and trainer at Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH) and Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI). Dr. Magu graduated from Aga Khan University-Hospital in 2006 with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing and in 2009 completed a Master’s Degree in Public Health at Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology (JKUAT) in collaboration with Institute of Tropical Medicine and Infectious Diseases (ITROMID). In 2012 he received his Ph.D. in Epidemiology from JKUAT. As a trained researcher he has conducted nationally funded collaborative surveys (such as Kenya National Micro Nutrient Survey (KNMS) and substance abuse and sexual risky related behaviors among the youth in Kenya) and worked in HIV research, presenting findings and publications in international forums and conferences. In addition, Dr. Magu is an accredited Trainer of Trainers by Ministry for Public Health and sanitation in Kenya, having trained students on HIV epidemiology and research.

Winnie Mwangi
CDC Kisumu, Malaria in Pregnancy Division

Bio

Winfred Mwangi is an obstetrician and gynaecologist at Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Eldoret, Kenya. Dr. Mwangi graduated from Moi University with an MBChB in Medicine and Surgery and completed a Masters in Obstetrics and Gynaecology at the University of Nairobi in 2011. She presented her thesis entitled “Utility of surrogate markers for CD4 Count among HIV infected pregnant women in western Kenya” at the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) conference in 2011. Currently, Dr. Mwangi is involved in offering clinical care, including ART for pregnant women and cancer of cervix screening and treatment for HIV positive women, through the AMPATH program. She is an honorary Lecturer at the Moi University School of Medicine. Her research interests include infectious diseases, especially HIV and STDs, and Global Health research ethics.

Tanzania

Mathias Issuja
Ministry of Health Tanzania, NACP

Bio

Mathias Abuya is the country director of Jesse Rhode Foundation in Tanzania and a pediatrics complex manager at Shirati Hospital in Mara region -Tanzania. He is the clinical instructor at the department of Pediatrics Health and HIV/AIDS counseling. Mathias has 3 years of professional experience in HIV/AIDS and TB case management and over five years of community health education. That is inclusive of providing technical assistance for leadership, strategic planning on hospital development and monitoring & evaluation for medical nursing students as well as medical doctors’ education programs as interns or exchange program students from the United State of America (Touro University). He holds a Masters of Public Health from the International Medical and Technological University (2011), Bachelor of Science in Medicine from Hubert Kairuki Memorial University (2009), and Diploma in Clinical Medicine from Mvumi College of Clinical Medicine Dodoma (2002).

Jairy Khanga
AMREF Tanzania, Monitoring & Evaluation Division

Bio

Jairy Khanga works for Mbeya City Council as a Medical Officer in charge of the city hospital. Dr. Khanga has over 10 years of experience in health management system and service delivery in the areas of human resource management, financial management, health planning and coordination, monitoring and evaluation, program management and training. He also has experience in working with government and non-government organizations in various management aspects such as Reproductive and Child Health, OVC programs, CTC for HIV/AIDS, CBDA for family planning methods and Monitoring and Evaluation. Dr Khanga holds a Master of Public Health degree from Tumaini University, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical College, Tanzania and Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) from International Medical and Technological University based in Dar es Salaam. He also has a certificate in Family Planning Service Provision from Exeter University in United Kingdom, and Leadership Skills studied in Tanzania.

Angela Ramadhani
Benjamin Mkapa HIV/AIDS Foundation

Bio

Dr. Ramadhani is a Medical doctor and a Public Health specialist, with more than fifteen (15) years working experience in the Health sector. She has spent ten years working in the area of HIV and AIDS and Reproductive and Child Health Section in The Ministry of Health and Social Welfare (MoHSW). For the past 18 months she has been the Programme Manager for the National AIDS Control Programme (NACP) where she is leading the health sector response to HIV and AIDS. Prior to joining the NACP she spent 8 years in PMTCT work, where she was the first National Coordinator for Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission of HIV Services (PMTCT).

Hellen Siril
MUHAS-MDH

Bio

Hellen Neema Siril is a Public Health Evaluations Coordinator in the department of strategy information at the Management and Development for Health (MDH) organization. Dr. Siril graduated from Mbarara University of Science and Technology-Uganda with a Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery (MBChB) in 2004. She then worked as a physician in Uganda before moving to Tanzania to work as a HIV care clinic manager and a study physician. In 2008 she completed a Master’s degree in Public Health at Harvard School of Public Health with a thesis work titled “Modeling of Pandemic flue Boston USA.” Later, she joined the MDH HIV care program in Tanzania as a health care quality improvement program manager, then switched to head a new unit of Public Health Evaluations. Dr. Siril has over 5 years experience of clinical management of HIV infected patients, research and health care quality improvement approaches. Dr. Siril is interested in public health systems reform in developing countries.

Uganda

Joel Bazira
Infectious Disease Institute

Bio

Joel Bazira is a researcher, Clinical Microbiologist and Senior Lecturer in the department of Microbiology in the faculty of Medicine at Mbarara University of Science and Technology. He holds an MBChB and PhD in Molecular Epidemiology of Tuberculosis from Mbarara University of Science and Technology in Uganda, as well as a Master of Medicine in Microbiology/Immunology from University of Dar es Salaam. Dr. Bazira is a recipient of a German Academic Exchange Scholarship (DAAD) in 2006, a World Health Organization/ Tropical Disease Training grant (which funded his PhD study) in 2007, and an HIV research Trust Fellowship in 2008 to study methods of improving diagnosis of tuberculosis among HIV infected individuals.

Peter Elyanu
Ministry of Health Uganda

Bio

Peter Elyanu is a pediatrician with 11 years experience as a doctor and 5 years experience in planning, implementing and monitoring Paediatric HIV/AIDs programs at the health facility, district, and national levels. He received his Bachelor of Medicine & Bachelor of Surgery and Masters of Medicine (Pediatrics and Child Health) from Makerere University in Kampala. Currently, Dr. Elyanu provides strategic and technical leadership and guidance at national level for strengthening systems to scale-up paediatric HIV/AIDS care and treatment. He is also highly experienced in training and mentoring facility teams and health care workers on various health initiatives.

Christine Mugasha
Infectious Disease Institute, Outreach Department

Bio

Christine Mugasha is a paediatrician working at Infectious Disease Institute in the outreach department. The outreach department houses projects focusing on health systems strengthening and capacity building for local governments and community based organizations. She supports grant writing, planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation. The main technical areas she supports include paediatric care and treatment, as well as PMTCT.

Charles Osingada
Ministry of Health Uganda

Bio

Charles Osingada is Assistant Lecturer in the Department of Nursing at Makerere University College of Health Sciences. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) from Makerere University and Master of Arts in Bioethics from Case Western Reserve University. In January 2012, he obtained a Master of Public Health from Makerere University. His dissertation was on determinants of malaria prevalence among pregnant women in two sub-counties of Kumi district in Uganda. Charles Osingada has served as a Head of Department of Nursing at Makerere University and has taught in the same department for eight years. He is also a member of the Bioethics Working Group- an association of Ugandans trained in bioethics. He has participated in conducting trainings in research and clinical ethics. Charles has special interest in the areas of program design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation.

United States

Jaclyn Hagon
I-TECH Botswana

Bio

Jaclyn Hagon received her Master's degree from the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) in 2012. As part of the Advanced Practice Public Health Nurse specialty, Jaclyn honed her interest in infectious diseases through completing an academic minor and clinical residency in HIV/AIDS care, as well as participating in malaria research in Zanzibar, Tanzania. As a Master's student she assisted in the development of a community-based HIV medication adherence program. She has also spent time working globally in Guatemala, Haiti and Tanzania. These experiences have shaped her specific interests in global health, which include program development and evaluation addressing infectious diseases. In addition to academics, Jaclyn has worked for the last four years as a clinical nurse in the emergency department.

Jason Madrano
I-TECH Kenya

Bio

Jason Madrano holds a doctor of nursing practice (DNP) degree from the University of Washington. He is a community health nurse specializing in cross-cultural and global health, and his interests lie at the intersection of health, technology, and policy. Jason worked with the city and county health department to plan, implement, and evaluate a number of programs on text messaging (SMS), including vaccination reminders, employee communications, emergency messages for the Deaf community, and treatment and appointment reminders for the county TB clinic. Dr. Madrano also managed a database to track patients for a community primary care clinic serving uninsured patients. He used the database to create clinical treatment reminders, as well as monitoring and evaluation of health, disease, and treatment measures at the patient and the clinic levels.


2011-2012

Botswana

Onalenna Lemo, BSN, MS, MPA

Bio

Onalenna Lemo is employed by the Nurses Association of Botswana as Project Coordinator for the Care of the Carers Program funded by BOTUSA through the CDC. The program coordinates and trains health care workers in the formation of support groups to promote and enhance their wellbeing. She holds an MSc in Community Health Nursing from Wayne State University (USA). During this period of study, Onalenna worked as a volunteer for the Junior League of Detroit at the Detroit AIDS Consortium. In 2009, she completed an MPA from the University of Botswana. She taught at the National Health Institute for 17 years were she has developed some of the crop of nursing leaders, was later deployed to head the Health Manpower Recruitment, Deployment and Utilisation Unit of the Ministry of Health for five years. She moved to the Performance Improvement Unit of the Ministry of Health were she took up the position of Deputy Performance Improvement Coordinator installing and monitoring systems for national health care delivery in Botswana. Onalenna’ scholarly interests are in strategic management and leadership, health policy, and primary health care.

Hildah Molate, BSN, MPH

Bio

Hildah Molate is a Senior Nursing Officer in Princess Marina Hospital (Botswana Government-Ministry of Health) and has been a nurse for the past 18 years, specializing in Community Mental Health (Psychiatric) Nursing. Hildah holds a Master’s of Public Health, from Curtin University of Technology (Australia), a Bachelor of Nursing Science (University of Botswana), Post-graduate Diploma in Community Mental Health and a Diploma in General Nursing (University of Botswana). Hildah Molate currently heads the Psychiatric Unit in Princess Marina Hospital and a member of the performance improvement committee, which oversees the overall performance in the hospital and spearheading the accreditation process of Princess Marina Hospital with the Council of Health Services Accreditation of Southern Africa (COHSASA). Hildah’s scholarly interest is in international health.

Opelo M. Rankopo, BSN, MSN

Bio

Ms. Rankopo is a Clinical Practice Officer at the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Botswana, Ministry of Health. She is a nurse with extensive experience in clinical practice at primary health care and tertiary care levels. She received both Master and Bachelor of Nursing degrees from Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane, Australia; diploma in General Nursing and Midwifery respectively from Institute of Health Sciences in Gaborone. Ms. Rankopo served ten years in the public service, two years in a government-aided facility, and six in the private sector. She worked in clinics and hospitals before joining the training institute working as a Nurse Lecturer. In 2004, she worked as a Clinical Data Coordinator responsible for collecting, editing, retrieving, and analyzing clinical data in an HIV/AIDS clinic (Botswana Baylor Children’s Clinical Centre of Excellence). In 2008, Ms. Opelo Rankopo joined the Ministry of Health at the Nursing and Midwifery Council of Botswana as a clinical practice officer responsible for the establishment and enforcement of policies, procedures and standards for nursing and midwifery practice in Botswana.

Lillian Lemo Segwagwe, BSN, MS

Bio

Lillian Lemo Segwagwe works as Head of the Department for Family Nurse Practice Program at Kanye SDA College of Nursing in Botswana. After completing her diploma in General Nursing in 1986, she went to Gaborone Institute of Health Sciences to pursue her Diploma in Midwifery. Ms. Segwagwe graduated in July 1987 and worked at Kanye SDA Hospital as a Registered Nurse. She served as an Assistant Lecturer at Kanye SDA College of Nursing from September 1988 to July 1991. In 1991 she went to Virginia Commonwealth University/Medical College of Virginia for her Bachelor of Science in Nursing and minor in Education; graduated in 1993 and joined Francistown Institute of Health as a Lecturer. In 1995 she went back to do a Master of Science in Nursing and minor in Education. She is an adult health generalist and she can function as a clinical specialist and also as a nurse practitioner. Her training also prepared her to work as a case manager. After graduation, she returned to Francistown Institute of Health for two years and then returned to Kanye SDA College of Nursing where she was given a post of Senior Lecturer. Heading the General Nursing Program for seven years, Segwagwe was assigned to pioneer the Family Nurse Practice Program in 2005. Apart from working as Head of Department, she actively provides direct care to patients in primary healthcare settings. She has also served as a Chairperson of Registration Committee for Botswana Nursing and Midwifery Council for three years from 2007 to 2009. Her dream is to pursue Doctorate in Management or Public Health.

Kenya

Sarah Bett, BSc, MPH, MSc Nursing

Bio

Sarah Bett is a nursing officer at Kenyatta National Teaching and Referral Hospital in Kenya. She worked as a staff nurse at various hospitals including Aga Khan University Hospital and Nairobi Hospital before completing her Master’s in Public health at the University of Nairobi in Kenya. In addition, she completed a Master’s of Science in Nursing (Pediatric) in 2009 from the University of Nairobi. At Kenyatta, she is responsible for clinical teaching for the students, and coordinating continuous medical education, research, and clinical audit in the pediatric department, as well as unit management. Sarah’s main interest is pediatrics, public health and epidemiology.

James M. Gitau, MBChB, MMed

Bio

James Gitau graduated from Moi University in 2001 with a degree in Medicine and Surgery (MBChB). He was posted to Nakuru Provincial Hospital in the same year to fulfill his one-year statutory internship requirement before full registration by the Medical Board in Kenya. In 2002, he moved onto Lodwar District Hospital in Northern Kenya as a medical officer where he stayed until 2004. He subsequently joined the University of Nairobi to pursue studies leading to a Master’s degree in 2008 in Pediatric Medicine. James then went to Garissa Provincial Hospital in North Eastern Kenya as a pediatrician. He has a major interest in research and is keen to uphold evidence-based medicine as the key to providing quality healthcare.

Lucy Kabare, MBChB, MMed

Bio

Lucy Kabare is a consultant obstetrician, gynecologist, and honorary lecturer at the University of Nairobi. She was educated at the University of Nairobi where she received both MBChB and MMed in Obstetrics and Gynecology and also earned a postgraduate diploma in STI there. She has worked as a medical officer for six years in various hospitals. She is currently working toward a PhD in Public Health at the Jomo Kenyatta University. Her scholarly interest is in reproductive health.

Eddah Karijo, BSc Nursing, MPH

Bio

Eddah Karijo is a nursing officer at Kenyatta National, Teaching, and Referral Hospital where she has worked since 2006. In 2006, Eddah resigned from the Nairobi Hospital where she had served as a clinical trainer to nursing students and a preceptor to newly employed nurses in Maia Cabbery Floor (MCF) since 2005. Eddah worked at Consolata Mission Hospital and was responsible for managing both the medical and maternity wards. Eddah successfully implemented the PMTCT project by Catholic Medical Mission Board at Consolata Mission Hospital. Eddah studied community health nursing at St. Luke’s School of Nursing and a received a Higher Diploma in HIV/AIDS management and control at Kenyatta University. Eddah received a Bachelor of Science degree in Nursing from Aga Khan University and then enrolled in a Master’s degree in Public Health (Monitoring and Evaluation) at Kenyatta University. Eddah has conducted a research in PMTCT and has been involved in a Baseline survey of maternal newborn child health (MNCH) with AMREF. Her current thesis is on “Data quality from the health management information system”. Eddah’s scholarly interests include HIV/AIDS and health information systems.

Nerry J. Kittur, BSc Nursing, MPH

Bio

Nerry Kittur is currently a nursing officer coordinating infection prevention and control activities at Kenyatta National Hospital. She previously served at the Department of Surgery as a training coordinator between 2004 and 2009 in the same institution. Nerry holds a Master’s in Public Health from the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology and a Bachelor’s of Science degree in Nursing from University of Eastern Africa, Baraton. She also holds a postgraduate diploma in Healthcare Management from Kenya Institute of Management. Since 2004, Nerry has participated in research, coordinated continuous professional development among nurses at Kenyatta National Hospital. Nerry is interested in disease control and epidemiology, specifically in the field of HIV and AIDS.

Samuel W. Ndungu, MBChB, MMed

Bio

Samuel W. Ndungu is an obstetrician & gynecologist at Mbagathi District Hospital in Nairobi. He is in charge of the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology and is involved in the training of medical officer interns and clinical officer interns. He was the Medical Superintendent of Maralal District Hospital. Samuel was educated at University of Nairobi’s School of Medicine, where he received a Bachelor’s degree in Medicine & Surgery and a Master’s degree in Obstetrics & Gynecology. Samuel has a major interest in HIV/AIDS research. He was one of the study doctors in the Kesho Bora ( ‘A better tomorrow’ in Swahili) PMTCT study, a multi-center randomized controlled trial that compared various PMTCT regimes.

Kenneth Ngure, BSc Nursing, MSc, MPH, PhD

Bio

Mr. Ngure is the study coordinator for the UW collaborative Partners PrEP Study at the Thika Site, Kenya. Before joining the PrEP study team, Kenneth worked as a study coordinator for the UW HIV-HSV2 Transmission Clinical Trial. From 2004 to2005, he served as Program Director for the Organization of African First Ladies Against AIDS (OAFLA) where he coordinated programs which focused on HIV prevention, treatment, care and support among women, orphans, and vulnerable children in Kenya. He is currently completing his PhD in Public Health at the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, and an MSc in Clinical Trials from the University of London. Kenneth was recently awarded the African Doctoral Dissertation Research Fellowship. Kenneth received his MPH and BSc.N degrees from the University of Nairobi and an Executive Master of Science in Organizational Development degree from the United States International University. He also received 2 postgraduate diplomas in HIV/STI Management and Clinical Trials from the University of Nairobi and University of London respectively. In 2010, Kenneth was an International AIDS Research and Training Program Scholar at the University of Washington, his training appointment, included taking the Qualitative Methods in Health Services course (HServ 521) and analyzing data from a pilot study on barriers to couples HIV testing. Kenneth’s scholarly interests include fertility intentions and contraceptive use among HIV positive women and HIV serodiscordant couples.

Tanzania

Mucho Mizinduko, MD, MPH

Bio

Mucho Mizinduko is working as research clinician for Mwanza Intervention Trials Unit, Mwanza, Tanzania. He graduated from Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences in 2007 and was awarded his Doctor of Medicine degree. From October 2007 to October 2008, he did his post medical school internship at Mbeya Consultant Hospital in Mbeya, Tanzania. Apart from being research clinician, Mucho has mainly served as a research team/site leader responsible for overall site activities. As part of capacity-building within Mwanza Intervention Trials Unit, he received a grant to attend a short course on epidemiology and medical statistics at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine 2010. Since graduation, his career interest has been in public health research.

Hawa A. Nyange, MD

Bio

Hawa A. Nyange is currently a medical doctor and site manager for Muhimbili University-Dar es Salaam City-Harvard University (MDH) HIV/AIDS Care and Treatment Clinic at Tandale in collaboration with Tanzania’s Ministry of Health. Her main activities include supervising the clinic monitoring and involving in quality improvement of services in the areas of HIV/AIDS, including Management of Adults/pediatric HIV/AIDS, PMTCT,TB/HIV. From 2006 to late 2007, Dr. Hawa served as medical doctor and Coordinator of Health Officers Training Program at Edna Adan Charitable Hospital in Hargeisa, Somaliland responsible for coordinating the health officers program and running the inpatients and outpatients clinic managing diseases such as HIV/AIDS, malaria, diabetes, hypertension, diarrheal diseases, and pneumonia. From 2005 to mid-2006, Dr. Hawa worked with the MUHAS-Harvard project as a physician, where she was also attending to patients with HIV/AIDS, giving them health education about HIV/AIDS and other opportunistic infections, prescribing ARVS to them and treating any other conditions they had. Dr. Hawa received her MD at Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences. Dr. Hawa is a member of different organizations such as Medical Women Association of Tanzania (MEWATA), Tanzania Medical Students Association (TAMSA), and Roots and Shoots. Dr. Hawa’s scholarly interest is in public health and disease prevention, program management, and monitoring and evaluation.

Riziki O. Ponsiano, MD, MPH

Bio

Riziki O. Ponsiano worked as the Mkuranga District medical officer from 2006 to 2007. He served as the medical officer-in-charge of the Mkuranga District Hospital for three years from 2003 to 2005. During that period, he was also working as the District Integrated Management of Childhood Illness Coordinator, District Lymphatic Phiraliasis Eradication Coordinator, and District Measles and Acute Paralysis Program Coordinator. Dr. Ponsiano was educated at the University of Dar es Salaam where he received his MD degree and completed his medical internship at the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center. Dr. Ponsiano received his MPH in Social and Behavioral Health Sciences and a postgraduate certificate in Maternal and Child Health from the University of Hawaii at Manoa in the US. He is currently working as the project coordinator of Human Pappiloma Virus Vaccination Program in the Mwanza Intervention Trials Unit (MITU), National Institute for Medical Research, the program which aims to inform the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare on the feasibility of introducing school-based HPV vaccination programs in Tanzania. Dr. Ponsiano’s area of interest is theory-based analysis of social-behavioral factors attributable to maternal and infant deaths in developing countries.

Alice K. Simwinga, MD

Bio

Alice K. Simwinga is currently the site manager and assistant medical officer at the Muhimbili University-Dar es Salaam City-Harvard University (MDH) HIV Clinic Sinza Hospital in Dar es Salaam, which is one of the PEPFAR funded program since January 2006. Prior to that, she was a general clinician. Alice coordinates HIV/AIDS care and treatment clinics in adults, pediatrics, PMTC, and TB/HIV. She has long experience in HIV/AIDS leadership, particularly with interest to social sciences. Dr. Simwinga attended psychosocial care and counseling for HIV-infected children and adolescents in 2008. She supervises two new ARVs refill sites in Kinondoni District for stable case management. She also headed VCT project sponsored by Axios Foundation from 2003 to 2004 and served as the Secretary General of Doctors’ Membership Club at Tumbi Special Hospital. Dr. Simwinga completed an advanced diploma in clinical medicine in 2002 at Mbeya Medical Training Centre. She was awarded best student in surgery and obstetrics and gynecology. In 2009, she completed her postgraduate diploma in social work where she specialized in social development. She is interested in HIV/AIDS program/project management, M&E, public health, and table tennis.

Uganda

Richard Muhindo, BSc Nursing, MPH

Bio

Richard Muhindo received his BScN in Nursing at Makerere University in 2004. In August 2004, he worked with Masaka Regional Referral Hospital as an intern nurse until the following year. Richard worked as a branch coordinator and service provider for Reproductive Health Uganda, an affiliate of IPPF. In 2008, he worked as a clinical instructor with Mulago School of Nursing & Midwifery. He received his Masters in Public Health degree from Maastricht University in Holland in 2010. Currently he is a volunteer lecturer in the College of Health Sciences’ Department of Nursing at Makerere University. He is particularly interested in reproductive health and family planning, and adolescent reproductive health.

Ziadah Nankinga, RN, BSN, MSC

Bio

Ziadah is a teaching assistant at the Department of Nursing College of Health Sciences, Makerere University. She has worked as a course coordinator and clinical instructor for Medical Nursing and Palliative Care for four years. Since 2006, she also supervises undergraduate students’ research. She received both her Bachelor of Science in Nursing and Master of Science in Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics degrees at Makerere University. Her research interest is in malaria.

Joyce Nankumbi, RN, BSc Nursing, MSc

Bio

Joyce Nankumbi has been a teaching assistant in the Department of Nursing College of Health Sciences, Makerere University since 2006. In 2008, Joyce began to pursue a Master’s degree in Applied Human Nutrition at the same university. She joined Mulago Teaching and National referral hospital as a clinical nurse in 2005 for one year. She received her Bachelor of Nursing from Makerere in 2005.

Benson Tumwesigye Tuhwezeine, MBChB, MPH

Bio

Benson Tumwesigye Tuhwezeine is a public health specialist working with Ministry of Health Uganda. He is currently the national coordinator for HIV Counseling and Testing in the STD/AIDS Control Program-Ministry of Health. He earned his Bachelor’s degree in Medicine and Surgery (MBChB) from Mbarara University of Science and Technology, Uganda and a Master’s degree in Public Health from Makerere University. He has worked as quality improvement technical adviser/technical coordinator in the Quality of Care for HIV Program in the Ministry of Health in Uganda and University Research Co. LL (URC). During the time at URC, he trained and mentored several health workers in quality improvement (QI). Benson also spearheaded the Technical Working Group (TWG) that developed national QI indicators on HIV/AIDS care and treatment. He has trained and mentored Master’s students and fellows in QI at Makerere University’s School of Public Health. In his current position, he has been coordinating HCT implementation, and has led the review of a new HCT policy. His interest is in health policy and programming with an emphasis in strengthening health systems.

United States

Lisa Gatti, BSN, MSN

Bio

Lisa Gatti is a doctoral student in Nursing at the University of Pennsylvania. She also holds a Bachelor’s of Science in Nursing and a Master’s of Science in Nursing (MSN) from the University of Pennsylvania. Her MSN is in the field of health leadership, with a focus on women’s health. Most of Ms. Gatti’s prior research has been related to nutrition, particularly maternal and infant nutrition. She has been trained in both quantitative and qualitative methods and has conducted a variety of funded research projects, both with multi-disciplinary teams and independently. Since 2008, Ms. Gatti has spent the majority of her time in rural Guatemala conducting community-based research and working for a private hospital, Hospitalito Atitlan, as their development manager. From 2006-2008, she held a T32 doctoral fellowship at the Center for Health Disparities Research at the University of Pennsylvania. She was the recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship in 2010 and the Advanced Trainee Scholarship in Nursing in 2005. Prior to working in Guatemala, Ms. Gatti also worked and in Mexico, training nurses, Thailand, researching the national and private health systems, and France, studying language. Ms. Gatti is interested in international healthcare development.

SoSon Jong, BSN, MS Nursing, MS

Bio

SoSon Jong completed her MS in Advanced Community Health and International Nursing and received her MS in Global Health Science at the University of California, San Francisco in 2009. Korean by birth, SoSon received her BS in Nursing at Seoul National University. She spent two years as a volunteer nurse at Black Lion Hospital in Addis Ababa, learning fluent Amharic. Since 2007, she has worked on HIV/Oncology unit in San Francisco General Hospital as a registered nurse. Her broad global health interest is in community health and access-to-care.

Aliza Monroe-Wise, MD, MSc

Bio

Aliza Monroe-Wise is a second year resident in Internal Medicine at University of Washington Medical Center. Dr. Monroe-Wise graduated from Columbia University with a BA in African American Studies in 2002. She then spent a year conducting HIV prevention research in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. In 2005 she completed a Master’s degree in Epidemiology at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. Her thesis was entitled “Married, Monogamous Women at Risk: The Sexual Relationships and Behaviors of Married Men in Chennai, India.” Dr. Monroe-Wise then entered Stanford School of Medicine in 2005. As a medical student, she worked on an HIV counseling and testing study in Uganda and an HIV chemoprophylaxis study in Brazil. She started her residency in Internal Medicine at University of Washington after graduating from medical school in 2009, and was then accepted into the Global Health track there. Dr. Monroe-Wise is the Western Region representative to the American College of Physicians’ National Council of Associates. In her free time, she enjoys traveling and playing capoeira, an Afro-Brazilian martial art.