Raj Panjabi

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PresidentJoe Biden
Succeeded byPaul A. Friedrichs
PresidentJoe Biden
Raj Panjabi
Senior Director for Global Health Security and Biodefense, National Security Council
In office
February 2022  August 2023
PresidentJoe Biden
Preceded byElizabeth Cameron
Succeeded byPaul A. Friedrichs
U.S. Global Malaria Coordinator, United States Agency for International Development
In office
February 2021  February 2022
PresidentJoe Biden
Preceded byKenneth Staley
Succeeded byDavid Walton
Personal details
BornRajesh Ramesh Panjabi
(1981-02-03) February 3, 1981 (age 45)
EducationUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (BS, MD)
Johns Hopkins University (MPH)
OccupationPhysician, professor, entrepreneur, White House official.
Websitewww.rajpanjabi.com

Raj Panjabi (born February 3, 1981[1]) is an American physician, entrepreneur, professor and former White House official.

Panjabi served in the Biden-Harris Administration from 2021 - 2023. President Joe Biden appointed Panjabi as White House Senior Director for Global Health Security and Biodefense on the United States National Security Council. Previously, President Joe Biden appointed Panjabi as the 3rd U.S. Global Malaria Coordinator to lead the U.S. President's Malaria Initiative.

Dr. Panjabi was named as one of the TIME 100 Most Influential People in the World in 2016,[2] one of TIME's 50 Most Influential People in Health Care in 2018,[3] received the 2017 TED Prize,[4][5][6] and was listed as one of the World's 50 Greatest Leaders by Fortune in 2015[7] and in 2017.[8]

Panjabi is the co-founder and former CEO of Last Mile Health and has served as Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School (part-time) and Brigham and Women's Hospital, visiting faculty at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, and Advisor to former Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, co-chair (with former New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark) of the Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response.[9]

Panjabi's grandparents were ethnic-Sindhi refugees from Sind Province in modern-day Pakistan following the Partition of India in 1947, resettling in Mumbai and Indore. A generation later, Panjabi's parents migrated to Liberia, where Panjabi was born and raised. After civil war broke out in Liberia in 1989, Panjabi, at age nine, and his family fled on a rescue cargo plane to Sierra Leone and eventually sought refuge in the United States, resettling initially with a host family in High Point, North Carolina.

Panjabi graduated with a bachelor's degree and MD from the University of North Carolina School at Chapel Hill and received a Masters of Public Health in epidemiology from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. He was a Clinical Fellow at Harvard Medical School, and trained in internal medicine and primary care at the Massachusetts General Hospital.

Career

References

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