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Dr LEE Jong-wook, Former WHO Director-General
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2020-06-18

LEE Jong-wook was nominated on 28 January 2003 by the World Health Organization's Executive Board for the post of Director-General of the agency and elected to the post on 21 May by the Member States of WHO for a five-year term.
Prior to his work as Director-General, Dr Lee was a world leader in the fight against two of the greatest challenges to international health and development - tuberculosis, and vaccine preventable diseases of children.

Dr LEE Jong-wook: Biography

LEE Jong-wook was nominated on 28 January 2003 by the World Health Organization's Executive Board for the post of Director-General of the agency and elected to the post on 21 May by the Member States of WHO for a five-year term.

Prior to his work as Director-General, Dr Lee was a world leader in the fight against two of the greatest challenges to international health and development - tuberculosis, and vaccine preventable diseases of children. Since the appointment as Director of the Stop TB Department in WHO in 2000 – and building on previous experience as head of the Global Programme on Vaccines and Immunization – Dr Lee rapidly built what is internationally recognized as one of the most successful and dynamic global public-private partnerships for health; the Global Partnership to Stop TB. Credited by the Boston Globe as having brought the leadership and political skills needed to build consensus and ‘spur former antagonists to work together’, Dr Lee led the growth of a remarkable and complex coalition of more than 250 international partners that includes WHO Members States, donors, NGOs, industry and foundations.

Dr Lee’s work in tuberculosis control and vaccines demonstrated his personal strategic focus on health interventions to reduce poverty. In accelerating movement to reach the global immunization goals – including polio eradication – and hastening progress towards the global TB control targets, he led efforts which will make a substantial contribution to reaching the Millennium Development Goals. Shortly after his appointment to Stop TB, he launched the Global Drug Facility (GDF) - a new initiative to increase access to TB drugs, with substantial financial support from several multilateral agencies, governments and foundations, the GDF has already made a significant impact and is increasingly being viewed as a model for increasing access to drugs for other diseases of poverty, such as HIV/AIDS and malaria.

His commitment to action and focus on countries ensured that what counts is results – a feature that has been clearly evident from early in his career. As head of polio eradication initiatives in the Western Pacific from 1990 to 1994, he oversaw a reduction in reported polio cases from 5963 to 700 in the Region. In 1994, Dr Lee moved to WHO headquarters in Geneva as Director of the WHO Global Programme for Vaccines and Immunization (GPV) and Executive Secretary of the Children’s Vaccine Initiative – a global campaign to catalyze development of new and improved vaccines for children. He quickly established a reputation as a visionary leader and strong manager. Dubbed as WHO’s ‘Vaccine Czar’ by the Scientific American magazine in 1997, he was responsible for a series of strategic developments in GPV. These included an open approach to working with industry, a review of the short-, mid- and long-term mission of GPV, an increase in funding from $15 million to nearly $70 million between 1994 and 1998, and management reforms to assure the highest technical competence of staff and increase the proportion of women in professional posts.

In 1998, having joined the newly formed cabinet as Senior Policy Adviser to the Director-General of WHO, he was closely involved in the WHO reform process, and maintained a strong commitment to supporting Members States by strengthening the regional and country structure of the Organization. As Special Representative of the Director-General, he was responsible for several crucial WHO initiatives, including those in the Horn of Africa and East Timor.

Dr Lee probably knew WHO better than most, having worked for more than 20 years in technical, managerial and policy positions at all levels in the Organization – country, region and headquarters. He began his WHO career in 1983 as a leprosy consultant in the South Pacific, and a year later was appointed team leader for leprosy control in the South Pacific. In 1986 he moved to the Western Pacific Regional Office in Manila, initially in the Regional Leprosy Control Programme and later as Regional Adviser on Chronic Diseases.

Since Dr Lee took office as Director-General, the Organization has achieved some notable milestones in public health; ratifying the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (the first public health treaty negotiated by WHO); adopting a revised set of International Health Regulations; and leading the health response to avian influenza, the Asian tsunami, and the Pakistan earthquake.

In addition, Dr. Lee Jong Wook was nominated as the first winner of Hanmi Proud Doctor Award jointly established by the Korean Medical Association and Hanmi Pharm in commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the foundation of the Korean Medical Association in 2008

The Director-General released several landmark publications with the aim of prompting a substantial response to some of the greatest health challenges facing the world, most notably the annual World Health Reports, which have focused on the AIDS treatment gap (2004); the appalling burden of suffering and death faced by pregnant women and children, with a call to 'make every mother and child count' (2005); and a commitment to address the health workforce crisis facing most developing countries (2006). The Report for 2007 takes the theme of health and security, emphasizing the central relationship between health, peace and human security.

Prior to joining WHO, Dr Lee worked for two years at the LBJ Tropical Medical Centre in American Samoa. A national of the Republic of Korea, he received his Medical Doctor (MD) degree from Seoul National University Medical School of Medicine, and a Master of Public Health degree from the University of Hawaii, School of Public Health.

Dr Lee was born in 1945. He is survived by his wife and son, two brothers and a sister and their families..

Source : World Health Organization, Doctorsnews

世界卫生组织前总干事李钟郁博士

李钟郁先生于2003年1月28日由世界卫生组织执行委员会提名担任该机构总干事一职,并于5月21日经世界卫生组织会员国选举担任这一职务,任期五年。

在担任总干事之前,李博士曾作为世界领导人,领导了应对国际卫生和发展的两项最重大挑战--结核病和可通过疫苗预防的儿童疾病。自2000年担任世界卫生组织控制结核司司长以来----李博士利用他之前担任全球疫苗和免疫规划负责人的经验----迅速创建了国际公认的最成功和最具活力的全球公立-私立卫生伙伴关系之一,即控制结核全球伙伴关系。《波士顿环球报》称赞李博士具有创建共识和“促使原对立方共同工作”所需的领导能力和政治技能。李博士领导了包括世界卫生组织会员国、捐助者,非政府组织、工业界和基金会在内的250多个国际伙伴组成的卓越和复杂的联盟的发展。

李博士在结核病控制和疫苗方面的工作显示出他个人把减少贫困的卫生干预措施作为战略重点。在加速推动实现全球免疫目标--包括根除脊髓灰质炎--和加快实现全球结核病控制目标进展方面,他领导作出的努力将为实现千年发展目标作出巨大贡献。在控制结核司就职后不久,他启动了全球药物基金(GDF)--这是一项旨在提高获取结核病药物的新举措。在得若干多边机构、政府和基金会的大量财政支持下,全球药物基金已经产生了重大影响,并日益被越来越多的人视为一个样板,可用以提高获取治疗艾滋病毒/艾滋病和疟疾等贫穷造成的其他疾病的药物。

他致力于行动并立足国家,从而确保了注重成果的价值----这一特点从他职业生涯早期就已明显体现出来。作为1990年至1994年西太平洋地区根除脊髓灰质炎倡议的负责人,在其监督下,该地区报告的脊髓灰质炎病例从5963例减少到700例。1994年,李博士被调往世界卫生组织日内瓦总部担任世界卫生组织疫苗和免疫全球规划(GPV)主任兼儿童疫苗行动执行秘书。儿童疫苗行动是旨在促进开发新的和改良的儿童疫苗的一项全球运动。他作为一个具有远见的领导者和强有力的管理者,很快博得了名声。1997年,他被《科学美国人》杂志称为世界卫生组织的“疫苗沙皇”,负责疫苗和免疫全球规划(GPV)的一系列战略发展。其中包括与工业界合作采取开放的措施、疫苗和免疫全球规划伙伴关系的短期,中期和长期使命的评审、1994年至1998年期间从1500万美元增加到近7000万美元的资助增长、以及确保工作人员具有最高的技术能力和增加妇女在专业类职位所占比例进行的管理改革。

1998年,他作为世界卫生组织总干事的高级政策顾问加入了新组建的内阁,密切参与了世界卫生组织的改革进程,并通过加强该组织的区域和国家结构,维持了支持会员国的坚定承诺。作为总干事的特别代表,他负责世界卫生组织的多项重要行动,包括在非洲之角和东帝汶的行动。

李博士可能比大多数人更了解世界卫生组织,因为他在该组织国家、区域和总部的各级技术、管理和政策岗位上工作了20多年。他于1983年作为南太平洋地区的一名麻风顾问开始了在世界卫生组织的职业生涯,一年之后被任命为南太平洋地区麻风控制小组组长。1986年,他被调到马尼拉西太平洋区域办事处,最初在麻风控制区域规划部工作,后来担任慢性病问题区域顾问。

自李博士就任总干事以来,该组织在公共卫生方面取得了一些显著成就;批准《烟草控制框架公约》(世界卫生组织谈判的第一项公共卫生条约);通过一套经修订的《国际卫生条例》;领导对禽流感、亚洲海啸和巴基斯坦地震的卫生响应。

此外,李钟郁博士于2008年被提名为韩美骄傲医生奖的首位获奖者,该奖项为纪念大韩医学会成立100周年而由大韩医学会和韩美制药共同设立。

这位总干事发表了几份具有里程碑意义的出版物,目的是促使对世界所面临的一些重大卫生挑战作出实质性反应,其中最突出的是年度《世界卫生报告》,该报告侧重于艾滋病治疗差距(2004年);孕妇和儿童所面临的可怕的痛苦和死亡负担,呼吁“重视每一位母亲和儿童”(2005年);承诺解决大多数发展中国家面临的卫生劳动力危机(2006年)。2007年的报告以健康与安全为主题,强调健康、和平与人类安全之间的核心关系。

在加入世卫组织之前,李博士在美属萨摩亚LBJ热带医学中心工作了两年。他是大韩民国国民,在汉城国立大学医学院获得医学博士学位(MD),并在夏威夷大学公共卫生学院获得公共卫生硕士学位。

李博士生于1945年。遗有妻子和儿子,两个兄弟和一个姐妹及其家人。

资料来源:世界卫生组织,Doctorsnews

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