The new directive focuses mainly on the Sectoral Council Meetings of the
regional organization where important issues for each sector are
discussed by senior officials and technical experts from the partner
states
By Zephania Ubwani,The Citizen Reporter
In Summary
- The Commission will be charged with spearheading health research in the region, focussing mainly on leading diseases afflicting the region as well as laid down strategies to improve the health of the people
Arusha. A Tanzanian consultant
physician and professor at the Tumaini University will head the
newly-established East African Health Research Commission (EAHRC).
Prof Gibson Kibiki, who currently serves as the
Director of Kilimanjaro Clinical Research Institute (KCRI), will soon
assume duties as the executive director at the commission’s headquarters
in Bujumbura, Burundi.
His appointment was announced at the end of the
East African Community (EAC) Council of Ministers meeting which ended
here at the weekend, alongside other appointments other newly-formed
regional bodies under EAC.
The Commission will be charged with spearheading
health research in the region, focussing mainly on leading diseases
afflicting the region as well as laid down strategies to improve the
health of the people.
Prof Kibiki, who graduated with a degree in
medicine in Bulgaria in 1996 and internal medicine at the Kilimanjaro
Christian Medical Centre (KCMC) in Moshi in 2003, has vast experience in
clinical medicine.
He trained in gastroenterology, advanced
endoscopy, bronchoscopy in the Netherlands in 2001 and 2003 and won a
University of Virginia Pfizer-Centre for Global Health fellowship award
in Infectious Disease for Global Health Research and Training at the
University of Virginia in 2005.
He got his PhD from Radboud University, the Netherlands, in 2006.
Apart from clinical work, research, and teaching,
he is involved in research capacity building (including establishing
research-oriented MSc programmes and promoting PhD programme at KCMC,
Tumaini University.
He formed a TB research group in 2003 and now the group is carrying out a range of research programmes at KCRI.
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