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Academic Alliance

A Global Coalition

Accordia Global Health Foundation's Academic Alliance is a coalition of committed academicians, physicians, researchers, and other leaders from well-established institutions in North America, Europe, and Africa who work collaboratively to pursue Accordia's goal of building stronger academic medical centers in Africa. Members of the Academic Alliance provide expertise and guidance to shape future healthcare programs in Africa and to provide African academic medical centers with a reliable source of international expertise in infectious disease.

 

International Academic Alliance

Warner C. Greene, MD, PhD (Chair)
Director, Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology, University of California- San Francisco (UCSF) - California, USA
Executive Chair, Accordia Global Health Foundation - Washington D.C., USA

Hank McKinnell, PhD (Member with Distinction)
Chairman of the Board, Accordia Global Health Foundation - Washington D.C., USA

Nelson Sewankambo, MD (Co-chair, Ugandan chapter)
Principal, College of Health Sciences, Makerere University - Kampala, Uganda

W. Michael Scheld (Co-chair, Ugandan chapter)
Director, Pfizer Initiative in International Health, University of Virginia (UVA) School of Medicine - Virginia, USA

William Blattner, MD (Co-chair, West African chapter)
Co-founder and Director, Institute of Human Virology, University of Maryland-Baltimore (UMB) - Maryland, USA

John Idoko (Co-chair, West African chapter)
Director General, National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA) – Nigeria

Bob Colebunders, MD
Lead Coordinator, International Network for the Study of HIV-associated IRIS (INSHI)
Professor, Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM) – Antwerp, Belgium

Concepta Merry, MSc, PhD
Senior Lecturer in Global Health, Trinity College – Dublin, Ireland

Tom Quinn, MD
Founding Director, Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health
Professor, Johns Hopkins University – Maryland, USA

Allan Ronald, MD
Scientific Director, National Coordinating Center for Infectious Diseases - Canada
Distinguished Professor Emeritus, University of Manitoba – Winnipeg, Canada

Walter Schlech, MD
Governor, American College of Physicians
Professor of Medicine, Dalhousie University – Nova Scotia, Canada

 

 

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Ugandan Chapter

Nelson Sewankambo, MD (Co-chair, Ugandan chapter)
Principal, College of Health Sciences, Makerere University - Kampala, Uganda

W. Michael Scheld (Co-chair, Ugandan chapter)
Director, Pfizer Initiative in International Health, University of Virginia (UVA) School of Medicine

Jerrold Ellner, MD
Chief of Infectious Diseases, Boston Medical Center
Professor of Medicine, Boston University

Moses Joloba, MBChB, MS, MMed, MPH, PhD
Director, Tuberculosis Research Unit (TBRU), Case Western Reserve University
Department Head, Medical Microbiology, Makerere University School of Medicine – Kampala, Uganda

Moses R. Kamya, MBChB, MMed, MPH, PhD
Chair, Ministry of Health (MOH) Adult ART Management Committee
Department Head, Makerere University School of Medicine – Kampala, Uganda

Elly T. Katabira, MBChB, FRCP Edin
Co-founder, The AIDS Support Organization (TASO)
Associate Dean for Research, Makerere University School of Medicine – Kampala, Uganda

Edward Katongole-Mbidde, MBCHB, MMED, MRCP
Director of the Uganda Virus Research Institute – Entebbe, Uganda

Yukari C. Manabe, MD
Associate Director of Global Health Research and Innovation, Johns Hopkins University

Harriet Mayanja-Kizza, MBChB, MMed, MS
Dean, School of Medicine, Makerere University College of Health Sciences – Kampala, Uganda

Keith McAdam, MB BChir, FRCP, FWACP
Founding Director, Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI) – Kampala, Uganda
Associate International Director, Royal College of Physicians – London, UK

Dr. Lydia Mpanga-Sebuyira, FRCP
Director, Capacity Building, Imprint (U) Ltd.

Roy Mugerwa, MBChB, MMed
Professor and Former Chairman, Makerere University Department of Medicine – Kampala, Uganda

Philippa Musoke, MD
Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, Makerere University – Kampala, Uganda

Gisela Schneider, MD, MPH
Director, German Institute for Medical Missions

David Serwadda, MD
Director, Institute of Public Health, Makerere University – Kampala, Uganda

David Thomas, MD
Chief of Infectious Diseases, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine – Maryland, USA

Fred Wabwire-Mangen, MBChB, DTM&H, MPH, PhD
Associate Professor of Epidemiology, Makerere University Institute of Public Health – Kampala, Uganda

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West African Chapter

Professor William Blattner, MD (Co-Chair)
Director, Epidemiology and Prevention Division, Institute of Human Virology, University of Maryland

Professor John Idoko, MD (Co-Chair)
Director General, National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA)

Professor Clement Adebamowo, BM ChB Hons, FWACS, FACS, ScD
Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health at the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, and the Institute of Human Virology, University of Maryland Baltimore – United States

Professor Etim Moses Essien, NNOM, MB, BS, MD
Professor of Haematology, Uyo University - Nigeria

Professor Emmanual Ezedinachi, MD, DTMH
Professor of Medicine, Director of the Institute of Tropical Diseases Research, University of Calabar

Professor Emnanuel Oni Idigbe, BSC, PhD
Coordinator, Research Planning and Management, Nigerian Institute of Medical Research

Professor Phyllis Kanki, DVM, SD
Professor of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Harvard University – United States

Professor Oladapo A. Ladipo, MBChB, FRCOG, FMCOG, FWACS, OON
President and CEO, Association for Reproductive and Family Health (ARFH)

Professor Souleymane Mboup, PharmD, PhD
Professor of Microbiology and Chief Bacteriology-Virology Laboratory, Université Cheikh Anta Diop - Senegal

Professor Idris Mohammed, OON, NNOM, MB, MD, FRCP, DTMH, FMCP, FWACP
Professor of Medicine and Clinical Immunology, University of Maiduguri - Nigeria
Hon. Chief Consultant Physician, Federal Medical Centre, Gombe - Nigeria

Professor Robert L. Murphy, MD
Director, Center for Global Health - Institute for Public Health and Medicine, Northwestern University

Professor Abdulsalami Nasidi
Director, Nigerian Centers for Disease Control

Professor Folasade Tolulope Ogunsola, MBChB, MSc, PhD, FMCPath, FWACP
Professor of Medical Microbiology, University of Lagos - Nigeria
Consultant, Lagos University Teaching Hospital - Nigeria

Professor Geoffrey C. Onyemelukwe, MBBS, FWACP, FMCP, DTM, FICA
Professor of Medicine and Immunology, Ahmadu Bello University - Nigeria

Professor Papa Salif Sow, MD, MS
Professor of Infectious Diseases, University of Dakar in Senegal

Professor Umar Shehu, CFR, FAS, DFMC
Professor Emeritus of Community Medicine, University of Maiduguri - Nigeria

Professor Rich Enujioke Umeh, MB BCh, MSc (CEH), DO, FMC, MRC, FWACS, FICS
Professor of Ophthalmology, University of Nigeria
Deputy Vice Chancellor, University of Nigeria, Enugu Campus
Director, Global Health Initiative, University of Nigeria

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Robert Colebunders, MD

Dr. Robert Colebunders is professor in tropical diseases at the Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM) in Antwerp and professor in infectious diseases at the University of Antwerp. He is head of the Clinical HIV/STD Unit of ITM. From 1985 to 1988, he worked in the Democratic Republic of the Congo as coordinator of the clinical studies on HIV/AIDS of "Project SIDA" in Kinshasa. He is one of the first physicians who studied and described the clinical manifestations of HIV infection in Africa. He also has been involved in the study of two hemorrhagic fever outbreaks in Africa (Ebola and Marburg). From 2004 to 2005, he spent a sabbatical year at the Infectious Diseases Institute and was mainly involved in starting its outpatient clinic. He is involved in research projects concerning the management of HIV and HIV co-infections in Uganda, the Central African Region, Ethiopia and South Africa. He was coordinating of the International Network for the Study of HIV-associated IRIS (INSHI) and is currently involved in research into the cause of the nodding syndrome. He has published more than 500 articles in peer-reviewed journals.

 

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Jerrold Ellner, MD Jerrold Ellner, MC

Dr. Jerry Ellner is a professor of medicine at Boston University and chief of infectious diseases at Boston Medical Center. He is one of the premier world authorities on TB pathogenesis, epidemiology, and treatment. He has been actively involved in HIV/AIDS research in Kampala since 1987, establishing a successful program for studying TB as well. He was a founding member of the Academic Alliance. Dr. Ellner has been principal investigator of the large National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants for the study of infectious diseases and participated in an exchange program that has enabled over 60 Ugandan doctors to train in U.S. medical schools in epidemiology. Currently, he directs an International Collaboration for Infectious Diseases (ICIDR) NIH program in Vitória, Brazil that conducts research on TB transmission and pathogenesis. He also is principal investigator of an NIH contract "TB-Clinical Diagnostics Research Consortium" that will facilitate the development of new TB diagnostics. Dr. Ellner has been repeatedly named to multiple “Best Doctor” lists and is a member of many professional organizations.

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Moses R. Joloba, MBChB, MS, MMed, MPH, PhD Moses R. Kamya, MBChB., MMed, MPH, PhD

Dr. Moses Joloba is the head of the Department of Medical Microbiology and senior lecturer at Makerere University’s School of Medicine. Since 2004, Dr. Joloba has served as the head of the National TB Reference Laboratory in Uganda. He has been the director of the Tuberculosis Research Unit (TBRU) for Case Western Reserve University since 2003. Dr. Joloba received his initial medical training at Makerere Medical School and later sought additional management training at the Uganda Management Institute. Dr. Joloba received his MS in pathology and clinical microbiology as well as his PhD in molecular microbiology from Case Western Reserve University on a merit scholarship. He has been a member of the Uganda Medical Association for 14 years and of the American Society for Microbiology for the past 13 years. His current research activities include a co-investigator role on an HIV and malaria co-infection study in Uganda. He is also the principal investigator on two important studies conducted at IDI, Molecular Biology of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Uganda and Cell to Cell Signaling in Mycobacteria.

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Moses R. Kamya, MBChB, MMed, MPH, PhD

Dr. Moses Kamya is a professor of medicine and Chair of the Department of Medicine at Makerere University College of Health Sciences in Uganda. Dr. Kamya is a key person in AIDS care in Uganda. He formally trained in internal medicine at Makerere University (MU) and in Epidemiology at the University of California at Berkeley. He has major interests in malaria and HIV and the in the interactions between the two diseases. He has been conducting Infectious Disease research at Makerere University in Kampala, Uganda for more than 20 years and has over 160 publications largely in the field of HIV and malaria but also on STDs, TB, and bloodstream infections. Currently, He serves as the Uganda Principal Investigator and director of the Makerere University-UCSF Research Collaboration and the Uganda Malaria Surveillance Project. He is also the executive director of the Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration, a research NGO based at Mulago Hospital Campus. Dr. Kamya is PI or co-PI on several malaria and HIV projects including the Sustainable East Africa Research in Community Health (SEARCH). He is one of the Founding Members of the Academic Alliance for AIDS Care and Prevention in Africa, the Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI) and the Makerere University Joint AIDS Program. He also serves as an editor of the Uganda antiretroviral therapy (ART) clinical guidelines and the access to ARVs newsletter and currently chairs the Ministry of Health adult ART management committee. Dr. Kamya also acts as consultant on various task forces of the Uganda Ministry of Health HIV and Malaria Control Programs.

 

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Elly T Katabira, MBChB, FRCP Edin

Dr. Elly Katabira is the co-founder of The AIDS Support Organization (TASO), where he has served as Medical Advisor since 1987. He is professor of internal medicine, associate dean for research, and on the faculty of medicine at Makerere University. He was trained as a medical doctor at Makerere University and later trained as a physician specializing in Neurology in Manchester, UK. He has worked extensively in the field of care and support for HIV-infected people. He is a director of the Mulago Hospital AIDS Clinic, which he opened in 1987 and where over 20,000 patients have been treated. He specializes in the development of treatment and management guidelines for HIV/AIDS and has written several publications and chapters in various books on this topic. His research expertise includes clinical trials and operational research issues on various aspects of HIV/AIDS care and support delivery both within institutions and at the community level. He has consulted on HIV/AIDS care and support for UNAIDS and WHO, both for the headquarters in Geneva and for the African Regional Office in Harare, Zimbabwe.

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Edward Katongole-Mbidde, MBCHB, MMED, MRCP (UK)

Dr. Edward Katongole-Mbidde is the director of the Uganda Virus Research Institute, Entebbe  and a practicing medical oncologist. Dr. Mbidde obtained his MBChB degree from Makerere Medical School in 1972 and specialized in internal medicine. He continued his studies in medical oncology in the UK. His responsibilities included  teaching undergraduate students and residents in internal medicine as well supervising PhD candidates at Makerere Medical School while still the director of the Uganda Cancer Institute (UCI) . He has conducted research locally and internationally. Dr. Mbidde has served on many committees and has presented at many international scientific meetings. Currently he  directs the largest institute devoted to conducting research in viral diseases including viral hemorrhagic fevers besides HIV/AIDS and related diseases. He maintains his research ties with both the IDI and UCI.

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Yukari C. Mandabe, MD

Yuka Manabe is currently the Associate Director of Global Health Research and Innovation within the Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health, an Associate Professor of Medicine, International Health, and Molecular Microbiology and Immunology and a member of the Johns Hopkins University faculty since 1999 and an infectious diseases clinician. She began her faculty career as a basic science researcher studying the molecular and immunopathogenesis of tuberculosis (TB) in animal models. From 2007 until 2012, she was seconded from JHU first as the Associate Medical Laboratory Director of the Makerere University-Johns Hopkins University Clinical Core Lab and then as the Head of Research at the Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI) in Kampala, Uganda. During her tenure, the Research Department built strong research infrastructure (including a translational research lab to build basic science research), research capacity building programs, and scientific and regulatory oversight which has led to increased academic productivity and formal recognition of the IDI as a Research Center of Excellence. Her own research is in health systems strengthening and implementation science particularly in the area of HIV and TB infection and frugal innovation with an emphasis on point-of-care diagnostics.

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Harriet Mayanja-Kizza, MBChB, MMed, MS

Dr. Mayanja-Kizza is the dean of the School of Medicine at Makerere University College of Health Sciences. Dr. Mayanja-Kizza is an internist and clinical immunologist involved in patient care, teaching, and research. Her research focuses on HIV and tuberculosis interaction, with an emphasis on interventional studies and immune interaction. She has conducted research on the effect of tuberculosis on HIV progression, with specific projects in the area of cytokine and chemokine regulation in HIV/tuberculosis interaction. Currently she is conducting epidemiological trials in adolescents and infants in preparation for tuberculosis vaccine clinical trials in Uganda.

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Keith McAdam, MB BChir, FRCP, FWACP

Dr. Keith McAdam is the founding director of the Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI) (2004-7), seconded from Tufts New England Medical Center in Boston, Massachusetts. He is emeritus professor of clinical tropical medicine at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, a position he held from 1985 to 2004. From 1994 to 2003, Dr. McAdam was seconded to West Africa to serve as director of the UK Medical Research Council Laboratories in the Republic of The Gambia. Dr. McAdam grew up in Uganda, where his father, Sir Ian McAdam, was Professor of Surgery at Makerere. He did his schooling in Kenya and went on to study medicine at Cambridge University and the Middlesex Hospital in London. After training in internal medicine in London, he spent three years at the Institute of Medical Research in Papua New Guinea working on leprosy, malaria, and filariasis as causes of secondary amyloidosis. Two years, from 1975 to 1977, Dr. McAdam developed his laboratory and clinical research focus on inflammation, acute phase proteins, and cytokines, at the Immunology Branch of the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, and continued this focus over the next seven years in Boston as a clinical scientist in the Department of Medicine at Tufts New England Medical Center. Professor McAdam was medical advisor to the UK Parliamentary Select Committee on AIDS in 1987 and a member of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics working party that produced an authoritative publication The Ethics of Healthcare Related Research in Developing Countries. He is currently associate international director at the Royal College of Physicians in London and on the International Board of the African Medical and Research Foundation (AMREF).

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Dr. Lydia Mpanga Sebuyira  
BM BCh, BA (Hons) Physiol Sci, MA (Oxon), FRCP

Lydia is an expert physician and teacher who has led world-class education and training programmes at the Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI) of Makerere University and Hospice Africa Uganda. She is a Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Global Health, University of Washington, and a Ugandan Member of the Academic Alliance for Care and Prevention of HIV in Africa.

Lydia holds a Medical degree, a Bachelor’s degree in Physiological Sciences, and a Master’s degree from Oxford University;  is a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians (UK), and holds a Practitioner’s Diploma in Executive Coaching from the Academy of Executive Coaches, UK.

In addition to having over 19 years’ clinical, educational and research experience in the UK, South Africa and in Uganda, Lydia brings a wealth of leadership and management experience from her work in academia and the health sector, both in public and NGO settings.  She has strong facilitator, mentoring, writing and advocacy skills, and is experienced in curriculum development.

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Concepta Merry, MSc, PhD Concepta Merry, MSc, PhD

Dr. Merry is a medical graduate from Trinity College Dublin and obtained a masters degree in HIV from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and a PhD in pharmacology from Trinity College Dublin. She completed a fellowship in infectious diseases at North Western Memorial Hospital in Chicago, Illinois. Dr. Merry is a consultant in infectious diseases and senior lecturer in global health at Trinity College Dublin. She is currently on a leave of absence and based at the Infectious Diseases Institute, where she is developing HIV pharmacology research and the AIDS Treatment Information Center (ATIC). She is a member of the adjunct faculty at the Center for Global Health Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern. Dr. Merry also co-founded Realta, an Irish-based NGO involved in community projects in Kampala and the Mpigi district of Uganda.

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Clement Adebamowo, BM ChB Hons, FWACS, FACS, ScD

Dr. Clement Adebamowo is a professor of epidemiology and public health at the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, and the Institute of Human Virology, University of Maryland Baltimore. He is also a member of the Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Cancer Center, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore. In Nigeria, he offers national service as the Chairman of the National Health Research Ethics Committee and Director of the Nigerian National System of Cancer Registries. He studied medicine at the University of Jos, Nigeria; Surgery at the University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria and Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA.

He has research interests in oncology including viral oncology related to HIV infection and oncogenic viruses such as HPV. He has been conducting cancer and non-communicable diseases research at Institute of Human Virology Nigeria (IHVN) for more than 4 years and has many publications in the field of oncology, surgery, medical education and bioethics. Currently, he is the Principal Investigator and Director of the NIH-funded African Collaborative Center for Microbiome and Genomics Research; Program Director of the West African Bioethics Training Program and the Training in NCD Epidemiology in Nigeria projects. He also directs the CDC-funded Pre-Service Training Program for Clinical, Nursing, and Community Health Personnel in Nigeria (Spearhead). He is an adviser to IHVN on Strategic Information, Training and Research.

 

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Professor Emmanuel Oni Idigbe, BSC, Ph.D

Professor Oni Idigbe is a Medical Bacteriologist by training and joined the Nigerian Institute of Medical Research (NIMR) in 1979 as a Research Fellow II after his Ph.D programme at the University of Glasgow, Scotland. He has had 35 years of service at NIMR during which he rose through the various research appointments and became the Director-General of the Institute in 2000; a position he held until 2008. Currently he is the Coordinator of Research Planning and Management and Coordinator of the HIV/TB Research Group in the Institute. Within this period of service, Professor Oni Idigbe established the National Reference Laboratory for HIV as well as the National Reference Laboratory for Tuberculosis at the institute. In the early 1990’s, he developed and established the database for HIV/AIDS in Nigeria. He further carried out a comparative study on the evaluation of the efficacy of branded versus generic antiretroviral drugs in the Clinical Management of HIV/AIDS. He pioneered the first national survey on Multi-drug resistant TB and he is currently the Chair of the National MDR-TB Committee. With a grant support from the NIH/CDC he is presently conducting a study on resistant to first and second line antiretroviral drugs, amongst HIV patients on treatment in Nigeria. Professor Idigbe served as the Co-investigator of the PEPFAR programmed at NIMR where over 17000 patients are currently accessing antiretroviral treatment. His current areas of research interests are: MDR-TB, ARV resistance, evaluation of innovative and diagnostic techniques and clinical management strategies, as well as community TB and HIV studies. He was appointed an Adjunct Professor of Medical Bacteriology at the Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University Chicago in May 2010. He has supervised over 12 Ph.D programmes and has been a recipient of 25 national and international grants. He serves on several boards and has received several fellowship grants and awards of excellence. He presently has 156 scientific papers in peer-reviewed journals.

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Professor Oladapo .A. Ladipo, MB.Bch, FRCOG, FMCOG, FWACS, OON

Professor Ladipo is a renowned Obstetrician and Gynecologist (internationally and nationally) with over 38 years experience in health care delivery, including over 28 years of consulting and initiating public Health program interventions. Prof Ladipo is the lead/Co-founder, President and Chief Executive officer of the Association for Reproductive& Family Health (ARFH), Nigeria.

Prof Ladipo has provided technical assistance on Sexual and Reproductive Health including HIV/AIDS prevention and other Life saving skill to many developing countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Many Nigerian Local, State and Federal agencies have also benefited from mentoring or technical assistance through the Non-Governmental Organization that he established in 1989.

While a service faculty staff of University College Hospital, Ibadan, he pilot tested the first successful community based delivery of health services in Nigeria; this earned him the WHO Sasakawa award in 1991 for innovative health services in disadvantaged communities in Nigeria. Prof Ladipo is the chairman of National Reproductive Health working group, Chair of Association for Advancement of Family Planning (AAFP), Chair of the Advisory Committee for Evidence for Action Project  and also a National award recipient  of the  Order Of the office of Niger (OON) and two chieftaincy titles for his immense contribution to Knowledge and improvement of healthcare in Nigeria.

His areas of interest include but are not limited to Family Planning, Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights, HIV/AIDS/TB/Malaria, Community Based Distribution of Maternal and Child health Services, Youth/Adolescent programming, Orphan and Vulnerable Children , Safe Motherhood Programmes, Contraceptive Technology among others. Through his research activities he has to his credit about One hundred and seventy one (171) publications in reputable national and international journals.

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Idris Mohammed, OON, NNOM, MB, MD, FRCP, DTM&H, FMCP, FWACP

Idris Mohammed, OON, NNOM, MB, MD, FRCP, DTM&H, FMCP, FWACP, is professor of medicine and clinical immunology at the University of Maiduguri, and chief consultant physician Federal Teaching Centre Gombe. He is also currently Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Governing Council of Gombe State University, and Chairman, Implementation Committee of the proposed College of Medical Sciences, Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University, Bauchi, Nigeria. After obtaining the MBBS from the University of Ibadan, he proceeded to the United Kingdom where he underwent further training that earned him the MRCS, LRCP, DTM&H, MRCP, and MD in Immunology. Upon his return to Nigeria, he served as chief medical officer and permanent secretary Ministry of Health, Bauchi, before transferring his services to the Ahmadu Bello University where he became a full professor of Medicine in 1983. Professor Mohammed again transferred his service (on request) to the University of Maiduguri as professor of medicine and clinical immunology in 1984. While at Maiduguri, he served as the foundation chief medical director of the university teaching hospital for nine years and as provost of the College of Medical Sciences for four years.

His major areas of research are in various aspects of immunopathogenesis of disease, HIV/AIDS, malaria, typhoid infection, and meningococcal disease. His landmark research on preventive vaccination against epidemic meningococcal meningitis contributed to the development of the new conjugate MenAfrivac vaccine that is expected by the WHO to end epidemics of meningitis as a public health problem in Africa. Among the many honors he has received are: Officer of the Order of the Niger, Nigerian National Order of Merit (the highest academic and intellectual honor in Nigeria), and Fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Science. He is one of 14 scientists adjudged to have contributed the most towards Nigeria's development in the 50 years since independence, and inducted to the Nigeria Hall of Fame.

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Roy Mugerwa, MBChB, MMed

Dr. Roy Mugerwa is professor and past chairman at Makerere University's Department of Medicine. He is the Uganda-based principal investigator (PI) for the on-going Tuberculosis Research Projects funded by the National Institutes of Health, and the PI for joint projects between Makerere University and University of Medicine and Dentistry, New Jersey. He was the PI for the first preventive HIV vaccine trial in Africa. Dr. Mugerwa was one of the first African scientists to identify AIDS in Uganda and has been principal investigator for various clinical and epidemiological trials of HIV-associated tuberculosis, including two successfully completed IND studies, in addition to being principal investigator of various intervention studies to prevent HIV transmission in women.

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Philippa Musoke, MD Phillipa Musoke, MD

Dr. Philippa Musoke is associate professor in the department of pediatrics and child health at Makerere University. She is also the principal investigator for site Makerere University-Johns Hopkins University (MU-JHU) Care Ltd. She previously served as the head of the pediatrics department and an investigator at the MU-JHU Research Collaboration based at Mulago Hospital. Her medical degree was obtained from Makerere University. She received her training at Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio and University of Louisville, Kentucky. She is board certified in pediatric infectious diseases. Her research interests include; prevention of mother to child HIV transmission, pediatric HIV in resource poor settings, and childhood TB.

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Thomas Quinn, MD

Dr. Tom Quinn is professor of medicine, pathology, international health, epidemiology, molecular microbiology and immunology at John Hopkins University Medical Institutions. He is founding director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health. He is also senior investigator and head of the Section on International HIV/STD at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. One of the first western scientists to identify AIDS in Africa in 1983, he is now a leading authority on the epidemiology, transmission, and models of care for HIV in Africa and other developing nations. Dr. Quinn is responsible for the creation and operation of the state-of-the-art HIV-dedicated laboratory facility at the new Institute.

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Allan Ronald, MD

Dr. Allan Ronald is distinguished professor emeritus at the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada. He was the founder of the highly successful investigation unit for studying HIV and STDs in Nairobi, Kenya from 1980 to 2004. He was president of the International Society of Infectious Diseases from 1996 to 1998. Dr. Ronald was based at Makerere University from 2002 to 2004, during which he assisted with organizing the Infectious Diseases Institute clinical services. He was also chair of internal medicine at the University of Manitoba and physician-in-chief of the Health Sciences Center. Currently, he serves as the scientific director of the National Coordinating Center for Infectious Diseases, which is part of the Public Health Agency of Canada. In addition, Dr. Ronald is a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and is the 2006 recipient of the Wightman Award from the Gairdner Foundation of Canada. In 2013, he was awarded the Order of Manitoba, the Canadian province's highest honor.

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Walter F. Schlech III, MD

Dr. Walter Schlech is professor of medicine in the Dalhousie University Faculty of Medicine and a member of the Division of Infectious Diseases. He has been involved in HIV research and care since 1982. Previously, Dr. Schlech served as a member of the National Advisory Committee on AIDS in Canada and Centers for Disease Control Atlanta’s Advisory Committee on HIV, STDs, and tuberculosis. He is a founding member of the Canada-Africa Prevention Trials Network with partnerships in Uganda, South Africa, and Kenya. He has taught HIV medicine in both India and Uganda. His association with the Infectious Diseases Institute began as an AIDS trainer in 2003. He now returns frequently as a professor-in-residence to teach, care for patients, and carry out research at IDI and Mulago Hospital, as well as at the Mbarara University of Science and Technology. Dr. Schlech is also a governor of the American College of Physicians, a member of their International Advisory Committee, and a past-president of the Canadian Infectious Diseases Society.

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W. Michael Scheld, MD

Dr. W. Michael Scheld is currently the Bayer-Gerald L. Mandell professor of infectious diseases, professor of internal medicine, clinical professor of neurosurgery, and director of the Pfizer Initiative in International Health at the University of Virginia (UVA) School of Medicine. Dr. Scheld received his BS with honors and distinction from Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, and his MD (with election to Alpha Omega Alpha) from Cornell University Medical College. He completed his internship, residency, and fellowship in infectious diseases at the UVA Health System, Charlottesville.
 
Dr. Scheld has received many awards and honors throughout his career, including the Young Clinical Investigator Award from the Southern Section American Federation for Clinical Research and an Established Investigator Award from the American Heart Association. Dr. Scheld is a founding member of the Academy of Distinguished Educators at the UVA School of Medicine, a co-chair and founding member of the Academic Alliance for AIDS and Care and Prevention in Africa, and the founder of the Virginia Infectious Diseases Society. Dr. Scheld has held executive positions at the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases and is past president of Infectious Diseases Society of America. He has been a member of the American Board of Internal Medicine Subspecialty Board on Infectious Diseases since 1997 and served as the chair from 2000 to 2004. He was a member of the Inter-science Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy Program Committee for twelve years, including service as vice chair and chair, and is a fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology. He is listed in all editions of the Best Doctors in America from 1992 to 2005, all editions of America’s Top Physicians since 2003, and all editions of America’s Top Doctors. Dr. Scheld has been on the editorial boards of a number of scholarly journals and is currently an editorial board member of Infection, International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents, and Medscape Infectious Disease. He has published over 200 original articles and has contributed to another 200 books and peer-reviewed articles. He is a frequent presenter at international conferences, meetings, symposia, and seminars.

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Gisela Schneider, MD, MPH

Dr. Gisela Schneider is a medical doctor, specializing in public and reproductive health. She has over 20 years of experience in Africa, mostly in the Republic of The Gambia. She has specific expertise in developing and implementing training programs, especially at the community level. Dr. Schneider held the position of head of training at the Infectious Diseases Institute in Kampala, Uganda from 2005 to 2007. Prior to her time in Kampala, she helped set up a comprehensive HIV-care program for Gambia. Dr Schneider is now director at the German Institute for Medical Mission. The main areas of work are training of health workers, doctors and nurses working in low-resources settings, strengthening faith-based health systems in Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sudan, Chad and Central African Republic, and work in HIV programs across Africa and Asia. In December 2010 she received the Dignity and Health Award of the International Christian Medical and Dental Association.

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Nelson Sewankambo, MD

Dr. Nelson Sewankambo is principal of the College of Health Sciences at Makerere University in Kampala, Uganda. Dr. Sewankambo was among the first scientists to publish data on AIDS in Africa, was instrumental in starting the AIDS Clinic at Mulago Hospital in Uganda, and continues to be active in HIV/AIDS research. He is currently Co-Principal Investigator (Co-PI) of the Rakai Health Sciences Program. Sewankambo was founding Director of the Clinical Epidemiology Unit, and Co-PI of the Behavioral and Qualitative Research on AIDS Prevention funded by the Canadian International Development Research Centre. He has served on numerous local and international advisory boards including the Working Party on the Ethics of Clinical Research in Developing Countries of the Nuffield Council for Bioethics, the Joint Learning Initiative, the WHO African Advisory Committee on Health and Research Development (AACHRD), and the Board of Directors of the International Clinical Epidemiology Network (INCLEN). Dr. Sewankambo is also chairman of the Infectious Diseases Institute Board, a member of Council of the Global Forum for Health Research, and a chair of Initiative for Strengthening Health Research Capacity in Africa.

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David Serwadda, MD

Dr. David Serwadda is an Associate Professor and Director of the Institute of Public Health at Makerere University in Kamapala, Uganda. Prior to that, he served as the Senior Lecturer in Infectious Epidemiology at the University and as the Director of the Masters of Public Health Program. His various publications have tackled themes such as: alcohol use before sex and HIV acquisition, mortality in HIV-infected and uninfected children of HIV-infected and uninfected mothers in rural Uganda, and the role of sexual behavior change and the national response, just to name a few. He is a member of the Ugandan National Committee for the Prevention of AIDS and a member of the AIDS Research Subcommittee. His expertise has also been sought by the World Health Organization (WHO) in their Department of Reproductive Health and Research and the International Scientific Committee on research pertaining to AIDS and Associated Cancers in Africa.

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David Thomas, MD

Dr. David Thomas is a professor of medicine and chief of infectious diseases at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland. Dr. Thomas is trained in internal medicine and infectious diseases, and he cares for patients with chronic viral hepatitis. He also oversees clinical research projects which focus on understanding the natural history and pathogenesis of hepatitis C virus infection. Liver disease in HIV infected persons is a special area of clinical and research focus.

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Fred Wabwire-Mangen, MBChB, DTM&H, MPH, PhD

Dr. Fred Wabwire-Mangen is associate professor of epidemiology at the Makerere University Institute of Public Health, where he teaches epidemiology and research methodology to graduate and undergraduate students. He was trained as a medical doctor at Makerere University and later specialized in tropical medicine at Liverpool University, and immunology and infectious diseases and infectious disease epidemiology at Johns Hopkins University. His research interests include sexually transmitted diseases, HIV/AIDS, malaria, and reproductive health. He has been a co-investigator with the Rakai Health Sciences Program since 1994, where he was in charge of the maternal-infant component of the STD control for the AIDS Prevention Trial. Presently, Dr. Wabwire-Mangen is leading HIV vaccine initiatives in collaboration with the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. His strengths are in the design, implementation, and analysis of research studies and the translation of research findings into public health policy and practice. Dr. Wabwire-Mangen has over 45 journal publications. Dr. Wabwire-Mangen also has specific interests in the development of innovative methods for adult medical education. In this regard, he spearheaded the Ugandan development of the innovative experience-based master of public health Training Program using the 'Public Health Without Walls' model. In the ten years of its existence, this Program has produced over 100 MPH graduates who are currently deployed in public health leadership positions in Uganda.

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