New WHO Regional Director Nominated by African Member States Africa 18/05/2025 • Elaine Ruth Fletcher Share this: Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to print (Opens in new window) Print Newly-elected African Regional Director, Dr Mohamed Yakub Janabi. Dr Moahamed Yakub Janabi, of Tanzania, was elected as the new African Region nominee for Regional Director, in a special meeting of the WHO African Regional Committee on Sunday – replacing fellow Tanzanian, RD-elect Dr Faustine Ndugulile, who died suddenly in November, 2024. The WHO Executive Board will be asked to approve Janabi’s nomination at their meeting just after next week’s World Health Assembly, clearing the way for his formal appointment by WHO Director General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. Janabi beat out three other candidates in secret voting by the committee, which followed a series of presentations and interviews of the four candidates at Sunday’s meeting. They included candidates proposed by Côte d’Ivoire, Togo, and Guinea. A senior health advisor to Tanzania’s late president and its present head of state, Samia Hassan, Janabi is a cardiologist by training and the former executive director of Tanzania’s largest hospital. Born in 1962, his career spans over three decades of work in clinical and policy settings, from the early days of the HIV epidemic to his role today as presidential advisor, he noted, in his presentation before the African Regional Committee. Hardships caused by out-of-pocket expenses Janabi said his first priority as Regional Director would be achieving Universal Health Coverage for the African Region, reducing catastrophic health expenses that cause financial hardship. “During the course of my duties, I have witnessed, first hand, patients being denied access to health care due to financial constraints, families parting ways with their position, their very means of living just to pay hospital bills,” he told the Regional Committee, “Yet, despite making these heartbreaking sacrifices, many still find themselves trapped in debt and still in poor health conditions. For me, this is a harrowing experience out of pocket, costs have pushed countless families into the depths of poverty, thereby recycling poverty.” He also noted his involvement in HIV vaccine trials in Tanzania and Mozambique in the early 2000s, and later, public health advocacy that convinced Tanzania’s then-president to get a public HIV test, “encouraging 5 million Tanzanians to get tested that year.” In 2021, he supported Tanzania’s new president, Samia Hassan, in devising a new, COVID-19 vaccination strategy, “which played a key role in countering misinformation and boosting vaccine uptake,” he noted. Hassan took over following the death in March 2021 of then-President John Magufuli, a COVID vaccine skeptic, who ultimately succumbed to the virus himself, according to some reports. Janabi also is the founder of the Jakaya Kikwete Heart Institute in 2014, which he claimed achieved a “95% reduction in overseas heart disease referrals” within five years of its founding. Building health systems on primary health care and community health workers Other priorities he cited would include supporting larger fixed contributions to WHO from member states “for more predictable, flexible and sustainable investment” along with stepped up domestic financing for health systems – through blended financing, private-public partnerships and solidarity levies.” Building emergency preparedness, including through cross border collaborations, as well as advancing maternal and child health, along with nutrition, are other high priority items he said, noting that 70% of maternal deaths and 56% of deaths of children under the age of 5 still occur on the continent. Janabi also pledged to tackle infectious diseases as well as non-communicable diseases through a “One Health” approach that “acknowledges the interconnectedness of humans, animals and the environment” – as well as tackling antimicrobial resistance, through better surveillance systems, as well as strengthening local production of diagnostic, therapeutics and vaccines “by leveraging the pandemic agreement” – the new accord expected to be approved at this year’s WHA. He added that primary health care and Community Health Worker networks need more investment as the backbone of health systems – noting that in high-income countries nurse practitioners carry out many functions that doctors used to perform. “You have to build on your community health workers, because these are the people who have the trust. They are the people who are communicating with your general population every day,” he said, adding, “There’s other thing, which unfortunately is not very prominent in Africa. They are called nurse practitioners… So if they get training on basic things like immunization, maternal and child health, education, these efforts will improve access.” Janabi, once confirmed by WHO’s Executive Board and formally appointed by the DG, will step into the shoes of the late RD-elect, Nduguilile, who died on November 27, 2024, at the age of 55, while receiving medical treatment in India. Ndugulile, a former Tanzanian Deputy Health Minister and member of parliament had been elected as the WHO Africa Regional Director in August of 2024 and was scheduled to begin his term in February 2025. His death led to a special session of the WHO Regional Committee for Africa in January 2025 to decide on a new election process. Dr. Matshidiso Moeti had been the WHO Africa Director for two terms before Ndugulile’s election. 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