Indian-origin man appointed global coordinator for US President's Malaria Initiative
Born in Liberia, Panjabi and his family fled the county during its civil war and arrived in the United States as refugees in the 1990s.

"After being sworn in this morning, I'm honored to share that I've been appointed by" Biden as the president's Malaria Coordinator to lead the US president's Malaria Initiative, Panjabi said on twitter. "I'm grateful for this chance to serve," he added.
Born in Liberia, Panjabi and his family fled the county during its civil war and arrived in the United States as refugees in the 1990s.
"My family and I arrived in America 30 years ago after fleeing civil war in Liberia. A community of Americans rallied around my family to help us build back our lives. It's an honor to serve the country that helped build back my own life as part of the Biden-Harris Administration.
After being sworn in this morning, I'm honored to share that I've been appointed by @POTUS as the President’s Malar… https://t.co/NxXuTRkXIs
— Dr. Raj Panjabi (@rajpanjabi) 1612190579000"In the face of an unprecedented crises, I am humbled by the challenges our country and our world faces to build back better. But as I have learned in America: we are not defined by the conditions we face, we are defined by how we respond," Panjabi said in a series of tweets.
He said this mission is personal for him. "My grandparents and parents were infected with malaria while living in India. As a child in Liberia, I fell sick with malaria, and as a doctor serving in Africa, I have seen this disease take too many lives," he said.
"I've seen how" the Malaria Initiative and its partners have responded with resolve in the countries where it operates.
"I've seen the relief on the faces of parents whose children survived malaria because they were treated with medicines and by health workers backed by its support," he said.
Panjabi and the Last Mile Health team played a key role in the 2013-16 West Africa Ebola epidemic, helping train over a thousand frontline and community health workers and support the government of Liberia to lead its national Ebola Operations Centre. Panjabi delivered testimony on the Ebola epidemic at the US Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee.
He is a graduate of the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, trained in internal medicine and primary care at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, and received a masters degree in public health in epidemiology from Johns Hopkins. He has served as a faculty member at the Harvard Kennedy School.
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