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Confirmed Keynotes
Jim Yong Kim, M.D., Ph.D.
Co-Founder, Partners in Health
Professor, Harvard School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School
Chief, Division of Social Medicine and Health Inequalities, Brigham and Women’s
Hospital
Jim Yong Kim holds appointments as François Xavier Bagnoud Professor of Health and
Human Rights at the Harvard School of Public Health and Professor of Medicine and
Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School. He is chief of the Division of Social
Medicine and Health Inequalities at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a major Harvard
teaching hospital; director of the François Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human
Rights; and chair of the Department of Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School.
Dr. Kim returned to Harvard in December 2005 after a three-year leave of absence at the
World Health Organization (WHO). While on leave, Dr. Kim was director of the WHO’s
HIV/AIDS department, a post he was appointed to in March 2004 after serving as advisor
to the WHO director-general. Dr. Kim oversaw all of WHO’s work related to HIV/AIDS,
focusing on initiatives to help developing countries scale up their treatment, prevention,
and care programs, including the "3x5" initiative designed to put three million people in
developing countries on AIDS treatment by the end of 2005.
Dr. Kim has 20 years of experience in improving health in developing countries. He is a
founding trustee and the former executive director of Partners In Health, a not-for-profit
organization that supports a range of health programs in poor communities in Haiti, Peru,
Russia, Rwanda, Lesotho, and the United States.
An expert in tuberculosis, Dr. Kim has chaired or served on a number of committees on
international TB policy. He has conducted extensive research into effective and
affordable strategies for treating strains of TB that are resistant to standard drugs. While
at WHO, Dr. Kim was responsible for coordinating HIV efforts with the TB department.
Dr. Kim trained dually as a physician and medical anthropologist. He received his M.D.
and Ph.D. from Harvard University. Dr. Kim has been recognized on numerous occasions
as a global leader and distinguished professional, including being awarded a MacArthur "Genius" Fellowship in 2003; being named one of America's 25 best leaders by US News
& World Report in 2005; and being named as one of the 100 most influential people in
the world by Time magazine in 2006. He was a contributing editor to the 2003 and 2004
World Health Report, and his edited volume Dying for Growth: Global Inequity and the
Health of the Poor analyzes the effects of economic and political change on health
outcomes in developing countries.
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