U-M to award global health medal to leader of BRAC

March 17, 2016
Written By:
Laurel Thomas
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Thomas Francis Jr. Medal recipient Sir Fazle Hasan Abed’s development organization BRAC has opened some 45,000 schoolhouses, often in remote areas, to reach children who might otherwise not have an opportunity to get an education. Image courtesy: BRACThomas Francis Jr. Medal recipient Sir Fazle Hasan Abed’s development organization BRAC has opened some 45,000 schoolhouses, often in remote areas, to reach children who might otherwise not have an opportunity to get an education. Image courtesy: BRACANN ARBOR—The University of Michigan will honor a champion of global public health next month as the U-M president bestows the third Thomas Francis Jr. Medal upon the leader of an international organization that works to alleviate poverty by creating opportunities.

Sir Fazle Hasan Abed is founder and chairperson of the organization once known as the Bangladesh Rehabilitation Assistance Committee but now, with programs in 12 countries, is simply called BRAC.

U-M honors Abed for his lifetime achievement reaching millions living in poverty in Bangladesh and 11 other countries in Asia, Africa and the Caribbean. His organization is built on the belief that poverty does not have one cause and, therefore, requires many solutions. BRAC’s programs include education, microfinance, skills and job training, health care and empowerment to give people, particularly women and children, the tools and resources they need to overcome poverty.

“The Thomas Francis Jr. Medal in Global Public Health celebrates the University of Michigan’s excellence in research and impact on humanity, while recognizing the greatest achievements of those who have advanced human health and welfare around the globe,” said U-M President Mark Schlissel.

“The presentation to Sir Fazle gives us the opportunity to learn from a global leader who is taking on some of society’s most pressing problems—while drawing inspiration for our ongoing work to address global health challenges as a community of scholars.”

The medal will be presented 2 p.m. April 6 at Robertson Auditorium at the Ross School of Business. Abed will speak, followed by a panel discussion and reception.

“Sir Fazle has done extraordinary work across multiple disciplines to tackle poverty by building an incredible development organization unlike any other. The result has been significant public health gains on a global scale,” said Martin Philbert, dean of the U-M School of Public Health. “Future generations should be inspired by his vision and rigor. Through BRAC, Sir Fazle has demonstrated that the potential for dramatically improving the public’s health is within our reach.”

Abed and BRAC

Abed was an executive at Shell Oil in 1970 when a major cyclone devastated his home country of Bangladesh, killing upwards of 300,000 people, displacing millions and wiping out tens of thousands of homes, mostly housing for the poor. Within months the country was at war, fighting for independence from Pakistan, which it achieved in 1971.

What began as a short-term relief effort, with two-dozen volunteers helping people rebuild their homes after the cyclone and war, turned into a major operation. BRAC has since been called innovative, visionary, resourceful—and some say the biggest attributes—scalable and sustainable.

Under Abed’s leadership, BRAC has reached 138 million people with more than 115,000 employees, making it the world’s largest nongovernmental organization.

Along with its development programs, BRAC owns 16 social enterprises and uses a business approach to address poverty. Its enterprises in Bangladesh include a lifestyle retailer, a dairy business, hotels and conference centers, and a bank, that together provide economic resources to support the organization’s social programs. This includes some 45,000 one-room schoolhouses, a university and a number of birthing centers for pregnant mothers.

“While traveling to different districts across the country for my fieldwork, I saw BRAC health and education facilities located in the most marginalized communities,” said U-M student Munmun Khan, who spent summer 2012 in Bangladesh as an intern for Save the Children International.

“As a Bangladeshi, as a person committed to social justice, and a public health student, Sir Fazle’s recognition feels like a personal affirmation for my goals and the impact that I want to have on the world,” said Khan, who will graduate in April with a master’s degree in public health from the U-M Department of Health Behavior and Health Education and with a certificate in global health.

Ann Arbor resident and U-M public health student Surabhi Rajaram also completed an internship in Bangladesh through CARE last summer, where she witnessed BRAC’s health systems work firsthand, after following the organization for years.

Her favorite story in global development is the Oral Therapy Extension Program, through which BRAC taught 12 million mothers how to make and administer a simple solution that could save their children’s lives. A mixture of clean water, salt and sugar helped countless children in poor, rural communities avoid deadly diarrhea.

“A hallmark of BRAC’s work is this service at the doorstep, which travels upwards to bridge communities and, ultimately, scale impact,” said Rajaram, a second-year health behavior and health education master’s student who hopes to do similar grassroots work upon graduation.

“Sir Fazle’s greatest contribution to the field is that he has reconceptualized development as empowerment, as generating value. It’s so humbling what one man’s vision has manifested into.”

The Francis Medal

Thomas “Tommy” Francis Jr. was founding chair of the Department of Epidemiology in the U-M School of Public Health, and was the first scientist to isolate human influenza virus in the Americas. He designed and oversaw the running of the field trial of the Salk polio vaccine that involved 1.8 million children from the U.S., Canada and Finland.

During a major media event April 12, 1955, Francis announced to the world that the vaccine was “safe, effective, and potent.” At the 50th anniversary of that pronouncement, U-M established a medal in honor of Francis, to be awarded every three-to-five years.

The first recipient was Dr. William Foege, known for his work to eradicate smallpox. The second, in 2010, went to Dr. Alfred Sommer, whose research focuses on Vitamin A supplementation as a way to prevent blindness.

 

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