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Partners In Health mourns Dr. Lee Jong-wook, Director-General of WHO
Dr. Lee Jong-wook and Reiko Kaburaki Lee enjoy a lighter moment at the Mujeres Unidas project in Peru. |
The global health community lost a visionary leader and Partners In Health
lost a valued friend on May 22 with the death of Dr. Lee Jong-wook, Director-General
of the World Health Organization (WHO).
Since taking the helm of WHO in 2003, Dr. Lee had galvanized action to
bring anti-retroviral treatment that had previously been available only
in rich countries to millions of AIDS patients in Africa and elsewhere
in the developing world. Shortly after taking office, Dr. Lee launched
the "3 by 5" campaign, with the goal of having 3 million people on treatment
by the end of 2005. Although the campaign fell short of its target, the
number of patients on treatment in developing countries quadrupled in just
two years. In Africa, it increased eight-fold.
"Someone had to say, 'Let's do something with the tools we already have,'" recalled
PIH co-founder Jim Kim, who worked closely with Dr. Lee on the "3 by 5" campaign
as head of WHO's HIV/AIDS Department. "And he [Dr. Lee] did it." For more
than one million people who started receiving treatment between 2003 and
2005, Dr. Lee's willingness to take action and take responsibility quite
literally meant the difference between hope and despair, life and death.
Dr. Lee began his career with WHO directly out of medical school. After
working with leprosy programs in Fiji, he took on ever increasing responsibility,
leading WHO efforts to eradicate polio in Asia, immunize children worldwide
and fight tuberculosis. It was as head of WHO's tuberculosis program that
Dr. Lee came to be a friend and supporter of Partners In Health in its
work with multidrug-resistant TB patients in Peru, Haiti and Russia.
Since 2001, Dr. Lee's wife, Reiko Kaburaki Lee, has devoted six months
of every year to working with Mujeres Unidas - a crafts cooperative organized
by PIH's partner organization, Socios En Salud. Mujeres Unidas, was founded
in 2000 as a way for poor women in the TB-ridden shantytowns outside Lima,
Peru, to contribute to their families' income. Over the past six years
it has provided many women the opportunity both to earn money and to learn
important managerial and technical skills that boost their self esteem
as well as their ability to provide for their families. And for half of
each of those years, Reiko Kaburaki Lee has worked alongside these women,
stitching and weaving the fabric of scarves, hats and better livelihoods.
In lieu of flowers, Reiko Kaburaki Lee has asked people to honor her husband's
memory by donating to Mujeres Unidas. Donations
can be made online. To earmark your contribution in honor of Dr. Lee,
select "Peru: gifts in memory of Dr. JW Lee" from the "Program" drop-down
menu and check the box to indicate that "My donation is a tribute to someone
special."
More details on Dr. Lee's life, work and legacy are included in the obituary
in the Boston Globe.
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