The Clinton Health Access Initiative, Inc. (CHAI) is a global health organization committed to our mission of saving lives and reducing the burden of disease in low-and middle-income countries. We work at the invitation of governments to support them and the private sector to create and sustain high-quality health systems.
CHAI was founded in 2002 in response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic, with the goal of dramatically reducing the price of life-saving drugs and increasing access to these medicines in the countries with the highest burden of the disease. Over the following two decades, CHAI has expanded its focus. Today, along with HIV, we work in conjunction with our partners to prevent and treat infectious diseases such as COVID-19, malaria, tuberculosis, and hepatitis. Our work has also expanded into cancer, diabetes, hypertension, and other non-communicable diseases, and we work to accelerate the rollout of lifesaving vaccines, reduce maternal and child mortality, combat chronic malnutrition, and increase access to assistive technology. We are investing in horizontal approaches to strengthen health systems through programs in human resources for health, digital health, and health financing. With each new and innovative program, our strategy is grounded in maximizing sustainable impact at scale, ensuring that governments lead the solutions, that programs are designed to scale nationally, and learnings are shared globally.
At CHAI, our people are our greatest asset, and none of this work would be possible without their talent, time, dedication and passion for our mission and values. We are a highly diverse team of enthusiastic individuals across 40 countries with a broad range of skill sets and life experiences. CHAI is deeply grounded in the countries we work in, with the majority of our staff based in program countries. Learn more about our exciting work: http://www.clintonhealthaccess.org.
CHAI is an Equal Opportunity Employer, and is committed to providing an environment of fairness, and mutual respect where all applicants have access to equal employment opportunities. CHAI values diversity and inclusion, and recognizes that our mission is best advanced by the leadership and contributions of people with diverse experience, backgrounds, and culture.
Overview of the Program
Malaria is one of the world's most important causes of illness, death, and lost economic productivity. Over the past decade, dramatic increases in donor funding have facilitated scale-up of effective interventions to prevent, diagnosis, and treat malaria. This investment has successfully reduced the burden of malaria in many settings, and some countries have begun planning to eliminate it altogether. CHAI’s global malaria program provides direct management and technical support to countries around the globe to strengthen their malaria programs and reduce the burden of this preventable, treatable disease.
Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) are a diverse group of over 20 infectious diseases that affect more than a billion people worldwide. These diseases typically affect the world’s poorest, including those living in remote, rural areas, urban slums, or conflict zones. Children are the most vulnerable. NTDs often overlap geographically with malaria, and most are similarly transmitted by vectors including mosquitoes, flies, or worms – meaning that they can be prevented through similar measures as those used to fight malaria. Today, the largest efforts against NTDs involve the delivery of preventive chemotherapy through mass drug administration.
Countries of the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) have committed to eliminating malaria. To achieve this, countries need to rapidly detect and effectively treat infections, to identify and aggressively target areas where malaria transmission persists, and to coordinate efforts closely to ensure movements of people and parasites do not jeopardize success. CHAI is supporting malaria programs in Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Myanmar, India and Papua New Guinea to strengthen surveillance systems, devise targeted and evidence-based plans, successfully implement these plans, scale-up case management and vector control interventions in high-risk and hard-to-reach populations, and coordinate activities regionally.
Overview of Role
CHAI is seeking a highly motivated individual with public health experience, case management experience, disease surveillance and analytical skills to scale-up disease surveillance systems; monitor and support the ongoing efforts to reduce disease burden and work towards elimination; and support analyses and translate results for decision-makers in the region with a particular focus on work in PNG where the CHAI program started in 2024. They will collaborate primarily with the Country Malaria Teams and the Regional Team for Asia, reporting to CHAI’s commodity access lead and regional technical advisor for surveillance analytics based in Cambodia. Additionally, the individual will collaborate with CHAI’s Global and other Regional Teams as well as with government programs, academic partners and public health agencies. The successful candidate will possess strong communication and organizational skills, work independently and be innovative in applying their epidemiological expertise with a commitment to producing results. They must have a willingness to travel to relatively remote regions with limited infrastructure and medical care.
Case management (70% (PNG (50%), GMS (50%))
Provide technical support, including but not limited to:
In close collaboration with CHAI’s country and global teams, NMCPs and other stakeholders, provide operational and implementation support including but not limited to:
Provide support to grant management and regional coordination, including but not limited to:
Analytics and Surveillance (30% (PNG (25%), GMS (5%))
Capacity building and communication
Advantages
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