UCSF Global Health Sciences 2013 Annual Report

Transcription

UCSF Global Health Sciences 2013 Annual Report
UCSF Global Health Sciences
2013 Annual Report
of
Letter from the Director
Dear friends,
As I think about 2013 and the year that was,
I am filled with a profound sense of gratitude
and hope.
with Associate Director Kim Baltzell, are
energizing faculty and students alike with
the passion and creativity that they bring
to educating the next generation of global
health leaders.
It’s the people who surround me on a daily
basis at UCSF that inspire this hope and
make me feel confident that we are gaining
ground on our mission of “improving health
and reducing inequities worldwide.”
It’s the senior faculty and leadership, such
as Eric Goosby, who returned to UCSF in
November after completing his outstanding
tenure as the US Global AIDS Ambassador
and head of PEPFAR (the President’s
Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief). Goosby
attended medical school at UCSF and treated
patients on Ward 86 at San Francisco General
Hospital and Trauma Center, during the
height of the AIDS epidemic. Caring for these
patients inspired him to dedicate his career
to tackling HIV/AIDS around the world.
It’s the young faculty like Gavin Yamey and
Madhavi Dandu. Gavin has been traveling the
world with Dean Jamison and Larry Summers,
who co-chaired the The Lancet Commission
that produced a call to action: Global Health
2035: The World Converging within a Generation.
As a commissioner and lead author of the
report, Gavin is actively engaged in spreading
the word that the health gap between poorer
and wealthier nations can be eliminated
within a generation if the right decisions are
made today.
It’s Sir Richard Feachem, who in addition
to serving on The Lancet Commission on
Investing in Health, led his Global Health Group
team to receive a $15M grant from the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation to continue their
groundbreaking work on malaria elimination.
A hospitalist by training, Madhavi took over
as Director of the GHS Masters program after
John Ziegler retired in August. She, along
Left to right: Gavin Yamey and audience at the US launch of Global Health 2035. Photo by Cindy Chew; Madhavi Dandu at the 2013
Masters Commencement Ceremony. Photo by Cindy Chew; Eric Goosby. Photo by Susan Merrell.
UCSF Global Health Sciences 2013 Annual Report
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Left: From left to right, Haile Debas, Chancellor Susan Desmond-Hellmann and Jaime Sepulveda at the groundbreaking ceremony for
Mission Hall. Photo by Cindy Chew. Right: Mission Hall building in progress, November 2013. Photo by Mark Citret.
It’s George Rutherford, who in 2013 secured
a new five-year cooperative agreement to
continue his group’s strategic information
support to PEPFAR countries.
Our research programs are growing. We
launched FIRST (Fighting Infections through
Research, Science, and Technology), which
includes faculty at UCSF, UC Berkeley, and
elsewhere and targets neglected infectious
diseases in vulnerable populations in Mesoamerica. This work is being jointly supported
by the Gates and Carlos Slim Foundations.
It’s Molly Cooke, whose leadership was
recognized in 2013 by being elected to the
Institute of Medicine and named Chair of
the American College of Physicians.
Eric Goosby will be leading our efforts to
create a Center for Implementation Sciences,
applying his decades of experience in
running global health programs and using
business-world efficiencies to improve them.
And it’s Paul Volberding, who galvanizes
UCSF’s world-renowned research community
to continue the tradition of innovation, applying the “San Francisco model” of research
and treatment to diseases of global urgency,
including Hepatitis C.
A new research interest group—the Global
Health Economics Consortium—was
launched by Jim Kahn in 2013. It’s a sign of
UCSF’s commitment to bring economics to
health innovation given the needs in lowresource settings.
And there are many more UCSF faculty, staff,
and students with whom I have the pleasure
of working and who give me confidence that
the future will be bright.
I am also optimistic about the growth of
global health as a discipline at UCSF. In
March we broke ground on the site of our
future home on the Mission Bay campus.
The Mission Hall: Global Health & Clinical
Sciences groundbreaking ceremony was
attended by philanthropist Chuck Feeney and
his wife Helga, whose generous gift to UCSF
made the building possible. Construction is
progressing at a speedy pace, and we expect
to officially cut the ribbon in the fall of 2014.
As I look ahead to 2014 and beyond, I see a
growing Masters in Global Health program,
a new PhD in global health degree, a bustling
presence on the Mission Bay campus, and
new lines of research that will solidify UCSF’s
reputation as a world-leader in global health.
Thank you for your support of global health
at UCSF. I look forward to our journey ahead.
Jaime Sepulveda, MD, MDH, DrSc
Executive Director
UCSF Global Health Sciences 2013 Annual Report
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GHS Program Overview
AIDS Research Institute. In addition to our
education programs, we also partner with
other departments at UCSF who are active in
global health, such as the Bixby Center for
Global Reproductive Health.
UCSF Global Health Sciences is at the
forefront of educating and training the next
generation of global health leaders, as well
as conducting research that improves health
and reduces inequities of vulnerable populations around the world. GHS launched the
nation’s first Masters of Science in Global
Health degree program, and supports the
Pathways and Clinical Scholars programs,
which train professional students, residents,
and postdocs for careers in global health.
The vision for GHS is to be the fifth school at
UCSF, spanning the existing four professional
schools and the graduate division, and leveraging the expertise of neighboring campuses,
such as UC Berkeley, UC Davis, and Stanford.
THE GLOBAL HEALTH GROUP
Led by Sir Richard Feachem, the Global Health Group
(GHG) believes that a stronger link between evidence,
policy, and action will improve lives. Every day GHG faculty
and staff work with researchers, policymakers, and
implementers to understand and advance new approaches
to addressing critical health challenges. Through its
commitment to boldness, focus, collaboration, and
innovation, the GHG is making a difference in reducing
the burden of disease and enhancing economic prosperity
for people around the world.
The GHG’s efforts are focused on three topics:
Founded in 2003 as an academic program
reporting directly to the UCSF Chancellor,
GHS comprises the Global Health Group,
Prevention & Public Health Group, and the
• Malaria Elimination, led by Roland Gosling
• Private Sector Healthcare, led by Dominic Montagu
• Evidence to Policy, led by Gavin Yamey
Left and right: With support from the Global Health Group, a surveillance team in Swaziland visits a village to screen people for malaria.
Photos by Michelle Hsiang.
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Left: Diane Havlir speaking at the World AIDS Day Forum, which was co-sponsored by the AIDS Research Institute. Photo by Stephen
May. Right: Jim Kahn, Director of UCSF’s new Global Health Economics Consortium (GHECon) and Claire Brindis, Director of the UCSF
Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, kick off GHECon’s first Colloquium. Photo by Marco Sanchez.
PREVENTION AND PUBLIC HEALTH GROUP
GHS OFFICE OF RESEARCH
Directed by George Rutherford, the Prevention & Public
Health Group (PPHG) focuses on applied public health
research, education, and program improvement. The 70+
affiliated faculty and senior staff of the PPHG utilize their
expertise and field experience in more than 40 countries
to train local professionals, evaluate data to inform policy,
conduct research, and build capacity.
Led by Paul Volberding, the GHS Office of Research works
with faculty and staff in GHS and across the campus to:
• develop new areas of research,
• support the creation of resources that facilitate global
health research across UCSF, and
• provide funding and training opportunities for young
researchers.
PPHG is composed of three main program areas:
Affiliated projects and programs include the Global
Research Projects database, the UCSF East Africa office
(with the Center for AIDS Research), RAP funding for basic
science and policy research, the Burke Scholars Award
program and the Global Health Economics Consortium
(GHECon) with the Institute for Health Policy Studies.
• Global Strategic Information
• Faculty Research
• Domestic Programs
Major funding comes from the California Department
of Public Health, the Joint United Nations Program on
HIV/AIDS, the National Institutes of Health, the US
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the
World Health Organization.
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR’S OFFICE
Led by Executive Director Jaime Sepulveda and Deputy
Director Colin Boyle, the Executive Director’s Office
manages the administrative aspects of Global Health
Sciences, including financial oversight, strategic planning,
communications, and development. Dr. Sepulveda also
serves as Principal Investigator for select research projects,
including the FIRST (Fighting Infections through Research,
Science and Technology) program, which tackles neglected
diseases in vulnerable communities in Mesoamerica.
AIDS RESEARCH INSTITUTE
The AIDS Research Institute (ARI), led by Paul Volberding,
coordinates and integrates AIDS research activities at
UCSF. The ARI stimulates innovation and supports
interdisciplinary collaboration aimed at all aspects of the
epidemic domestically and around the world. Bringing
together hundreds of scientists and more than 50 programs from throughout the university and affiliated labs
and institutions, and working in close collaboration with
affected communities, the ARI is one of the premier AIDS
research entities in the world.
UC GLOBAL HEALTH INSTITUTE (UCGHI)
Directed by GHS’ Haile Debas and Thomas Coates from
UCLA, the University of California Global Health Institute
is working to build an interdisciplinary, system-wide
academic global health program that leverages the global
health expertise of the 10 University of California campuses
to meet the growing interest and demands of students and
young faculty in California and throughout the US. UCSF
is the administrative hub for the UCGHI and for the UCGHI
GloCal Fellowship program, which provides 11-month
international training opportunities to UC investigators.
The ARI also provides administration for the Laboratory
of Clinical Virology.
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Education and Training
In 2013 the GHS Education & Training team
said goodbye to John Ziegler, the founder
of the Masters program, who retired on the
same day that the fifth class graduated.
Taking over at the helm are Director Madhavi
Dandu, MD, MPH and Associate Director Kim
Baltzell, RN, PhD, NP, MS. Also joining GHS
in 2013 was Sally Rankin, RN, PhD, FAAN,
who is leading the planning of a PhD program
in global health.
Growth of GHS education programs
110
110
Pathways to Discovery in Global Health
100
Global Health Clinical Scholars
# OF STUDENTS
90
90
80
Complex Humanitarian Emergency Training
70
70
Masters in Global Health Sciences
60
50
50
40
30
30
20
10
10
0
Among the year’s achievements were a very
positive five-year external review of the
Masters program, successful fundraising
efforts to support scholarship and fieldwork
from the Drown, Kwan and Gilead foundations, and continued growth in the Clinical
Scholars and Masters programs.
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
MASTERS OF SCIENCE IN GLOBAL HEALTH SCIENCES
The Global Health Sciences Masters degree program
welcomed its sixth class in September. This diverse group
includes 38 students from Ethiopia, Finland, India, Iran,
Ireland, New Zealand, the Philippines, South America,
Uganda, the UK, and the US. Graduates of the one-year
program are prepared for leadership careers in international health policy, health care, and research and development. Approximately half of our graduates are employed
in the global/public health sector, completing residency
programs,teaching and/or conducting research in academia
or working at NGOs and in other public and non-profit
areas. Most of our other alumni are currently enrolled in
advanced academic or professional degree programs.
Left: Masters student Vicky Khoury conducts a mental health interview with a Palestinian refugee. Right: Masters students at their 2013
Commencement ceremony, Photo by Cindy Chew.
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Complex Humanitarian Emergency Leadership Training in the Presidio of San Francisco. Left: Trainee teams set their plans of action
for the day. Right: During the simulated refugee crisis, one of the teams speaks with a refugee. Photos by Dipesh Manandhar.
PATHWAYS FOR ENROLLED STUDENTS, RESIDENTS
AND FELLOWS
COMPLEX HUMANITARIAN EMERGENCY LEADERSHIP
TRAINING PROGRAM
UCSF offers several global health training options for
students enrolled in professional and graduate programs,
as well as for residents and fellows, including the
Pathways to Discovery and Clinical Scholars programs,
led by Chris Stewart.
GHS hosted its eighth Complex Humanitarian Emergency
Leadership Training program in April 2013, in the Presidio
of San Francisco. With financial support from the EustaceKwan Family Foundation, and the help of roughly 40
role-playing volunteers, the training simulated a refugee
crisis at the border of Syria and Turkey. Over the course of
the weekend, 56 trainees were tasked with performing a
rapid assessment and developing a plan to meet the needs
of the simulated Syrian refugee population. The event
challenged trainees to consider water sanitation concerns,
interact with the media and address the emergency
medical needs of the refugee population.
The Pathways to Discovery program is for UCSF health
professional students who want to be involved in global
health through in-depth course work, as well as clinical or
research experiences with an underserved population. In
2013, the program offered an MD with Distinction in Global
Health for the first time, and had two students graduate
with this distinction. Additionally in 2013, the program
admitted five medical students to join the five students
continuing on for a second year in the program. Their
mentored projects focus on health issues in six countries
including China, Kenya, and Mexico.
INTERNATIONAL TRAINEESHIPS IN AIDS PREVENTION
STUDIES (I-TAPS)
A joint program between GHS and the UCSF Center for
AIDS Prevention Studies (CAPS), I-TAPS offers shortterm training in scientific writing and research methods
for health professionals from low- and middle-income
countries. Trainees partner with UCSF faculty to develop
research projects that are carried out in their home
countries and/or prepare scientific manuscripts based
on these studies or other collaborative research.
The Clinical Scholars program is a training track for
UCSF graduate healthcare professionals (UCSF residents,
scholars, fellows, and graduate students) from the Schools
of Medicine, Nursing, Dentistry, Pharmacy, and the
Graduate Division, who wish to formally incorporate global
health into their professional careers. Thirty-three UCSF
trainees entered the program in September 2013, the
largest cohort to date.
In 2013, GHS and CAPS hosted 15 scholars from
sub-Saharan Africa and four scholars from Brazil, China,
Iran, and Vietnam. In its 25th year, I-TAPS has more than
240 alumni from 46 countries. Alumni have gone on to
become leaders at their universities, Ministries of Health
and National AIDS Control Programs.
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Faculty Instructors
Faculty from across UCSF serve as
instructors in GHS education and
training programs and serve on the
GHS Graduate Group, chaired by
Craig Cohen, MD.
For full Graduate Group list, visit:
globalhealthsciences.ucsf.edu/
education-training/about-e-t/
graduate-group
Kimberly Baltzell, RN, PhD, MS
Assistant Professor, Family Health Care Nursing
Willi McFarland, MD, PhD, MPH, TM
Professor, Epidemiology & Biostatistics
Deborah Bain Brickley, DrPH, MPH
Deputy Director, International Training &
Education, Prevention and Public Health Group
Kala Mehta, DSc
Associate Professor, Epidemiology &
Biostatistics
Nancy Burke, PhD
Associate Professor, Department of
Anthropology, History and Social Medicine
Roger Myrick, PhD
Director, Monitoring and Evaluation, Global
Strategic Information
Molly Cooke, MD
Professor, Medicine
Long (John) H. Nguyen, MD
Director, Addiction Treatment Services Veterans
Affaris, Palo Alto Health Care System
Madhavi Dandu, MD, MPH
Associate Professor, Medicine
Shari Dworkin, PhD, MS
Associate Professor, Social & Behavioral
Sciences
Kim Page, PhD, MS, MPH
Professor, Epidemiology & BIostatistics
Philip J. Rosenthal, MD
Professor, Medicine
Maria Ekstrand, PhD
Professor, Medicine
George W. Rutherford, MD, MPH
Professor, Epidemiology & Biostatistics
Wayne Enanoria, PhD, MPH
Assistant Adjunct Professor, Epidemiology
& Biostatistics
Sandy Schwarcz, MD, MPH
Associate Professor, Medicine
Jonathan Fuchs, PhD
Associate Clinical Professor, Medicine
Monica Gandhi, MD, MPH
Professor, Medicine
Anke Hemmerling, MD, PhD, MPH
Academic Coordinator, Obstetrics, Gynecology
& Reproductive Sciences
Nancy Hills, MA, MBA,PhD
Assistant Professor, Epidemiology &
Biostatistics, and Neurology
James G. Kahn, MD, MPH
Professor, Institute for Health Policy Studies
Christina P. Lindan, MD
Associate Professor, Epidemiology &
Biostatistics
Jeffrey S. Mandel, PhD, MPH
International Training & Education, Prevention
and Public Health Group
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James Seward, MD, MPP
Clinical Professor, Medicine
Craig Steinmaus, MD, MPH
Associate Professor, Epidemiology
& Biostatistics (UC Berkeley)
Wayne Steward, PhD, MS
Associate Professor, Medicine
Christopher Stewart, MD
Professor, Medicine
Sheri Weiser, MD, MA, MPH
Associate Professor in Residence
Ian Whitmarsh, PhD
Associate Professor, Anthropology, History
& Social Medicine
Gavin Yamey, MD, MPH, MA, MRCP
Associate Professor, Epidemiology
& Biostatistics
Financials
FUND SOURCES
JULY 1, 2012–JUNE 30, 2013
TOTAL: $44.75 MILLION
2%
3%
3%
3%
3%
6%
Sponsored projects
Campus support
Recharges
Tuition/fees
Gifts/endowment income
Other
80%
Indirect cost recovery
FUND USES
JULY 1, 2012–JUNE 30, 2013
TOTAL: $42.09 MILLION
3%
4%
Personnel costs
10%
Other/non-payroll
Facilities & administration
11%
Subawards
Campus fees
Lease & rental
14%
58%
UCSF Global Health Sciences 2013 Annual Report
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GHS SPONSORED PROJECT EXPENDITURES BY FUND YEAR
$40,000,000
40000000
$35,000,000
35000000
$30,000,000
30000000
$25,000,000
25000000
$20,000,000
20000000
$15,000,000
15000000
$10,000,000
10000000
$5,000,000
5000000
$00
04-05
05–06
06–07
07–08
08–09
09–10
10–11
11–12
12–13
MAJOR FUNDERS OF GHS SPONSORED PROJECTS
5%
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
12%
President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) – CDC
National Institutes of Health
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
15%
Other
29%
39%
Major areas of focus of
GHS sponsored projects:
Evidence to policy
HIV/AIDS
Immunization
Malaria elimination
Maternal & child health
Neglected infectious diseases
Private sector healthcare
Tuberculosis
UCSF Global Health Sciences 2013 Annual Report
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Leadership
GHS FACULTY LEADERSHIP
GHS ADMINISTRATIVE LEADERSHIP
Kimberly Baltzell, RN, PhD, NP, MS
Associate Director, Masters of Science Program
Colin Boyle, MBA
Deputy Director
Craig Cohen, MD, MPH
Chair, Graduate Group in Global Health
Sciences; Professor, Obstetrics, Gynecology
& Reproductive Sciences
Elizabeth Brashers, MBA
Chief Operating Officer, Global Health Group
Molly Cooke, MD
Director of Education
Madhavi Dandu, MD, MPH
Director, Masters of Science Program and
Associate Director, Pathways to Discovery
Michael Horvat, MA
Director of Development
Gail Kennedy, MPH
Director of Programs, Global Strategic
Information
Daisy Leo
Program Coordinator
Haile T. Debas, MD
Director, UC Global Health Institute;
Senior Global Health Advisor, UCSF
Amy Lockwood, MBA, MS
Chief of Staff, Global Health Research
Richard Feachem, KBE, FREng, DSc(Med), PhD
Director, Global Health Group
Georgina Lopez
Manager of Finance and Administration
Eric Goosby, MD
Director of the Center for Implementation
Sciences
Paula Murphy, MS
Director of Communications
Sally Rankin, RN, PhD, FAAN
Faculty Associate for Education
George Rutherford, MD
Director, Prevention & Public Health Group
UCSF LEADERSHIP COUNCIL
FOR GLOBAL HEALTH
T. Robert “Bob” Burke
Co-Chair, UCSF Leadership Council for Global
Health; Managing Director, Metropolitan Real
Estate Equity Management
Haile T. Debas, MD
Senior Global Health Advisor, UCSF; Maurice
Galante Distinguished Professor of Surgery
Richard Feachem, KBE, FREng, DSc(Med), PhD
Director, The Global Health Group
Nicholas Hellmann, MD
Executive Vice President of Medical and
Scientific Affairs, Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric
AIDS Foundation
Sandra R. Hernández, MD
President and Chief Executive Officer, California
HealthCare Foundation
Karen Nelson, MA
Education Programs Officer
Jeffrey (Jeff) Hessekiel
Executive Vice President and General Counsel,
Exelixis, Inc.
Hannah Park
Director of Strategic Planning
The Honorable Howard H. Leach
President, Leach Capital, LLC
Cecilia C. M. Lee
Chairman, David S. L. Lee Foundation
Jaime Sepulveda, MD, MPH, DrSc
Executive Director
David S. Lee
Chairman of the Board, eOn Communications
Corporation
Christopher Stewart, MD
Director, Clinical Scholars Program and
Pathways to Discovery
Alix Marduel, MD
Biomedical Partner, Asset Management Company
Paul Volberding, MD
Director of Global Health Research; Director,
AIDS Research Institute
Sanford R. “Sandy” Robertson
Founder, Francisco Partners
William J. Rutter, PhD
Co-Chair, UCSF Leadership Council for Global
Health; Chairman and CEO, Synergenics, LLC
Jaime Sepulveda, MD, MPH, MSc, DrSc
Executive Director, Global Health Sciences
David (Dave) Smith
President, Interpacific Group
Holly Smith, MD
Associate Dean Emeritus, UCSF School of
Medicine
Michael (Mickey) Urdea
Managing Partner, Halteres Associates
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Individual Donors
We are grateful to the following
individuals who provided generous
support to help us advance GHS and
AIDS research and programs in 2013.*
$1 Million+
Chan Soon-Shiong Family Foundation (for UCGHI)
$100,000–$1 Million
The Peter and Shelagh Godsoe Family Foundation
$10,000–$99,999
Helen and Peter Bing
John P. Cello
Mary M. Cooke and Paul A. Volberding
Diep Doan and Dominic Montagu
Eustace-Kwan Family Foundation
Ann C. Hendrie
Joseph Drown Foundation
Susan J. and Steven N. Machtinger
Susanna and Michael Steinberg
$5,000–$9,999
James Ely
Alan M. Kates
Anke H. and Tony Prophet
Gil Seton
$1,000–$4,999
Paul A. Allen
Caroline L. and Gregg H. Alton
Margaret H. Bartlett
Scot Blocker
Gregory Charlop
Mary M. Cooke and Paul A. Volberding
John Gilman
Jeffrey Jennings
Sharon and Jay A. Levy
Paula E. Machtinger and Randy L. Thompson
Francine M. and David H. Meckler
John B. Morey, Jr.
John M. Sanger
Isabel Swift and Steven C. Phillips
Marjorie M. Wilson
Sophy S. Wong and Young W. Choi
Virginia M. Wulff
Up to $999
Patricia M. Liming
Anonymous donors
Lianxing Liu
Thomas J. Arnett
Eva Y. Lo
William W. Atkins
Ben Lui
Melissa Welch Barker and Bruce C. Barker
Shelley B. and Michael R. Nagel
Monica M. Barney
Douglas K. Mack
Scotty Bastable
Laura Malakoff and Michael Brown
Alvin H. Baum, Jr.
Michiko Masters
Stuart Bell
Lynette T. McLamb
Colin Boyle
Brian McEuen
Carol L. Brosgart and Joseph A. Gross
Todd J. McGregor
Margaret M. Byrnes
Jelane L. McGrew
Parker T. Callister and Alex B. Callister
Janice M. and Robert M. McHugh
James M. Campbell
Bruce McIntyre
George Carlson
James McLachlan
Edward Chan
David E. Meders
Helen Chen
Dace B. and Robert A. Mitchell
Stephanie E. Cohen
James R. Moser
Ellen Daniell and David H. Gelfand
William K. Nisbet
Greta L. and Brian C. Davison
Meg Pearson
Pete Dragon
Mahindokht and Amir H. Pejooh
Justin H. Elliott
Patricia E. Perry and Stephen J. McPhee
Judith V. Empson
A.M. Pinsukhanchana
Joanne N. Engel
Karen and Jim Quinn
Lois and Roland Feller
Robert S. Rhine
Ilona J. Frieden and Mark A. Jacobson
John T. Robinson
Edna M. Frigo
Wilma F. and William L. Ryan
Linda M. Goodwin
Allyn C. and James E. Ryan
June A. Gordon and David M. Pettigrew
JoAnne Sackheim
Lani Green
Marian E. Sauer
Marsha M. and Ralph J. Guggenheim
Peggy S. and James L. Shiovitz
Joseph R. Guydish
Stephen L. Sloan
Suheil Harb
Ward O. Smith
Edwin R. Harper
Kathryn S. and Timothy D. Statton
Roderick Hong
Leda P. and Kenneth F. Stelling
Matt Hornyak
Jim Stewart
Estie Hudes
Nicholas Szeto and Gordon Runnels
Stephen D. Hutcheon
Larissa R. Thomas
Christen Hyde-Treuhaft
Stephanie B. and Stanley Tick
Mary R. Jewell
Katherine Tick and Fred L. Raker
Kathleen Jose
Catherine and Jonathan Tuerk
Susan M. Kegeles
Tim Tune
Douglas D. Keller
Juvenal A. Vita and Lawrence D. Church
Max C. Kirkeberg
Trevor C. Wilson
Michael H. Kossman
David E. Winckoski
Joann C. and Jerry R. Kramer
Irving Zabin
Margot B. Kushel and Ari Krantz
Ivan Zdero
Harry W. Lampiris
Harold F. Ziese
Arthur D. Libera
*Individual donor listings for 2013 calendar year. We made every effort to ensure the accuracy and completeness of this list, and extend our sincerest apology for any
discrepancies. If you have questions, please contact Michael Horvat, Director of Development at michael.horvat@ucsf.edu or 415-597-8238.
UCSF Global Health Sciences 2013 Annual Report
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Partners
ACADEMIC, GOVERNMENT,
INTERNATIONAL AGENCY AND
NGO PARTNERS
Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI)
Jiangsu Institute of Parasitic Diseases, China
Consortium of Universities for Global Health
(CUGH)
Johns Hopkins University
African Leaders Malaria Alliance (ALMA)
Croatia INA
African Medical and Research Foundation
(AMREF)
Development AID from People to People (DAPP),
– Namibia
Aga Khan University, Pakistan
Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Statistique et
d’Economie Appliquée (ENSEA), Cote d’Ivoire
Anova Health Institute, Johannesburg
Asia Pacific Malaria Leaders Alliance (APLMA)
Asia Pacific Malaria Elimination Network
(APMEN)
Asia Network for Capacity Building in Health
Systems Strengthening (ANHSS)
Aurum Institute, Johannesburg
Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and
Trade
Blood Systems Research Institute
Boston University
Bureau of Vector Borne Disease, Thailand
Cakalo and Cakalo, Croatia
California Department of Public Health
Joint United Nations Programme on AIDS
(UNAIDS)
Kenya Medical Research Institute
Khan Academy
King’s College London. UK
Eduardo Mondlane University, Mozambique
Knowledge Hub for HIV Surveillance,
Kermanshah University, Iran
Eijkman-Oxford Clinical Research Unit (EOCRU),
Jakarta, Indonesia
Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, UK
Family AIDS Care and Education Services
(FACES)
Family Health International (FHI)
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
(LSHTM), UK
Lund University, Sweden
Fudan University, China
Makerere University, School of Public Health,
Uganda
Fundação de Medicina Tropical Doutor Heitor
Vieira Dourado, Brazil
Malaria Atlas Project (MAP)
Fundação Faculdade Federal de Ciências de
Médicas de Porto Alegre, Brazil
Malaria Research & Training Center, Mali
Malaria No More
Futures Group International
Malaria Vaccine Initiative
Ghana AIDS Commission
Marie Stopes International (MSI)
Gilead Sciences
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
Cambodian National Centre for HIV/AIDS
(NCHADS)
GMMB
Medical Research Council – Gambia Unit
Cambodian Women’s Development Agency
(CWDA)
Hanoi School of Public Health, Vietnam
Harvard University
Medical Research Council Laboratories The
Gambia
Cambridge Economic Policy Associates Ltd
Health and Development International, Norway
Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA)
Ho Chi Minh City Reproductive Health Center,
Vietnam
Center for Clinical Care and Research in Nigeria
Center for the AIDS Programme of Research in
South Africa
Hospital Metropolitan, Managua, Nicaragua
Hospital San Carlos, Chiapas, Mexico
Medical Research Council – South Africa
Menzies School of Health Research, Australia
Menzies University
Ministries of Health & National Malaria
Programs of Bhutan, Indonesia, Kenya, Malaysia,
Namibia, Philippines, Solomon Islands, South
Africa, Swaziland, Thailand, Vanuatu
Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC)
Imperial College, London, UK
Centers for Disease Control & Prevention,
Country Program Offices in Cote d’Ivoire,
Dominican Republic, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique,
Namibia, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, Vietnam,
Zambia, Zanzibar
INAS – NGO for the International Collaboration
and Development, Ukraine
Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, Global
AIDS Program
International HIV/AIDS Alliance, Ukraine
Ministry of Finance and Development Planning,
Lesotho
Instituto Dermatologico y Cirugia de Piel,
Dominican Republic
Mirebalais Hospital, Haiti
Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics and
Policy (CDDEP)
Centre for Operations Research and Training
(CORT), India
Innovations for Poverty Action (IPA)
International Finance Corporation (IFC)
Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública (Cuernavaca),
Mexico
Instituto Nacional de Saúde, Mozambique
Centro de Estudos de AIDS/DST de Rio Grande
do Sul (CEARGS), Brazil
International Training & Education Center for
Health (ITECH)
Chinese National Institute of Parasitic Diseases
(NIPD)
China Medical Board
Iranian Research Center for HIV/AIDS (IRCHA),
Imam Khomeini Hospital, Tehran University of
Medical Sciences
Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
ITAD
Ministries of Health in Antigua and Barbuda,
Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria,
Rwanda, St. Kitts and Nevis, Suriname, Tanzania,
Uganda, Vietnam, Zambia
Muhimbili National Hospital, Tanzania
Muhimbili University of Health and Allied
Sciences (MUHAS), Tanzania
Mzumbe University, Tanzania
National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS
Directors (NASTAD) Global Program
National AIDS Control Programs in Brazil, Ghana,
Haiti, Kenya, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria,
Rwanda, Tanzania,Vietnam, Zambia, Zanzibar
National Health and Family Planning
Commission, China
Jacaranda Health
UCSF Global Health Sciences 2013 Annual Report
13
National Hospital of Pediatrics (NHP) Hanoi,
Vietnam
National Institute of Medical Research, Tanzania
National Institute for Malariology, Parasitology
and Entomology (NIMPE), Vietnam
National Institutes of Health/NIAID
National Malaria Programs of Angola, Bhutan,
Cambodia, China, Democratic People’s Republic
of Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia, Nepal, North
Korea, Philippines, Republic of Korea, Solomon
Islands, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vanuatu, Vietnam
Tanzania Commission for AIDS
FOUNDATION AND CORPORATE
PARTNERS
Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Iran
Accordia Global Health Foundation
The Elimination Eight (E8) Regional Initiative
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
The Lancet
Black Coalition on AIDS
The World Bank Group
Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS
Tropical Diseases Research Centre (TRDC),
Zambia
Chevron Corporation
Uganda Virus Research Institute, Entebbe,
Uganda
C.V. Starr Foundation
Sun Yat-sen University, China
Nha Trang Pasteur Institute, Vietnam
UK AID
Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical
Research, Ghana
United Nations Office for Project Services (3MDG
Fund)
Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation
(NORAD)
Universidad Cayetano Heredia, Peru
Nossal Institute of Melbourne University,
Australia
Universidade Federal de Bahia
Universidad del Valle, Guatemala
Cisco Systems, Inc
The Drollinger Family Charitable Foundation
ExxonMobil Foundation
.
Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics
(FIND)
Gilead Sciences
Glaser Progress Foundation
GlaxoSmithKline (GSK)
Notre Dame University
Universidade Federal de Espírito Santo
Nsambaya Hosital, Uganda
University of California, Berkeley
Pacific Malaria Initiative (PacMi)
University of California, Davis
Palecky University, Czech Republic
University of California, Los Angeles
Pan American Health Organization (PAHO)
University of California, Riverside
Partners in Health (Chiapas Mexico)
University of California, San Diego
PATH (Program for Appropriate Technology in
Health)
University of London, UK
Peking University Health Science Center, China
Peking Union Medical College, China
University Cheikh Anta DIOP (UCAD) of Dakar,
Senegal
Pelumbra Ltd
University of Florida
Microsoft Giving Campaign The JK Group, Inc.
Population Council
University of Ghana, School of Public Health
Novartis Foundation for Sustainable Development
Population Services International (PSI)
University of Guyana
Pangaea Global AIDS Foundation
Public Health Foundation Enterprises (PHFE)
University of Kerman, Iran
PricewaterhouseCoopers
Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, The Netherlands
University of Minnesota, School of Public Health
Rockefeller Foundation
Regional Knowledge Hub for HIV/AIDS Surveillance, Kerman University of Medical Sciences
University of Namibia
San Francisco AIDS Foundation
University of New South Wales, Australia
Sanofi
Results for Development Institute (R4D)
University of Oxford, UK
Sarlo Foundation
RISE Clinic Nigeria
University of Queensland, Australia
USF Hospitality Management Association
Roatan Public Hospital (RPH)
University of Washington
Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Partnership
University of Zambia, Department of Demography
San Francisco Department of Public Health
SEEK Development, Berlin, Germany
US Agency for International Development
(USAID)
Shoklo Malaria Research Unit (SMRU), Thailand
Vanderbilt University, Institute of Global Health
Society for Family Health, Nigeria
Village Health Works, Burundi
Society for Women and AIDS in Africa, Ghana
Wellbody Alliance, Sierra Leone
South African Cochrane Center, MRC
Wits Reproductive Health Institute (WRHI),
Johannesburg
South African Medical Research Council
Stampar School of Public Health, University of
Zagreb, Croatia
Stanford University
UKZN – Center for Rural Health
World Bank Institute
World Health Organization (WHO)
Zagaya
UCSF Global Health Sciences 2013 Annual Report
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HP Your Cause, LLC
Hewlett Foundation
Hillshire Brands Company
Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation
International Planned Parenthood Foundation
Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Inc.
Khan Academy
Libra Foundation
Linked Foundation
At a Glance
Global Health Sciences
Facts & Figures
UCSF scientists, staff and students are working in
virtually every region of the world in pursuit of UCSF’s
mission: advancing health worldwide.™ Global Health
Sciences (GHS) translates UCSF’s scientific leadership
into programs that positively impact health and reduce
inequities globally.
Founded: August 1, 2003 by Haile Debas
Executive Director: Jaime Sepulveda
Number of faculty & staff: 268
Number of current students & trainees: 86
Our faculty—experts in research, implementation,
education and policy development—work alongside
partners, including ministries of health in many developing
countries, to support the prevention, treatment and elimination interventions for conditions that cause significant
health burdens among the underserved. We integrate
UCSF’s strengths in the basic sciences and clinical care
to reduce suffering from HIV/AIDS, malaria, maternal
mortality, neglected infectious diseases and other
devastating conditions.
Number of alumni:
Masters in Global Health Sciences: 125
Pathways to Discovery: 82
Clinical Scholars: 201
Complex Humanitarian Emergency Training: 217
Funding: $44.75 million
(80% from sponsored projects)
Countries in which GHS works: 50
Founded in 2003 as an academic program reporting
directly to the UCSF Chancellor, GHS comprises the
Global Health Group, Prevention & Public Health Group,
and the AIDS Research Institute. We also partner with
other units at UCSF who are active in global health, such
as the Bixby Center for Global Reproductive Health.
Countries in which UCSF works: 110
Number of UCSF investigators working globally: 700
UCSF rankings in NIH research funds:
#1 HIV and malaria
#2 Vector-borne disease
#4 Emerging infectious disease
#5 Tuberculosis
UC San Francisco
The University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) is the
leading university exclusively focused on health. Through
unparalleled and integrated excellence in discovery,
education and patient care, UCSF drives advancements
in health for patients, families and communities around
the world. We accelerate the discovery and application
of groundbreaking science and partner with industry,
government and our peers, providing new tools and
models that impact health from patients to populations.
From left to right, photos by: Karen Schlein, Hugh Sturrock, Brent Gordon, Lisa Thompson, and Rachel Steinfeld
UCSF Global Health Sciences 2013 Annual Report
15
Connect with us.
Website: globalhealthsciences.ucsf.edu
Email: communications@globalhealth.ucsf.edu
And, follow us on Facebook
MANAGING EDITOR: PAULA MURPHY
GRAPHIC DESIGNER: KERSTIN SVENDSEN
PHOTOS: CREDITED IN CAPTIONS, EXCEPT
FOR FRONT AND BACK COVER PHOTOS.
FRONT COVER, LEFT TO RIGHT: SARAH
GHATTASS, KATIE FOX, AND NICK HU.
BACK COVER: MICHELLE HSIANG
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