logo
#

Latest news with #Nabarro

David Nabarro, doctor who tried to raise millions to treat cholera in Haiti, dies at 75
David Nabarro, doctor who tried to raise millions to treat cholera in Haiti, dies at 75

Miami Herald

time12 hours ago

  • Health
  • Miami Herald

David Nabarro, doctor who tried to raise millions to treat cholera in Haiti, dies at 75

The United Nations and world health community are mourning the death of David Nabarro, the British physician and public health champion who led the U.N response to eradicating cholera in Haiti after taking on some of the world's most pressing diseases, including Ebola. A passionate advocate who was once described to the Miami Herald as the U.N.'s go-to guy for responding 'to really tricky' situations, Nabarro died Friday at his home in Ferney-Voltaire, France, a suburb of Geneva, according to the 4SD Foundation, a Switzerland-based social enterprise he founded and where he served as strategic director. He was 75. His passing was described as a 'sudden death.' 'Dr. Nabarro was a tireless advocate for global health -- a leader who brought clarity, compassion and conviction to some of the world's most complex health emergencies, from AIDS and malaria to avian influenza and the COVID-19 pandemic,' Farhan Haq, deputy spokesperson for U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres, said in a statement Tuesday. 'He dedicated his life to the conviction that health is a human right — and worked to help make that right a reality for all people everywhere,' Haq added. Nabarro was known for his organized, results-oriented style and willingness to take personal risks. During the COVID pandemic, he served as one of six special envoys to the World Health Organization dealing with the coronavirus crisis. For his efforts and overall contributions to global health, he was knighted by King Charles III in 2023. Among those contributions was his fight against Ebola. With more than 30 years experience as a public health doctor when he was appointed coordinator of the U.N's efforts, Nabarro ended up raising $3.5 billion to fight Ebola despite the incessant and worrying questions from donors asking him if he knew what he was doing and if he had a strategy. 'There was a question mark always over whether or not we had a strategy that made sense, whether or not we knew what we were up to,'' he told the Herald in a 2016 interview. Soon he faced the same kinds of question as he tried to raise $400 million for the U.N.'s cholera plan in Haiti. Nabarro had been tapped to serve as special adviser to then Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who after years of fighting litigation efforts by victims and refusing to acknowledge the U.N.'s role in inadvertently introducing the deadly disease into Haiti, was ready to take it on the problem. Scientific studies and a confidential U.N. report had traced Haiti's outbreak to Nepalese soldiers, part of a U.N. peacekeeping contingent stationed near a river in the rural town of Mirebalais after the devastating Jan. 12, 2010, earthquake. By the time Nabarro was involved cholera had killed at least 9,393 people and sickened more than 790,840 in the Caribbean country. His job was to help the secretary general raise hundreds of millions of dollars over two years to fund a U.N. plan to eliminate cholera with rapid responses, vaccinations and improving long-term access to clean water and sanitation. By the time Nabarro came on the scene in late 2016, Ban had finally admitted the U.N.'s role and offered an apology during a meeting of the U.N. General Assembly. He wanted Nabarro to do for cholera what he had done for Ebola in Africa: galvanize government efforts and raise money. 'I have no illusions about this. It's going to be tough,' Nabarro told the Herald two weeks before visiting Haiti with Ban. 'But I am not scared by it.' Over the next few months, Nabarro made other visits and devoted himself to the cholera problem as well as to the fight against global hunger. To understand the waterborne disease's evolution and response, he reached out to a number of public health experts including Ariel Henry. The physician, who would later serve as Haiti's prime minister, was in the administration of then-President René Préval and was helping with the government's response. At the time Préval was facing immense pressure from the Obama administration to hold presidential and legislative elections in Haiti despite the deaths of more than 300,000 people and 1.5 million homeless in the quake. Fearing that placing blame on the U.N. would lead to the departure of its blue helmet peacekeepers and open the door to more violence and instability, Préval tried to manage the response on his own. But as time went by, pressure built for the U.N. to not only acknowledge its role but to apologize and compensate victims. Instead of checks to victims, Ban called for vaccinating adults and dispatching more rapid response teams within 24 to 48 hours of an infection. He also pledged that the U.N. would improve water and sanitation in places where cholera had spread. In an email exchange in 2017 while vying for the top job at the World Health Organization, Nabarro acknowledged that the effort to raise financing to eradicate cholera in Haiti had not been easy. The amount of money raised was small, but he still held onto hope that the benefits would be enormous. 'I really do hope that I get to the director general of the World Health Organization as I would then be able to give a very high priority to a concerted and sustained effort to reduce the incidence of cholera in the country and to help all Haitians to access drinking water and functioning sanitation,' he told a Herald reporter. Nabarro lost out on the WHO job to Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. In a post on the social media platform X on Saturday, Ghebreyesus remembered Nabarro as 'a great champion of global health and health equity, and a wise, generous mentor to countless individuals.' Through Nabarro's efforts and those of others in Haiti, the country was declared cholera-free in February 2022 by Henry, now the country's prime minister, after three years without a confirmed case. The celebration was short-lived. By the end of the year, repeated gang clashes, which cut off access to water, fuel and hospitals in Port-au-Prince, gave rise to a resurgence of cholera cases. Nabarro is survived by his wife, Flo; his children, Tom, Ollie, Polly, Josie and Lucas, and seven grandchildren.

WHO's special envoy for Covid-19 David Nabarro dies aged 75
WHO's special envoy for Covid-19 David Nabarro dies aged 75

The Journal

time4 days ago

  • Health
  • The Journal

WHO's special envoy for Covid-19 David Nabarro dies aged 75

DAVID NABARRO, WHO was the World Health Organisation's (WHO) special envoy for Covid-19, has died aged 75. The WHO's director-general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he was 'deeply shocked and saddened by the passing' of Nabarro. London-born Nabarro worked at the United Nations for 17 years, expanding nutrition programmes to underdeveloped countries and tackling health crises including outbreaks of malaria, bird flu and Ebola, before leaving in 2017. He was appointed as special envoy on Covid-19 for the WHO in 2020 and appeared on news programmes regularly throughout the pandemic, telling Sky News in June 2021 that humanity was going to have to learn how to 'co-exist' with Covid-19. Advertisement Nabarro was knighted at Buckingham Palace in March 2023 for his outstanding contribution to global health. Dr Tedros wrote on X: 'Deeply shocked and saddened by the passing of our dear friend, colleague and WHO Envoy David Nabarro. 'David was a great champion of global health and health equity, and a wise, generous mentor to countless individuals. 'His work touched and impacted so many lives across the world. 'On behalf of WHO, I'm extending our heartfelt condolences to David's family, friends and colleagues. 'Rest in peace, my dear friend. We will dearly miss your expertise, wisdom and kindness.'

COVID-19 special envoy David Nabarro dies aged 75
COVID-19 special envoy David Nabarro dies aged 75

The Advertiser

time4 days ago

  • Health
  • The Advertiser

COVID-19 special envoy David Nabarro dies aged 75

David Nabarro, the World Health Organization's special envoy for COVID-19 since the early stages of the outbreak in 2020, has died at the age of 75. "David was a great champion of global health and health equity, and a wise, generous mentor to countless individuals," World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said of the Briton in a post on X on Saturday. "His work touched and impacted so many lives across the world." Nabarro was also co-director of the Institute of Global Health Innovation at Imperial College in London. At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2021, Nabarro called for more global cooperation and aid to poorer countries during a health crisis he said was "nothing like anything else we've ever seen in my professional life". In 2017, he was a candidate for WHO director general, finishing second to Tedros in the election. David Nabarro, the World Health Organization's special envoy for COVID-19 since the early stages of the outbreak in 2020, has died at the age of 75. "David was a great champion of global health and health equity, and a wise, generous mentor to countless individuals," World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said of the Briton in a post on X on Saturday. "His work touched and impacted so many lives across the world." Nabarro was also co-director of the Institute of Global Health Innovation at Imperial College in London. At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2021, Nabarro called for more global cooperation and aid to poorer countries during a health crisis he said was "nothing like anything else we've ever seen in my professional life". In 2017, he was a candidate for WHO director general, finishing second to Tedros in the election. David Nabarro, the World Health Organization's special envoy for COVID-19 since the early stages of the outbreak in 2020, has died at the age of 75. "David was a great champion of global health and health equity, and a wise, generous mentor to countless individuals," World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said of the Briton in a post on X on Saturday. "His work touched and impacted so many lives across the world." Nabarro was also co-director of the Institute of Global Health Innovation at Imperial College in London. At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2021, Nabarro called for more global cooperation and aid to poorer countries during a health crisis he said was "nothing like anything else we've ever seen in my professional life". In 2017, he was a candidate for WHO director general, finishing second to Tedros in the election. David Nabarro, the World Health Organization's special envoy for COVID-19 since the early stages of the outbreak in 2020, has died at the age of 75. "David was a great champion of global health and health equity, and a wise, generous mentor to countless individuals," World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said of the Briton in a post on X on Saturday. "His work touched and impacted so many lives across the world." Nabarro was also co-director of the Institute of Global Health Innovation at Imperial College in London. At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2021, Nabarro called for more global cooperation and aid to poorer countries during a health crisis he said was "nothing like anything else we've ever seen in my professional life". In 2017, he was a candidate for WHO director general, finishing second to Tedros in the election.

David Nabarro, British physician who led UN response to Ebola and COVID-19, dies
David Nabarro, British physician who led UN response to Ebola and COVID-19, dies

San Francisco Chronicle​

time4 days ago

  • Health
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

David Nabarro, British physician who led UN response to Ebola and COVID-19, dies

GENEVA (AP) — Dr. David Nabarro, a British physician who led the U.N. response to some of the biggest health crises in recent years, including bird flu, Ebola and the coronavirus pandemic, has died. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization, confirmed Nabarro's death on social media platform X. 'David was a great champion of global health and health equity, and a wise, generous mentor to countless individuals,' Tedros wrote Saturday. 'His work touched and impacted so many lives across the world.' King Charles knighted Nabarro in 2023 for his contributions to global health after he served as one of six special envoys to the WHO on COVID-19. He won the 2018 World Food Prize for his work on health and hunger issues. He also was a candidate for the top job at the WHO in 2017 but lost out to Tedros in the final round of voting. Nabarro left the U.N. later that year. The 4SD Foundation, a social enterprise in Switzerland focused on mentoring the next generation of leaders in global sustainable development, said its strategic director died at his home Friday in a 'sudden passing.' Other details were not immediately available. 'David's generosity and unwavering commitment to improve the lives of others will be sorely missed,' the foundation wrote on its website Saturday.

David Nabarro, British physician who led UN response to Ebola and COVID-19, dies
David Nabarro, British physician who led UN response to Ebola and COVID-19, dies

Winnipeg Free Press

time4 days ago

  • Health
  • Winnipeg Free Press

David Nabarro, British physician who led UN response to Ebola and COVID-19, dies

GENEVA (AP) — Dr. David Nabarro, a British physician who led the U.N. response to some of the biggest health crises in recent years, including bird flu, Ebola and the coronavirus pandemic, has died. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization, confirmed Nabarro's death on social media platform X. 'David was a great champion of global health and health equity, and a wise, generous mentor to countless individuals,' Tedros wrote Saturday. 'His work touched and impacted so many lives across the world.' King Charles knighted Nabarro in 2023 for his contributions to global health after he served as one of six special envoys to the WHO on COVID-19. He won the 2018 World Food Prize for his work on health and hunger issues. He also was a candidate for the top job at the WHO in 2017 but lost out to Tedros in the final round of voting. Nabarro left the U.N. later that year. The 4SD Foundation, a social enterprise in Switzerland focused on mentoring the next generation of leaders in global sustainable development, said its strategic director died at his home Friday in a 'sudden passing.' Other details were not immediately available. Wednesdays What's next in arts, life and pop culture. 'David's generosity and unwavering commitment to improve the lives of others will be sorely missed,' the foundation wrote on its website Saturday. Survivors include his wife, Flo, as well as his five children and seven grandchildren.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store