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Jhpiego News Release

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Mona Rock, media contact
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Announcing Jhpiego's first Leadership in Health Award recipients

05 September 2003

Baltimore, Md. – A Congressional reception in honor of Jhpiego’s (JUH-PIE-GO) 30th anniversary celebration is being hosted by the Maryland Congressional delegation on September 10, 2003, in the Foyer of the Rayburn House Office Building, from 6:30-8:00 p.m. At this event, Jhpiego will recognize seven innovative leaders in women’s and family health from around the globe.

Jhpiego, an international nonprofit health organization affiliated with Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md., trains and supports healthcare providers, including doctors, nurses, midwives, and health educators, working in limited resource settings throughout Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, and Europe and is focused on improving the health of women and children.

"To celebrate our 30th anniversary, we wanted to honor those who have been working to improve the health of women and their families around the world," said Jhpiego Chief Executive Officer Dr. Leslie Mancuso, R.N. "We thought it fitting to create the Jhpiego Leadership in Health Awards to recognize these heroes working in their countries to promote improvements in training and delivery of healthcare. The 2003 award recipients have contributed to improving women’s and family health through health education and training and expanding access to direct care. In recognizing the leaders listed below, we also shine the spotlight on the extraordinary improvements their efforts have brought to families whose access to healthcare is often severely restricted due to poverty, epidemic disease, reduced access to training, educational and technological resources, social or political conditions."

The honorees for the 2003 Jhpiego Leadership in Health Awards are (please see bios below):

  • Ms. Susanne Mubarak, First Lady of Egypt
  • Professor Khunying Kobchitt Limpaphayom, Chulalongkorn University School of Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Bangkok, Thailand
  • Ms. Soekir Soekaemi, Midwife, Maternal and Neonatal Health and Infection Prevention, Surabaya, Indonesia
  • Dr. Peter Figueroa, Chief, Epidemiology and AIDS, Ministry of Health, Kingston, Jamaica
  • Ms. Antonia Morales Tomín, Health Promoter, Solola, Guatemala
  • Ms. Jane Namasasu, Deputy Director, Clinical and Population Services, Ministry of Health and Population, Lilongwe, Malawi
  • Dr. Hajera Baharestani, Faisabad Hospital, Faisabad, Badakhshan, Afghanistan

Since 1973, Jhpiego has contributed to women’s global health in more than 140 countries worldwide, increasing access to and improving the quality of women’s and family health, reproductive health, HIV/AIDS, maternal and neonatal health, cervical cancer.

Today, the organization’s global network of trainers, faculty, and healthcare professionals continues to implement programs in more than 30 countries. As an affiliate of Johns Hopkins University, Jhpiego is also able to draw on the University’s comprehensive technical and clinical resources to develop creative, innovative, and positive responses to the challenges of today’s reproductive health needs the world over.

Awardee Bios

Egypt’s First Lady Susanne Mubarak has long been an advocate for women and children, including a recently-launched initiative against female genital mutilation (June 2003) and the establishment of the Egyptian National Council for Women in 2000 to improve the social status of Egyptian women in all domains so that they become active participants in the nation's comprehensive development process.

Highlights of her many contributions include: founder and chairperson of the Integrated Care Society established in 1977, a non-profit organization providing social, cultural and health care to school children; president of the Advisory Board to the National Council on Childhood and Motherhood; recipient of The Health for All Gold Medal in June 1994, the highest distinction awarded by the World Health Organization for her outstanding contributions to improving the quality of life of the women and children of Egypt and her personal commitment to international efforts aimed at integrating health in the development process; Honorary Fulbright Award, in 1992, for her efforts in the field of child development and education.

Professor Khunying Kobchitt Limpaphayom is an obstetrician/gynecologist whose academic focus and professional commitment has centered on issues in reproductive health. For more than 30 years, she has been involved in research and program implementation for obstetric emergencies, safe motherhood, family planning, cancer prevention and menopause. Professor Khunying Limpaphayom is former Secretary General of the Royal Thai College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Professor Khunying Limpaphayom pioneered innovative training approaches in reproductive health and recently directed an innovative, groundbreaking project involving the prevention and detection of cervical cancer, the leading cause of cancer death among Thai women. She is currently a professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok, where she designed and implemented an innovative menopause program leading to policy changes for well-woman care throughout Thailand. Professor Khunying Limpaphayom is a dynamic leader who has dedicated her professional career to the betterment of women’s health around the world.

Ms. Soekir Soekaemi is an active midwife with clinical, training, and leadership skills. Leader of the East Java branch of the Indonesian Midwives Association, she heads the IBI maternity hospital in Surabaya. Since 1998, she has been instrumental in developing and promoting the Basic Delivery Care services and training in Indonesia. Basic Delivery Care has become the national standard of practice for maternal and newborn health. A Jhpiego-trained professional, she has trained hundreds of midwives in both clinical skills and training skills. Ms. Soekaemi has been instrumental in introducing innovative training approaches at midwifery schools in Indonesia. Because of her strong technical and leadership skills, Ms. Soekaemi has also been assisting organizations in East Timor to conduct training of midwives and nurses. In Indonesia, Ms. Soekaemi is a recognized leader in the field of maternal and child health. Her clinical, training, and leadership skills, combined with her continued efforts to learn and improve, are an inspiration to other health professionals, especially to midwives.

Dr. Peter Figueroa, Chief of Epidemiology and HIV/AIDS, National HIV/STI program in Jamaica, is a leader in HIV/AIDS care, practices, and treatment. Dr. Figueroa is committed to making HIV/AIDS care and treatment available in the public sector, while also paying close attention to HIV/AIDS prevention activities. Because of Dr. Figueroa’s dedication, HIV prevalence in Jamaica is among the lowest in the Caribbean region and stands as a great success in the face of predictions that called for the Jamaican and the eastern Caribbean HIV/AIDS epidemic to spiral. Dr. Figueroa’s determination to conquer the health challenges facing the Jamaican population serves as a model to health leaders around the world.

Ms. Antonia Morales Tomín, a community leader and reproductive health advocate, serves as the President of the Health Committee of Las Canoas, Municipality of San Andrés Semetabaj, Sololá, Guatemala. In addition, she provides additional support to the local population by working as a health promoter for the Golden Child Project. Ms. Tomín regularly provides home visits to pregnant women and gives educational talks to mothers about the importance of maintaining their health. Recently, she worked to establish an emergency plan in her community that provides transportation and support for women suffering from pregnancy complications. Her efforts have contributed to saving the lives of countless women within her community.

Ms. Jane Namasasu, a nurse midwife with a special focus on community development, is deputy director of Clinical and Population Services responsible for reproductive health in the Malawian Ministry of Health and Population (MoHP). In this position, she plays a key role in making sure the objectives outlined in the national sexual and reproductive health program are met. With Ms. Namasasu’s guidance, Malawi’s MoHP has made a number of key advancements in improving the quality of women’s reproductive health. The past few years have seen the development and dissemination of a national reproductive health policy and reproductive health service delivery guidelines. In addition, Malawi has experienced an increase in the use of modern contraceptive methods from 14% in 1996 to 26% in 2000. Ms. Namasasu, a dynamic Malawian reproductive health leader, has also been instrumental in the introduction and expansion of postabortion care services as well as fully supported and participated in the launch of a national program to prevent Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV. Under her excellent leadership and guidance, the quality of health services provided to women in Malawi has seen dramatic improvements.

Dr. Hajera Baharestani and her team of nine comprise the entire medical staff at the Faizabad Maternity Hospital in Badakhshan, Afghanistan. Due to lack of qualified staff and limited resources, Dr. Hajera Baharestani works countless hours to provide healthcare to women in a facility lit by oil lamps and plagued with unreliable heat. The four-ward hospital where she works, the only one of its kind in the province, serves a population of one million people. In the first three months of 2003, Dr. Hajera Baharestani and her staff brought nearly 400 newborns into the world, yet Dr. Hajera Baharestani earns just $36 a month. Despite such day-to-day difficulties, Dr. Hajera Baharestani has remained committed to her work, driven by the needs of those who need her assistance. She said, "We always say there are many women who need us; we feel that we must continue, despite the difficulties. We have to go on, if only for these women."

About Jhpiego
For 35 years, Jhpiego, (pronounced "ja-pie-go"), has empowered front-line health workers by designing and implementing simple, low-cost, hands-on solutions that strengthen the delivery of health care services, following the household-to-hospital continuum of care. We partner with community- to national-level organizations to build sustainable, local capacity through advocacy, policy and guidelines development, and quality and performance improvement approaches.

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