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GBCHealth CONFERENCE & AWARDS DINNER May 14-15, 2012 New York City

GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

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Page 1: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

GBCHealthCONFERENCE & AWARDS DINNER

May 14-15, 2012 New York City

Page 2: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012
Page 3: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012
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1GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

Welcome .....................................................................................2

About GBCHealth .............................................................4

MDG Health Alliance ........................................................9

Schedule At A Glance ............................................................ 11

Speakers At A Glance ........................................................... 15

In-Depth Conference Program Guide ............................... 19

Special Opening Session – AIDS@30 ...................... 20

Panel Session – Lost in Translation:

Defining and Delivering Wellness in

the Global Workplace .................................................... 21

Panel Session – Social Health:

The Future of Disease Awareness,

Prevention and Treatment ........................................... 22

Panel Session – Healthy Cities: How Local

Governments are Partnering with Business

to Improve Urban Health ............................................. 23

Luncheon Keynote with Muhtar Kent ...................... 24

Panel Session – Can Southern Africa

Eliminate Malaria? .......................................................... 26

Panel Session – The Business

of Health Diplomacy ......................................................27

Panel Session – Health: Business Responsibility

or Business Opportunity? ............................................ 28

Members’ Reception

Hosted by Abbott and AMPATH ............................... 29

Breakfast Session with Deepak Chopra .................. 30

Panel Session – Maternal Health:

Milestone Moments on the Path

to Healthier Motherhood .............................................. 31

Influencing for Change – Tackling South

Africa’s Diabetes Epidemic: A Conversation

with Madam Bongi Ngema-Zuma ............................. 32

Luncheon Keynote with Dean Ornish ...................... 33

Special Closing Session: MDG Health Alliance –

A Plan for Driving Progress ........................................ 35

Spotlight Features ......................................................... 36

GBCHealth Gala Dinner ....................................................... 39

Dinner Speakers .............................................................40

Frontline Heroes Award ............................................... 42

Business Leadership Award ........................................ 43

Business Action on Health –

Award Winners and Commended ............................. 45

GBCHealth Membership List .............................................. 46

TABLe of ConTenTs

Concept and Design: Green Communication Design inc. www.greencom.ca

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2 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

Dear FrienDs,

Welcome to the GBCHealth annual Conference and Dinner.

Whether this is your 11th annual GBCHealth event (there are more

than a few of you!) or your first, we are delighted to have you

with us. Your partnership, dedication, and application of business

assets and know-how save millions of lives around the world

every year.

Last year we introduced a broad, dynamic and powerful new platform that

transcends specific diseases to focus on integrated solutions to global health

challenges in a more systematic and holistic way. While we continue to focus

our energies on top global health problems, including HIV/AIDS, malaria and

tuberculosis, we have also deepened our efforts to promote the health of

vulnerable populations, in particular women and girls.

We are moving this agenda forward in key geographies around the world—

Africa, China and Latin America. Indeed, I write this note from Moscow where

we are meeting with member companies about ways to fight cardiovascu-

lar disease and diabetes. In addition, GBCHealth, in collaboration with the

World Health Organization and Business Russia, is co-chairing a major interna-

tional conference to identify ways businesses can help stamp out tobacco use.

New technologies, in particular information technologies, are playing an

increasingly important role in our strategies. These technologies, when applied

to integrated health programs that employ sound business systems, can

lower costs, increase coverage and, most importantly, lead to better health

outcomes. It comes as no surprise that programs featuring innovative applica-

tions of technologies made strong showings in this year’s awards competition.

This is part of a trend that I expect to drive our collective impact well into

the future.

WELCOME!

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3GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

The need for business engagement has never been more urgent.

It is a privilege this year to recognize the work of the MDG Health Alliance.

Six initiatives underpin the work of the MDG Health Alliance, each led by senior

business leaders. Collectively they target the most pressing global health chal-

lenges we face today: Reducing Child Mortality; Reducing Maternal Mortality;

Reducing Malaria Deaths to Near-Zero; Ending Mother-to-Child Transmission

of HIV; Saving 1 million lives from TB/HIV co-infection; and Deploying more

Frontline Health Workers to achieve the Health MDGs. Working under the

leadership of Ray Chambers, the United Nations Secretary-General’s Special

Envoy for Malaria, these leaders are helping to focus attention on the biggest

problems with the best potential for the strongest outcomes. On behalf of

GBCHealth, we applaud this effort and pledge our support in the months

to come.

The need for business engagement has never been more urgent. Budgets for

overseas development assistance and global health are being cut. Lives are

at stake. By forging strong public-private partnerships, businesses can help

increase the efficiencies of donor investments, stretching dollars and Euros,

Pounds and Yen to greater effect. GBCHealth is proud of our work with donors

and members to create those strong partnerships and foster their success.

Congratulations to the winners and to all of the companies who participated

in this year’s award competition. By all accounts this was the most highly

qualified group of contestants ever. Your leadership will not go unnoticed—

among your colleagues, among your competitors, among your stakeholders,

and certainly not among the people whose lives you lift around the world.

Thank you for what you do.

Sincerely,

John E. Tedstrom

President and CEO, GBCHealth

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4 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

The 2012 conference is an exploration of what “forward” looks like for private

sector engagement in global health. The GBCHealth team has spent much

of the past year exploring new health areas, new regions and new forms of

engagement to understand where progress is being made and where busi-

ness assets are most needed. The topics on our two-day agenda are loosely

grouped into three areas.

Aids, TB & MALAriA: TUrninG ProGress inTo TriUMPhThe past year has been marked by promising news regarding three of the

world’s most devastating diseases. We now know that antiretroviral (ARV)

treatment reduces HIV transmission by 96%, a powerful effect that allows us to

imagine our path towards the end of AIDS. In another positive vein, the elimina-

tion of mother-to-child transmission of HIV has become a top priority of the

global health community and is clearly achievable. Reducing malaria deaths to

near-zero is also within grasp, but it will require an aggressive, universal deploy-

ment to Africa and affected countries of prevention tools, such as new and

replacement bed nets, as well as diagnostics and treatment. In addition, a prom-

ising new malaria vaccine is expected in just a few years. There also has been

tremendous progress in TB vaccine development, which recently got a signifi-

cant boost with a major donation from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to

Aeras, a non-profit dedicated to developing new vaccines for TB. Major new

initiatives are underway to address TB in key industries such as mining.

Despite promising signs and clear action paths, much remains to be done, and

funding is harder to secure in the aftermath of the economic crisis of recent years.

One Year aGO, GBCHealth announced its broader focus—

and, shorter name. During that time, the Coalition welcomed new

members like accenture, Dow Chemical, HP, intel and Medtronic,

companies that are engaged in health areas outside of our his-

toric focus on HiV/aiDs, malaria and tuberculosis. at the same

time, the robust GBCHealth membership remains the most di-

verse and engaged set of companies and organizations working to

bring an end to those three pandemics.

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5GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

In our opening panel called Aids@30, the world’s foremost AIDS

leaders will take stock and look forward, challenging business to continue

to play an essential role in driving progress. Can southern Africa eliminate

Malaria? takes a look at an ambitious eight-country effort to eliminate the

disease by 2020. If it happens, the private sector will be part of the triumph.

And finally, we are thrilled to be hosting the formal announcement of the MdG

health Alliance, a new and promising effort that seeks to accelerate progress

toward achieving the health-related Millennium Development Goals (MDGs 4,

5, and 6). This large effort is being led by eminent leaders from the private,

public, and non-profit sectors working in conjunction with the Health and

Education Cluster of the Secretary General’s MDG Advocates.

workPLACe To worLd: where And how ChAnGe hAPPensDiseases represent but one lens through which we view business engagement

on health issues. This year we’ll explore topics examining where and how health

change happens and the ways business can contribute most meaningfully. Lost

in Translation: defining and delivering wellness in the Global workplace looks

at how we define “workplace wellness” and the challenges that global organiza-

tions face in translating programs and concepts across their multiple regions

of operation. In healthy Cities: how Local Governments are Partnering with

Business to improve Urban health, we’ll examine ways that local governments

are providing visionary health leadership in urban settings, often in partnership

with business. Our Business of health diplomacy panel considers the risks and

opportunities that businesses face when engaging on foreign shores. Finally,

we’ll try to answer the question of “health: is it a Business responsibility or

opportunity?” Perhaps it is both, and who better than the experts at Edelman

to guide the discussion.

fUndAMenTALs for fUTUre ChAnGe: hiGh-iMPACT oPPorTUniTiesThere are several health engagement areas that nearly every business is

thinking about today. With women fully recognized as the foundation of

healthy societies, the health of women and girls is a growing investment

area for most companies. Maternal health: Milestone Moments on the Path

to healthier Motherhood will look at the critical moments in a woman’s life

where interventions can have the most profound impact. The issues of over-

and under-nutrition loom large for many companies and countries alike, as

the health implications of poor diets have been recognized for the crushing

financial burdens they cause. influencing for Change – Tackling south Africa’s

diabetes epidemic will present a fascinating conversation with South African

First Lady Madam Bongi Ngema-Zuma on the growing global challenge of this

exploding health crisis, one which poses enormous risks for governments and

business alike. Finally, we will put the spotlight on innovations in social health

to see how our increasingly digital and connected world is enabling changes

never before imagined in health awareness, prevention and treatment.

We hope you enjoy these conversations and that you leave the GBCHealth

conference with new ideas and inspirations.

Despite promising signs, much remains to be done.

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6 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

The CoLLeCTive ACTions of GBChealth

The Power of oUr neTwork

COlleCTiVe aCTiOns bring together companies from similar industries or regions to focus on

a common cause or action. When businesses join together to address a health problem, the power

of that collective action can be felt throughout nations and across continents.

COrpOratE aLLianCE On MaLaria in afriCa (CaMa)

CAMA is a coalition of companies that works to improve

malaria control efforts in sub-Saharan Africa. CAMA aims

to build in-country capacity on malaria control and serve

as a platform for exchanging knowledge and best prac-

tices. CAMA recently co-sponsored The Business Case

for IRS, a workshop that brought together companies,

academic institutions and health organizations such as

Roll Back Malaria and WHO to discuss the implementa-

tion and scale-up of indoor residual spraying in the private

sector. CAMA also produced a publication for companies

to establish workplace malaria control programs and a

collection of case studies in which companies shared their

experiences and lessons learned in malaria control.

U.S. HiV initiatiVE

GBCHealth pairs businesses with government and

non-profits to pilot HIV-prevention and care

programs that fill gaps in high-burden cities.

GBCHealth has worked with the health depart-

ment and companies in Washington. D.C.

to increase voluntary, routine HIV-testing in

doctors’ offices and to create a program for

teen advocates to reach their peers. It has also

helped develop an Oakland, California campaign

to encourage HIV-screening among gay men as well as a

curriculum with L’Oreal and the U.S. Centers for Disease

Control and Prevention to teach hairdressers how to

educate their clients about HIV.

CHina HiV/aiDS MEDia partnErSHip (CHaMp)

CHAMP harnesses the power of mass media, social media,

and commercial marketing to raise awareness about

HIV/AIDS and reduce stigma and discrimination against

people living with HIV in China. CHAMP is a unique

collaboration of more than 40 organizations including

media companies, private businesses, NGOs, the govern-

ment sector and UN agencies. Since its inception in 2008,

CHAMP’s public service announcements (PSAs) and

social marketing campaigns have reached millions

of people across China.

GLObaL fUnD priVatE SECtOr DELEGatiOn (pSD)

GBCHealth works closely with dozens of businesses that

contribute to shaping the policies and priorities of the

Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,

the leading funding agency for those diseases. We also

work hand-in-hand with the Fund’s corporate board

members. The PSD has played an instrumental role in

helping to define the Global Fund’s 2012-2016 “Investing

for Impact” strategy. PSD members also actively partici-

pate on the following influential Board Committees: Finance

and Operation Performance; Audit and Ethics; Market

Dynamics Advisory Group; and the Coordinating Group.

HEaLtHy WOMEn, HEaLtHy ECOnOMiES

GBCHealth is working with an array of companies to

advance the role of business in improving the

health, well-being and opportunity of women

and girls. Recent highlights of the HWHE plat-

form include: establishing the moMENtum

campaign, a health and gender awareness

program for male workforces; partnering with

Thomson Reuters to train African journalists to

enhance coverage of women’s issues; and conven-

ing a Business Action Summit to develop a collective

action that will accelerate corporate

investment in women and girls.

HiV-frEE GEnEratiOn/KEnya

The HIV-Free Generation/Kenya is a PEPFAR funded

public-private partnership that works with the private

sector toward the goal of halving HIV incidence among

Kenyan youth. Recent highlights include partnerships

with: MTV to create the high-impact TV series, Shuga

and Shuga ll, that promotes health education and safe

sex behavior; the Standard Media Group to publish youth

pages in magazines; two local NGOs to reach 10,000

youth through job skills programs; and Huru International

to provide sanitary pads to girls in poor communities,

along with HIV and health information.

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7GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

MAkinG An iMPACT ACross The GLoBe

FOr 11 Years, GBCHealth has worked to ensure that

businesses contribute their voices, assets and expertise to

the global health arena.

This impact can be felt across the globe—from workplace wellness programs

springing up in companies around the world; to television sets in Russia, where

families get lifesaving TB information; and to Kenya and South Africa, where

teens learn about HIV from an enormously popular MTV show.

GBCHealth has brought the most pressing health issues of our time into

the executive suites of companies. We’ve engaged CEOs to end workplace

discrimination against employees with HIV, test their own status on company

HIV testing days and urge the U.S. Congress to repeal its travel ban on people

living with HIV/AIDS. On the ground, GBCHealth has played an essential role

in distributing antimalarial medicines more cheaply and bed nets more quickly

and in working with partners toward the goal of halving HIV incidence among

Kenyan youth.

The impact of GBCHealth also can be felt at the Global Fund to Fight AIDS,

Tuberculosis and Malaria, where our private sector delegates help shape the

policy of the Fund’s efforts to combat these three deadly epidemics. Bringing

financial, technical and business expertise, Chevron, for example, has pledged

$55 million to the Fund while Standard Bank provides

free training to the Fund’s grantees.

new PArTners, new ProGrAMs

In our first 10 years, we led corporate action on HIV, TB and malaria.

Now, GBCHealth is applying lessons learned to mobilize businesses to take

on a broader range of health issues, such as diabetes, workplace wellness,

nutrition and women and children’s health.

One year in, GBCHealth is already making an impact. We’ve engaged new

companies and influential technical partners, including the GAVI Alliance

for Vaccines, Union for International Cancer Control (UICC), and the Global

Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN). We’ve launched a smoke-free work-

place challenge that has massive potential on a global scale, as tobacco is the

leading preventable cause of death.

As GBCHealth deepens our work with our legacy diseases and takes on new

issues, we continue to provide companies with the latest insights through

in-depth reports, case studies that share what works best and teleconfer-

ences with the world’s leading health experts. We bring together companies,

international agencies and NGOs at scores of events, workshops and round-

tables to create solutions to health problems, culminating in today’s gathering

of nearly 1,000 global leaders as we celebrate our collective impact on

health worldwide.

Page 12: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

tO DatE, programs supported by the Global Fund are providing AIDS

treatment for 3.3 million people, anti-tuberculosis treatment for 8.6 million people

and 230 million insecticide-treated nets for the prevention of malaria. The Global

Fund works in close collaboration with the private sector to supplement existing

efforts in dealing with these three diseases.

GbCHealth - priVatE SECtOr DELEGatiOn tO tHE GLObaL fUnDGBCHealth serves as the entry point for the Private Sector to collaborate with the

Global Fund, working with dozens of committed businesses willing to contribute

to strengthening the Fund’s agenda. GBCHealth orchestrates The Private Sector

Delegation’s role, steering Global Fund priorities and policies, while also ensuring

that the Global Fund actively engages the business sector.

priVatE SECtOr DELEGatiOn aDViSOry GrOUp MEMbErS

The broader Private Sector Constituency is a larger group of national business coalitions and more than 30 private sector companies engaged at country level through Country Coordinating Mechanisms (CCMs). Representation spans across various indus-tries: Agri-business, Financial Services, Healthcare, Hospitality, Logistics, Oil & Gas and Pharmaceuticals.

The Global Fund’s 10 YEARS OF iMPaCT

SINCE ITS CREATION

in 2002, the Global Fund

has become the main

financier of programs to

fight AIDS, TB and malaria,

with approved funding of

US$ 22.6 billion for more

than 1,000 programs in 150

countries (as of

1 December 2011).

Abbott

Abt Associates

Access Bank

Anglo American plc

Bayer

BD (Becton, Dickinson

and Company)

Chevron

HEINEKEN

Merck

Mylan

Novartis

Product (RED)

SABMiller

Sanofi

Sumitomo

Chemical Company

Vestergaard Frandsen

Photo: John Rae/The Global Fund

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9GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

inTrodUCinG The MdG heALTh ALLiAnCe

GBCHealth is thrilled to host the official debut of the MDG Health Alliance.

The purpose of the MDG Health Alliance is to work in partnership with UN

Agencies, the private sector, nonprofit organizations, academic institutions

and others to support country efforts to accelerate progress toward achieving

Millennium Development Goals 4 (child mortality), 5 (maternal mortality) and

6 (HIV/AIDS, Malaria and other diseases) by 2015.

Under the umbrella of Every Woman Every Child, an unprecedented global

movement spearheaded by the United Nations Secretary-General to mobilize

and intensify global action to improve the health of women and children, the

MDG Health Alliance is comprised of eminent private and public sector leaders

working in conjunction with the Health and Education Cluster of the

Secretary-General’s MDG Advocates.

Six initiatives underpin the work of the MDG Health Alliance. Each is led by

a respective Chair or Co-Chairs. They are, in turn, responsible for ensuring

forward progress and coordination across agendas, convening networks of

new and traditional partners, raising visibility, awareness, and resources, advo-

cating for increased public sector financing and assisting with logistics and

in-kind resources.

GBCHealth looks forward to building a close working relationship with the

MDG Health Alliance and to supporting our members’ engagement to advance

the Alliance’s essential goals.

The six MdG heALTh ALLiAnCe PiLLArs Are:

Reducing

Child Mortality

Reducing

Maternal Mortality

Ending Mother to Child

Transmission of HIV

Reducing Malaria

to Near-Zero

Saving 1 million lives from

TB/HIV co-infection

Deploying 1 Million

Frontline Health Workers to

achieve the Health MDGs

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11GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

SCHEDULEat a Glance

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12 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

Time Location Agenda

8:30 AM - 9:00 AM Breakfast

9:00 AM - 9:45 AM Grand Ballroom SpECiaL SESSiOn: Aids@30

9:45 AM - 10:00 AM Grand BallroomSpOtLiGHt: Un women and the importance of health

Michelle Bachelet, Executive Director, UN Women

10:00 AM - 11:20 AM Grand Ballroom

panEL SESSiOn – Lost in Translation:

Defining and Delivering Wellness in the Global Workplace

aWarD prESEntatiOn: workplace/workforce engagement

Presented by sir Mark Moody-stuart, Chairman (ret.) Anglo American plc

11:20 AM - 11:40 AM Break

11:40 AM - 12:40 PM

Grand BallroompanEL SESSiOn – social health:

The Future of Disease Awareness, Prevention and Treatment

Terrace RoompanEL SESSiOn – healthy Cities:

How Local Governments are Partnering with Business to Improve Urban Health

12:45 PM - 2:05 PM Grand Ballroom

LUnCH KEynOtE with Muhtar kent

Chairman and CEO, The Coca-Cola Company

aWarD prESEntatiOn: Partnerships & Collective Action

Presented by Aigboje Aig-imoukhuede, CEO and

Group Managing Director, Access Bank

2:15 PM - 3:30 PM

Terrace Room panEL SESSiOn – Can southern Africa eliminate Malaria?

Grand Ballroom panEL SESSiOn – The Business of health diplomacy

3:30 PM - 4:00 PM Networking Break

4:00 PM - 4:15 PM Grand BallroomSpOtLiGHt: richard edelman

President and CEO, Edelman

4:15 PM - 5:30 PM Grand Ballroom

panEL SESSiOn – health: Business responsibility

or Business opportunity?

aWarD prESEntatiOn: Technology in health

Presented by Ambassador eric Goosby, U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator and

Michel sidibé, Director, UNAIDS; Under Secretary-General, United Nations

CLOSinG rEMarKS

5:30 PM - 7:30 PMGrand Ballroom

Foyer

Members’ networking reception

Hosted by Abbott Fund and AMPATH

dAy

1MAy

142012

sChedULeat a Glance

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13GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

Time Agenda

8:30 AM - 9:00 AM Breakfast

9:00 AM - 9:30 AMbrEaKfaSt SESSiOn with deepak Chopra

Founder, The Chopra Foundation; Senior Scientist, The Gallup Organization

9:30 AM - 9:45 AMSpOtLiGHt: A new workplace Breast Cancer Toolkit

nancy G. Brinker, Founder and CEO, Susan G. Komen for the Cure

9:45 AM - 11:05 AM

panEL SESSiOn – Maternal health: Milestones on

the Path to Healthier Motherhood

aWarDS prESEntatiOn: Community investment

Presented by Christy Turlington Burns, Director/Producer,

NO WOMAN, NO CRY; Founder, Every Mother Counts

11:05 AM - 11:40 AM Break

11:40 AM - 12:10 PMinfluencing for Change – Tackling south Africa’s diabetes epidemic

A Conversation with Madam Bongi ngema-Zuma, First Lady of South Africa

12:10 PM - 12:30 PM

SpOtLiGHt: The Global fund: what’s Ahead for the fund and the Private sector

Brian Brink, Chief Medical Officer, Anglo American plc

renuka Gadde, Vice President, Global Health, BD

SpOtLiGHt: defining forward and Making an impact

A spotlight on Pfizer’s Global health fellows Program

12:30 PM - 2:00 PM

LUnCH KEynOtE with dean ornish, M.d.

Founder and President, Preventive Medicine Research Institute;

Clinical Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco

aWarDS prESEntatiOn: Application of Core Competence

Presented by Joy Phumaphi, Executive Secretary, African Leaders Malaria Alliance

aWarDS prESEntatiOn: health and Beyond: eradicating root Causes of disease

Presented by Ambassador Macharia kamau, Ambassador and

Permanent Representative, Kenya Mission to the United Nations

2:00 PM - 2:25 PM

SpOtLiGHt: The Quest for a Tuberculosis vaccine

Jim Connolly, President and CEO, Aeras

SpOtLiGHt: innovative Partnerships for Global health:

how Private sector resources and expertise help drive GAvi’s Mission

david ferreira, Managing Director for Innovative Finance &

Head of Washington DC Office, GAVI Alliance

2:25 PM - 3:00 PM Networking Break

3:00 PM - 4:00 PM SpECiaL SESSiOn: MdG health Alliance - A Plan for driving Progress

4:00 PM - 4:15 PM

SpOtLiGHt: The Power of Zinc to improve Child health

Michael e. Agg, Senior Vice President, Teck Resources Limited

CLOSinG rEMarKS

7:00 PM - 10:00 PMGBChealth Gala Awards reception and

GBChealth Gala Awards dinner (Cipriani wall street)

MAy

152012

dAy

2All Sessions and Spotlights will take place in

the Grand Ballroom of the Roosevelt Hotel.sChedULeat a Glance

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15GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

SpEaKErSat a Glance

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16 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

HUMa abbaSi ...............................................................................28

Chief Medical Officer; General Manager, Health

and Medical, Chevron Corporation

MiCHaEL E. aGG ..........................................................................37

Senior Vice President, Teck Resources Limited

aiGbOJE aiG-iMOUKHUEDE .................................................40

Group Managing Director and CEO, Access Bank plc

Co-Chair, Board of Directors, GBCHealth

CatHErinE M. baaSE ............................................................... 21

Global Director, Health Services,

The Dow Chemical Company

MiCHELLE baCHELEt ................................................................36

Executive Director, UN Women

MOrriSOn C. bEtHEa ............................................................. 26

Senior Vice President & Medical Director,

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc.

JO iVEy bOUffOrD ...................................................................23

President, New York Academy of Medicine

brian a. brinK....................................................................20, 36

Chief Medical Officer, Anglo American plc

nanCy G. brinKEr ....................................................................36

Founder and CEO, Susan G. Komen for the Cure

SaraH brOWn .................................................................... 31, 40

CEO, Office of Gordon and Sarah Brown

Global Patron, White Ribbon Alliance for Safe Motherhood

President, PiggyBankKids

barbara bUSH ..........................................................................40

CEO and Co-Founder, Global Health Corps

ray CHaMbErS ...........................................................................40

United Nations Secretary-General’s Special Envoy

for Malaria

DEEpaK CHOpra........................................................................ 30

Founder, The Chopra Foundation

Senior Scientist, The Gallup Organization

Gary M. COHEn ........................................................................... 31

Executive Vice President, BD (Becton, Dickinson & Company)

JiM COnnOLLy .............................................................................36

President and CEO, Aeras

MEG DErOnGHE ......................................................................... 26

Director, Policy and Advocacy,

Malaria Control Program, PATH

CarLOS DOMinGUEz ................................................................22

Senior Vice President, Cisco Systems Inc.

rOb DOnnELLy ............................................................................ 21

Vice President, Health, Royal Dutch Shell plc

aMbaSSaDOr MarK r. DybUL ............................................35

Former U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator; Co-Director of

the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law,

Georgetown University

riCHarD EDELMan ...................................................................36

President & CEO, Edelman

DaViD fErrEira .........................................................................37

Managing Director for Innovative Finance & Head

of Washington DC Office, GAVI Alliance

JULiO frEnK .................................................................................27

Dean of the Faculty, Harvard School of Public Health

rEnUKa GaDDE ...........................................................................36

Vice President, Global Health, BD

(Becton, Dickinson & Company)

JaCOb a. GayLE, Jr. .................................................................28

Vice President, Medtronic Foundation and

Community Affairs, Medtronic, Inc.

EriC GOOSby ............................................................................... 20

Ambassador, U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator

aLEx GOVEnDEr ........................................................................ 21

Corporate Health Services Manager,

Volkswagen Group South Africa

LEitH GrEEnSLaDE ...................................................................35

Co-Chair, Child Health Pillar, MDG Health Alliance

Co-Founder and Co-Chair, Isha Koach

JEnnifEr HOOpEr .....................................................................27

Global Director, Health and Safety, Vale

yanzHOnG HUanG ....................................................................27

Senior Fellow for Global Health,

Council on Foreign Relations

riCHarD nCHabi KaMWi ...................................................... 26

Minister of Health, Namibia

Chairperson, SADC

sPeAkersat a Glance

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17GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

MUHtar KEnt .............................................................................. 24

Chairman and CEO, The Coca-Cola Company

Co-Chair, Board of Directors, GBCHealth

rObErt KirKpatriCK ..............................................................22

Director, UN Global Pulse

SiMOn KUnEnE ........................................................................... 26

Manager, National Malaria Control Programme (NMCP),

Swaziland

niCOLai LOHSE ............................................................................27

Program Director, Global Health Diplomacy,

Novo Nordisk A/S

JOHn CHarLES MCHarO........................................................23

Deputy Mayor, Mombasa City, Kenya

JOHn f. MEGrUE .........................................................................35

Chair, PMTCT Pillar, MDG Health Alliance

CEO, U.S., Apax Partners, L.P.

CarOLyn S. MiLES ...................................................................... 41

President & CEO, Save the Children

Sir MarK MOODy-StUart ..................................................... 41

Chairman (ret.), Anglo American plc

SHiVa MUrUGaSaMpiLLay ................................................... 26

Medical Officer, Strategy, Economics

and Elimination Unit, Global Malaria Program, WHO

MaDaM bOnGi nGEMa-zUMa ..............................................32

First Lady, South Africa

DEan OrniSH, M.D. ....................................................................33

Founder and President, Preventive Medicine Research

Institute; Clinical Professor of Medicine, UCSF

tLaLanE pHOfOLi .................................................................... 20

Site Coordinator, mothers2mothers

JOy pHUMapHi .....................................................................26, 35

Executive Secretary,

African Leaders Malaria Alliance (ALMA)

tHirUMaLai raJGOpaL .......................................................... 21

Vice President, Global Medical and

Occupational Health, Unilever

naVEEn raO ..........................................................................31, 35

Co-Chair, Maternal Health Pillar,

MDG Health Alliance

Lead, Merck for Mothers, Merck & Co., Inc.

bEnJaMin SCHWartz ............................................................. 31

Senior Director for Health, CARE USA

MiCHEL SiDibé ............................................................................. 20

Executive Director, UNAIDS

Under Secretary-General, United Nations

MiCHaEL SnEED .......................................................................... 41

Vice President of Global Corporate Affairs,

Johnson & Johnson

GLOria SOMOLEKaE.................................................................27

Deputy Minister of Finance and Development Planning;

Member of Parliament, Government of Botswana

J. DOUGLaS StOrEy .................................................................22

Director for Communication Science & Research,

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health,

Center for Communication Programs

parKS taU ......................................................................................23

Executive Mayor, City of Johannesburg

Diana L. tayLOr ........................................................................35

Co-Chair, Maternal Health Pillar, MDG Health Alliance

Managing Director, Wolfensohn Fund Management

JOHn E. tEDStrOM ...........................................................20, 32

President and CEO, GBCHealth

farriS K. tiMiMi ..........................................................................22

Medical Director, Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media

nanCy MEnSCH tUrEtt .........................................................28

Chief Strategist, Health and Society,

Daniel J Edelman, Inc

CHriSty tUrLinGtOn bUrnS.............................................. 31

Director/Producer, NO WOMAN, NO CRY

Founder, Every Mother Counts

JEffrEy C. WaLKEr .................................................................35

Chair, Frontline Health Workers Pillar,

MDG Health Alliance

Former Chairman and CEO, CCMP Capital Advisors, LLC

DianE WHitty .............................................................................37

Executive Director, The Philanthropy Centre, JP Morgan

Gabi zEDLMayEr .......................................................................28

Vice President, Global Social Innovation, HP

rHOnDa i. zyGOCKi .................................................................. 31

Executive Vice President, Policy and Planning,

Chevron Corp

sPeAkersat a Glance (cont’d)

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19GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

in-DEptHConference Program Guide

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20 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

aiDS@30Thirty years: An eternity in terms of human suffering, yet it seems like only yesterday that HIV/AIDS burst

into our collective consciousness. Join GBCHealth CEO John Tedstrom in conversation with three of the

most passionate and influential leaders in today’s global fight against HIV/AIDS.

UNAIDS’ Executive Director Michel Sidibé, United States Global AIDS Coordinator Eric Goosby and Anglo

American’s Chief Medical Officer Dr. Brian Brink discuss lessons learned, impacts achieved and, most importantly,

the spirit, approach and strategies we need to go forward and finally break the back of this disease.

brian a. brinK, Chief Medical officer, Anglo American plc

Dr. Brian Brink has been with Anglo American for 30 years.

In his current role as Chief Medical Officer, he advises

companies around the world on a broad range of health-

related issues. Leveraging his experience, Brink spends

much of his time advising businesses on how to respond

effectively to HIV/AIDS and TB. He currently leads the

Private Sector Delegation on the board of the Global Fund

to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. Brink is an inde-

pendent director of Discovery Holdings, the largest health

insurer in South Africa, sits on the boards of various NGOs

involved in health and human rights and is Chair of the

International Women’s Health Coalition.

EriC GOOSby, United states Global Aids Coordinator, U.s. department of state

Ambassador Eric Goosby serves as the United States

Global AIDS Coordinator, leading all U.S. Government inter-

national HIV/AIDS efforts. In this role, Ambassador Goosby

oversees implementation of the U.S. President’s Emergency

Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), as well as U.S. Government

engagement with the Global Fund to Fight AIDS,

Tuberculosis and Malaria. He serves on the Operations

Committee that leads the U.S. Global Health Initiative,

along with the heads of the U.S. Agency for International

Development and the Centers for Disease Control and

Prevention. PEPFAR is the cornerstone of the Global

Health Initiative, which takes a comprehensive approach to

strengthen health systems and improve health outcomes in

the developing world.

MiCHEL SiDibé, executive director, UnAids; Under secretary-General, United nations

In his role as Executive Director, Michel Sidibé is committed

to transforming UNAIDS into a results-oriented organiza-

tion and to supporting countries in achieving their universal

access targets and Millennium Development Goals. An

outspoken advocate with a people-centered approach,

Sidibé has called for the elimination of mother-to-child

HIV transmission by 2015.

Sidibé has spent over 30 years in public service,

including 14 at UNICEF. He has been Under Secretary-

General of the United Nations since January 1, 2009,

is an Honorary Professor at Stellenbosch University,

South Africa, and received France’s Légion d’honneur

(Chevalier) and Monaco’s Order of Saint-Charles.

JOHn E. tEDStrOM, President and Ceo, GBChealth

John Tedstrom joined GBCHealth in 2006 and has since

focused on leveraging the many gains made by GBCHealth

in its earlier years—a strong membership base, technical

programs, and partnerships. Tedstrom has led the develop-

ment of an expanded mandate and strategy for GBCHealth,

beginning with tuberculosis and malaria to an updated

strategy that focuses on an array of health issues. He has

also led the expansion of GBCHealth’s geographical reach

through a merger with Trans Atlantic Partners Against AIDS

(TPAA), an organization he founded and led prior to joining

GBCHealth. Tedstrom also serves on the Global Health

Advisory Committee of the Clinton Global Initiative.

panELiStS

9:00 aM – 9:45 aM

LOCatiOn: Grand BallroomDay 1MAy

142012

Special session

intrODUCtiOn by

tLaLanE pHOfOLi, site Coordinator, mothers2mothers

As a site coordinator at a clinic in Maseru, Lesotho,

Tlalane Phofoli is one of almost 1500 HIV-positive women

employed by mothers2mothers (m2m) to counsel, educate

and support pregnant women and new mothers diagnosed

with HIV/AIDS. Determined to have a healthy child after

she was diagnosed with HIV, Phofoli found no support

and researched PMTCT herself to gave birth to a healthy

daughter. In 2009, m2m opened a program in her local

community and Phofoli was ready to begin giving back.

While she still dreams of living to see her daughter grow

into a woman, for now she dedicates all her time to provid-

ing education and support to the women of her community.

SpOnSOrED by:

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21GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

MODERATORaLEx GOVEnDEr, Corporate Health

Services Manager,

Volkswagen Group

South Africa

Dr. Alex Govender,

recently appointed Volkswagen Group’s

Global HIV and TB Expert, directs an

onsite medical center where a compre-

hensive wellness program encompasses

all services in one offering: primary

healthcare, occupational health, disabil-

ity management, employee assistance

and HIV/TB workplace programs. Driven

by Volkswagen’s motto “good health

is good business,” Govender has lent

expertise to help business partners and

suppliers establish programs. Govender

sits on the board of the South African

Business Coalition on HIV/AIDS and has

served two terms on World Economic

Forum health committees.

PANELISTSCatHErinE M. baaSE, Global Director,

Health Services,

The Dow Chemical

Company

Dr. Catherine Baase

is Chief Health Officer for The Dow

Chemical Company, with direct respon-

sibility for leadership and management

of all occupational health, epidemiology

and health promotion programs around

the world. She is a key driver of the Dow

Health Strategy. In addition, Baase is

Chair of the Board of Directors of the

Michigan Health Information Alliance,

a board member of the Partnership

for Prevention for more than 10 years

and serves on the board of the Patient

Centered Primary Care Collaborative.

She is a fellow in the American College

of Occupational and Environmental

Medicine and a fellow in the American

Academy of Family Physicians.

rOb DOnnELLy, Vice President, Health,

Royal Dutch Shell plc

Dr. Rob Donnelly

currently serves as Vice

President of Health, reporting to the

Chief HR and Corporate Officer at Royal

Dutch Shell plc. He directs policy, strat-

egy and delivery of health services to

Shell operations worldwide and leads

a team of 610 health professionals in

70 countries. He joined Shell in 2001,

having previously worked in the steel

industry and served for six years in the

Royal Army Medical Corps. Donnelly

graduated from the Edinburgh University

Medical School. Professional interests

include health and human performance.

tHirUMaLai raJGOpaL, Vice President, Global

Medical and

Occupational Health,

Unilever

Dr. Thirumalai Rajgopal is Vice President

of Global Medical and Occupational

Health for Unilever and a member of

Unilever’s global health and safety at

work leadership. Rajgopal holds post-

graduate qualifications in occupational

health, public health and preventive

medicine, as well as health and hospital

administration. He holds an honorary

fellowship in occupational medicine

from The Royal College of Physicians in

London and has trained at the Harvard

School of Public Health in advanced

leadership strategies for health care

executives. In 2007, he was elected

Chairman of Medichem and sits on the

Editorial Board of the International

Journal of Occupational Medicine and

Environmental Health.

LosT in TrAnsLATion: defininG And deLiverinG weLLness in The GLoBAL workPLACe“Workplace Wellness” is a phrase used increasingly by multinational companies today, but it has

no commonly accepted meaning or standards. Some companies get by with health tips on wall-postings

while others integrate knowledge, programs and policies into every aspect of their operations. Research

shows that there is often a significant difference between a company’s strategic vision for workplace health

and the implementation of programs on the ground across regions.

Senior experts behind best-in-class global wellness programs will share their insights on the issues that

every health director is facing: How do companies define “wellness” in the absence of global standards?

How do effective global programs translate from corporate headquarters to successful local applications, in

vastly different markets? The panel also will explore innovative approaches companies are taking to improve

worker health and welfare, with a particular look at gender-based efforts to accelerate results.

SpOnSOrED by:10:00 aM - 11:20 aM

LOCatiOn: Grand BallroomDay 1MAy

142012

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22 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

Day 1MAy

142012

11:40 aM – 12:40 pM

LOCatiOn: Grand Ballroom

PRESENTERSCarLOS DOMinGUEz, Senior Vice President,

Cisco Systems Inc

Carlos Dominguez is a

Senior Vice President

at Cisco and a technology evange-

list, motivating audiences worldwide

with insightful presentations on how

technology is changing the way we

communicate, collaborate and work.

Drawing from his 20 years at Cisco,

his talks address how technology and

the right culture can be used to create

winning companies and avoid getting

left behind. Dominguez is a member of

the CDC Foundation, which connects

the Centers for Disease Control and

Prevention to innovative ideas and

expertise. He is also a board member at

the Institute of Large Scale Innovation,

a group of international leaders using

innovation to help solve complex global

challenges. Before his current role at

Cisco, Dominguez ran Worldwide Service

Provider Operations for three years,

and was Vice President for U.S. Service

Provider Sales.

farriS tiMiMi, Medical Director,

Mayo Clinic Center

for Social Media

In addition to his current

roles at Mayo Clinic, Dr. Farris Timimi

also serves as Medical Director for the

Mayo Clinic Center for Social Media;

Director of the Cardiology Education

Clinic; Cardiology Physician Education

Coordinator for the Internal Medicine

Residency; and Program Director for the

Advanced Heart Failure and Transplant

Fellowship Program. In addition, Timimi

is the physician lead for the Division of

Cardiovascular Disease’s One Voice initia-

tive, as well as the institutional lead for

patient-family advisory councils. Timimi

completed his internship and residency

in internal medicine at Washington

University in St. Louis, Missouri; his

fellowship in cardiovascular medicine and

interventional cardiology at Brigham and

Women’s Hospital at Harvard Medical

School; and a separate fellowship in

interventional vascular radiology, vascu-

lar medicine and vascular ultrasound at

the Mayo Clinic.

J. DOUGLaS StOrEy, Director for

Communication

Science & Research,

Johns Hopkins

Bloomberg School of

Public Health, Center for

Communication Programs

Douglas Storey has 30 years of

experience in social and behavioral

change communication, evaluation and

strategic communication planning and

has lived and worked in more than 30

countries. His work spans a wide range

of topics including preventive health

behavior, population and reproductive

health, avian and pandemic flu prepared-

ness and response, environmental

communication, community capacity

building and public-private partner-

ships for health. Cutting across much

of his work is an interest in an ecological

and sustainable “health competence”

approach to health and social change.

rObErt KirKpatriCK, Director, UN Global Pulse

Robert Kirkpatrick is

Director of UN Global

Pulse, an innovation

initiative of the Secretary-General that

harnesses Big Data and real-time analyt-

ics for global development and crisis

resilience. Kirkpatrick was the founding

CTO of the Silicon Valley global health

and disaster technology NGO InSTEDD,

and the co-founder of Microsoft

Humanitarian Systems. He spent more

than 15 years developing solutions for

public and private sector organizations,

focusing on organizational change. He

has field experience in Iraq, Afghanistan,

Kashmir, Uganda, Indonesia, Cambodia,

and New Orleans.

soCiAL heALTh: The fUTUre of diseAse AwAreness, PrevenTion And TreATMenTWe live in a world that is fundamentally more interconnected than ever before. As our capacity to connect

virtually to other people expands, so does our ability to affect global health in unprecedented ways. Online

social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, are being utilized for health information and

interventions in ways their creators had never imagined. And new web-based technologies have transformed the

meaning and methods of face-to-face communication, enabling more effective research, care and treatment.

This session will highlight the impact that social connectivity is having on individual and collective health

outcomes, in both developed and developing countries. Speakers will address how online platforms are

being used to track global health trends, change the patient/provider dynamic, drive positive behaviors,

rapidly diffuse critical health information, and enable long-distance collaboration.

SpOnSOrED by:

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23GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

MODERATOR JO iVEy bOUffOrD, President, New York

Academy of Medicine

Jo Ivey Boufford is a

Professor of Public

Service, Health Policy and Management

at the Robert F. Wagner Graduate School

of Public Service and a Clinical Professor

of Pediatrics at the New York University

School of Medicine. She served as Dean

of the Robert F. Wagner Graduate School

of Public Service at New York University

from June 1997 to November 2002. Prior

to that, she served as Principal Deputy

Assistant Secretary for Health in the

U.S. Department of Health and Human

Services (HHS) from November 1993 to

January 1997, and as Acting Assistant

Secretary from January 1997 to May 1997.

While at HHS, she served as the U.S.

representative on the Executive Board of

the World Health Organization (WHO)

from 1994–1997.

SPEAKERS JOHn CHarLES MCHarO, Deputy Mayor,

Mombasa City, Kenya

John Charles Mcharo has

worked for the Mombasa City Council for

the last 10 years, five of which he spent

as the Deputy Mayor. He is involved in

various philanthropic activities, includ-

ing assisting orphans in his community.

Mcharo is also active in a number of

development initiatives undertaken by

the Council, including the Living Cities

Initiative, Greening the City, Twinning

Cities and Kenya Slum Upgrading Project

in collaboration with the Ministry of

Housing of Kenya. Mcharo represents the

Mombasa City Council in various regional

and international forums. Mcharo holds a

degree in accounting from the University

of Nairobi.

parKS taU, Executive Mayor,

City of Johannesburg

Executive Mayor Parks

Tau oversees the six

priorities that are the overarching frame-

work for the Johannesburg 2030 vision:

economic growth and job creation;

health and community development;

inner city regeneration; promotion of

safe, clean and green initiatives; good

governance; and HIV/AIDS. Since becom-

ing a member of the mayoral committee,

Tau is entrusted with a wide range of

portfolios including development plan-

ning, transportation and the environment.

As Deputy Chairperson of the Southern

Local Metropolitan Council (SLMC)

Executive Committee, Tau was a driving

force in Transformation Lekgotla, which

eventually resulted in the creation of a

united Johannesburg and his appoint-

ment as the Chairperson of the Urban

Development Committee of the SLMC

at the age of 25.

heALThy CiTies: how LoCAL GovernMenTs Are PArTnerinG wiTh BUsiness To iMProve UrBAn heALThUrbanization is both positively and negatively shaping the health outcomes of millions of people. Though

cities provide tremendous economic opportunities, they are home to some of the world’s most prominent

health disparities, with the urban poor most heavily impacted. Cities today are faced with the multiple

burdens of disease, lack of resources (food, water) and overcrowded living conditions. This session explores

how municipal leaders are approaching the ongoing challenge of improving health in urban settings.

11:40 aM - 12:40 aM

LOCatiOn: Terrace RoomDay 1MAy

142012

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24 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

Day 1

KEYNOTE SPEAKER: MUhTAr kenT

LUnCh keynoTe

MAy

142012

12:45 pM - 2:05 pM

LOCatiOn: Grand Ballroom

Chairman and CEO,

The Coca-Cola Company;

Co-Chair, Board of Directors, GBCHealth

Muhtar Kent joined The Coca-Cola Company

in Atlanta in 1978 and has held a variety of

marketing and operations roles throughout his career. From

1999 until his return to The Coca-Cola Company in May 2005,

he served as president and CEO of the Efes Beverage Group,

the majority shareholder of Turkish bottler Coca-Cola Icecek.

Under Kent’s leadership, Efes experienced extraordinary growth,

with triple-digit revenue growth and a 250 percent increase in

market capitalization. During that time, in addition to taking Efes

Breweries International public on the London Stock Exchange,

he also served as a board member of Coca-Cola Icecek.

Kent was named president and chief operating officer of The

Coca-Cola Company’s North Asia, Eurasia and Middle East Group

from 2005 until early 2006, where he was responsible for the

operations across a broad and diverse geographic region that

included China, Japan and Russia. Kent served as president of

Coca-Cola International through most of 2006, responsible for

operations outside of North America, until his appointment as

president and chief operating officer of The Coca-Cola Company,

overseeing all operations of the business, including Bottling

Investments. He succeeded Neville Isdell as chief executive

officer of the Company on July 1, 2008, and as chairman of the

Board of Directors on April 23, 2009.

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26 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

MODERATORDr. SHiVa MUrUGaSaMpiLLay, Medical Officer, Strategy,

Economics and

Elimination Unit, Global

Malaria Program, World

Health Organization

Dr. Shiva Murugasampillay serves

as Medical Officer in the Strategy,

Economics and Elimination Unit of

the World Health Organization’s Global

Malaria Program. From 1989–1997,

he served as the chief epidemiolo-

gist & director of the Department of

Epidemiology and Disease Control at

the Ministry of Health in Zimbabwe.

He has also supported the WHO as a

consultant in many fields including HIV,

tuberculosis, malaria and cholera control;

non-communicable diseases; maternal

and child health; disease surveillance; and

health information systems development.

PANELISTSMOrriSOn C. bEtHEa, Senior Vice President &

Medical Director,

Freeport-McMoRan

Copper & Gold, Inc.

Dr. Morrison Bethea is responsible

for Freeport-McMoRan Copper and

Gold’s worldwide medical and public

health programs. Bethea is currently a

staff physician at Ochsner Foundation

Hospital and Clinic and also a clinical

professor of surgery at Tulane University

Medical Center. A cardiac, thoracic and

vascular surgeon, Bethea co-authored

the New York Times best-selling book

SUGAR BUSTERS! and has authored

many publications in the field of

cardiovascular disease.

MEG DErOnGHE, Policy and Advocacy

Director, Malaria Control

Program, PATH

As the policy and

advocacy director, Meg DeRonghe

focuses on developing evidence-based

national malaria control programs in

Africa. Previously she served as Director

of Business Development, leading

external relations for NetsforLife. Prior to

working on malaria, DeRonghe provided

advocacy and communications counsel

on women and children’s health issues

with M+R Strategic Services. From 2000

to 2006, she led efforts to build national

and global partnerships and define

policy agendas to promote univer-

sal access to reproductive healthcare

services through Planned Parenthood

Federation of America.

SiMOn KUnEnE, Manager, National Malaria

Control Programme

(NMCP), Swaziland

Simon Kunene has served

as the Swaziland National Malaria Control

Programme Manager since 1987, guiding

Swaziland towards malaria elimination.

As Programme Manager, he oversees the

implementation of several intervention

areas including case management, vector

control, health promotion and disease

surveillance. Kunene currently serves as

the chairperson for the Regional Malaria

Control Commission related to the

Lubombo Spatial Development Initiative

and as President of the Subcommittee

for Malaria among the Southern African

Development Community.

riCHarD nCHabi KaMWi, Minister of

Health, Namibia;

Chairperson SADC

Dr. Richard Kamwi has

served as Namibia’s Minister of Health

and Social Services since 2005, provid-

ing visionary leadership on malaria

elimination and control. He chairs

the SADC Elimination 8 group and is

the chairperson of the SADC Health

Ministers Conference. From 1995-2000

he headed Namibia’s National Vector

Borne Disease Program and in 2000

was elected Member of Parliament of

the National Assembly. Kamwi received

his BSc from University of Liverpool, his

MSc from Liverpool School of Tropical

Medicine and a certificate in malaria

from the Malaria Control Program at

the Martsinovskij Institute of Medical

Parasitology and Tropical Medicine.

JOy pHUMapHi, Executive Secretary,

African Leaders

Malaria Alliance (ALMA)

During her tenure as

Executive Secretary, ALMA has grown to

include 41 heads of state, pioneered inno-

vative financing for malaria drugs and

commodities and led the development

and implementation of an accountabil-

ity mechanism that regularly updates

the heads of state on progress towards

the malaria goals. She held the position

of Vice President & Head of the Human

Development Network at the World

Bank, Minister of Health of Botswana and

Assistant Director-General at the World

Health Organization.

CAn soUThern AfriCA eLiMinATe MALAriA?National leaders in Angola, Botswana, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia and

Zimbabwe are spearheading an ambitious commitment to eliminate malaria from their countries by 2020 or

before. Can it be done? This panel assembles leaders from government, multilaterals and the leading boots-

on-the-ground implementers to discuss how Africa is innovating to defeat this most challenging of diseases.

2:15 pM - 3:30 pM

LOCatiOn: Terrace RoomDay 1MAy

142012

SpOnSOrED by:

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27GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

MODERATORJULiO frEnK, Dean of the Faculty,

Harvard School of

Public Health

Dr. Julio Frenk is the

Dean of the Faculty at the Harvard

School of Public Health (HSPH) and

T & G Angelopoulos Professor of Public

Health and International Development, a

joint appointment between the Harvard

Kennedy School of Government and

HSPH. Frenk served as the Minister of

Health of Mexico from 2000 to 2006,

launching a major reform effort towards

universal health insurance. He chairs the

boards of the Institute for Health Metrics

and Evaluation and Partnership for

Maternal, Newborn and Child Health. In

2008, Frenk received the Clinton Global

Citizen Award for changing “the way

practitioners and policy makers across

the world think about health.”

PANELISTSJEnnifEr HOOpEr, Global Director,

Health and Safety, Vale

Jennifer Hooper is Global

Director for Health and

Safety at Vale, a Brazil-based global

mining company and a leading producer

of iron ore and nickel and a major

producer of fertilizers, copper, coal,

manganese and aluminum. Prior to this

role, Hooper held executive positions in

sustainability and human resources in

Vale’s base metals business. She has held

senior positions in the Ontario Public

Service’s Ministry of Environment and

Ministry of Labour. Hooper serves on the

board of directors of Pollution Probe and

is a fellow of LEAD Canada — Leadership

for Environment and Development — a

worldwide network of mid-career profes-

sionals with experience and training in

sustainable development.

yanzHOnG HUanG, Senior Fellow for Global

Health, Council on

Foreign Relations

Yanzhong Huang is a

Senior Fellow for Global Health at the

Council on Foreign Relations, where he

directs the Emerging Powers in Global

Health Governance and Universal Health

Coverage Roundtable series. He is also an

associate professor and director for global

health studies at the John C. Whitehead

School of Diplomacy and International

Relations, Seton Hall University, where

he developed the first academic concen-

tration among U.S. professional schools

of international affairs that explicitly

addresses the security and foreign policy

aspects of health issues. In addition, he

is the founding editor of Global Health

Governance: The Scholarly Journal for the

New Health Security Paradigm.

niCOLai LOHSE, Program Director,

Global Health Diplomacy,

Novo Nordisk A/S

Dr. Nicolai Lohse

coordinates Novo Nordisk’s follow-up to

the United Nations High-Level Meeting

on Non-Communicable Diseases and

engages with both public and private

stakeholders to create shared value

among actors on the global health

scene. He also focuses on translating

evidence into policy action and establish-

ing public-private partnerships to build

country-level capacity. Prior to joining

Novo Nordisk, Lohse worked for more

than 10 years in HIV/AIDS as a clinician,

researcher and advocate. He was named

“AIDS Researcher of the Year 2007”

by the Danish AIDS Foundation and

currently serves as co-chair of the NCD

Roundtable at the Global Health Council.

GLOria SOMOLEKaE, Deputy Minister of

Finance and Development

Planning; Member of

Parliament, Government

of Botswana

Dr. Gloria Somolekae is a specially

elected member in the Parliament of

Botswana and a Deputy Minister of

Finance and Development Planning. An

activist and academic on a number of

social and political issues, she supports

the development of democracy in

the region and on issues of gender

and poverty. Somolekae taught at the

University of Botswana, and helped

develop the Norms and Standard for The

Conduct of free and fair elections in the

SADC region under the Electoral Institute

of Southern Africa (EISA). In recognition

of her achievements, she was awarded

the 2008 Presidential Order of Honour.

The BUsiness of heALTh diPLoMACyFor years the world’s wealthier countries have helped shape the global health agenda through demonstrated

leadership in multilateral organizations—including the UN System, WHO, the Global Fund, and the

World Bank—and by engaging in bilateral assistance programs. Emerging nations are no strangers to these

efforts to strengthen their nations political and economic influence while supporting improved health outcomes.

This session will explore the motivations and rationales for global health diplomacy, looking at both

governments and companies. We’ll look at how multinational companies and governments consider

engaging on health globally, and explore the opportunities and risks they face when investing in nations

with differing views on health policy. This panel will offer insights and a greater understanding of the

ways in which approaches to global health policy and cooperation are changing.

2:15 pM - 3:30 pM

LOCatiOn: Grand Ballroom Day 1MAy

142012

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28 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

SpOnSOrED by:4:15 pM - 5:30 pM

LOCatiOn: Grand BallroomDay 1MAy

142012

MODERATORnanCy MEnSCH tUrEtt, Chief Strategist,

Health and Society,

Daniel J. Edelman Inc.

Nancy Turett is Chief

Strategist, Health and Society, at Daniel

J. Edelman Inc., the world’s leading inde-

pendent public relations firm. A member

of the Edelman Strategy Committee,

Turett helps companies and organiza-

tions earn trust and advance their license

to lead through effective engagement

in health. Her strategies address issues

such as personal health empowerment,

productive aging, social health, access

to health care, business trust and health,

mutual health responsibility, and health

behavior motivation. A global thought

leader on business and societal issues,

Turett has been a key contributor to

Edelman’s global intellectual property

and created the Edelman Health

Barometer in 2008.

PANELISTSHUMa abbaSi, Chief Medical Officer;

General Manager,

Health and Medical,

Chevron Corporation

Dr. Huma Abbasi

oversees the design and implementation

of programs and services to meet the

health and medical needs of the compa-

ny’s 58,000 employees. Abbasi began

her career at Chevron in a lead role as

Country Health, Environment and Safety

Coordinator and Occupational Health

Specialist in Pakistan. She has over

15 years of increasing responsibility

and experience at Chevron including

successfully managing the Americas,

Europe, Eurasia, Middle East and Africa

regional medical portfolios, management

and development of the H&M Center of

Excellence (COE), leading the deploy-

ment and implementation of Operational

Excellence Management System and

working in central advisory and regional

positions in the U.S., Asia Pacific, Africa,

Middle East and Pakistan regions.

JaCOb a. GayLE, Jr., Vice President,

Medtronic Foundation

and Community Affairs,

Medtronic, Inc

Having joined Medtronic

in 2011 as Vice President of Community

Affairs and Executive Director of the

Medtronic Foundation at Medtronic, Inc.,

Dr. Jacob Gayle leads the strategic

development and implementation of

global corporate citizenship programs,

including philanthropy and employee

engagement. He has had an illustri-

ous global career in public health that

spans nearly 30 years and several of the

leading worldwide institutions including

the US Centers for Disease Control and

Prevention, USAID, United Nations and

the World Bank. Previously, Gayle served

as Deputy Vice President of The Ford

Foundation and spent a year at US-based

Social and Scientific Systems, Inc., as

Director of Caribbean Programs.

Gabi zEDLMayEr, Vice President of Global

Social Innovation,

Hewlett-Packard

Company

Gabi Zedlmayer drives

a global team of experts focused on

enriching society, promoting economic

growth and solving social issues with HP

talent and technology. Her team works to

develop and deliver social innovations in

education, healthcare, entrepreneurship

and community engagement. In addition,

Zedlmayer leads HP’s Global Citizenship

Council and serves as a member of the

Board of Directors of Junior Achievement

Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA),

the EU Commission e-skills Leadership

Board, HAAS Center for Business

Responsibility, the Executive Diversity

Forum for HP in EMEA and is a member

of the Women’s Council of Hypo

Vereinsbank UNICREDIT.

heALTh: BUsiness resPonsiBiLiTy or BUsiness oPPorTUniTy?Shared Value. Triple Bottom Line. Corporate Social Responsibility. Whatever you call it, today’s business

leaders recognize that responsible business is both a requirement and an opportunity. In this session, we

explore the duality of responsibility vs. opportunity in the context of health, which has emerged as one

of the richest ways for companies to engage customers, develop products and enter new markets.

An essential pillar of sustainability, health is also the ultimate convergence issue: It’s personal, it’s

professional, it’s political and it’s societal. We’ll learn how some of the most inventive companies in the

world are finding ways to make health a cornerstone of their business, and a foundation of their success.

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29GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

Join GBChealth AT oUr AnnUAL MeMBers reCePTion on MAy 14Th

Join GBCHealth at our Annual Members Reception and Networking

Event on May 14th graciously hosted by Abbott Fund and AMPATH. The

reception will be an intimate networking opportunity for participants

and speakers from the GBCHealth Conference. Welcoming remarks

will be given by representatives from our hosts – Abbott Fund and

AMPATH, as well as GBCHealth Managing Director, Michael Schreiber.

5:30 pM – 7:30 pM

LOCatiOn: Grand Ballroom FoyerDay 1MAy

142012

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30 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

BreAkfAsT session

9:00 aM – 9:30 aM

LOCatiOn: Grand BallroomDay 2MAy

152012

KEYNOTE SPEAKER: deePAk ChoPrA

Founder, The Chopra Foundation; Senior

Scientist, The Gallup Organization

As a global pioneer of mind-body medicine,

Dr. Deepak Chopra transforms the way the

world views physical, mental, emotional, spiri-

tual and social wellness. He has written over 64 books including

19 New York Times bestsellers in both fiction and non-fiction; his

books have been published in more than 85 languages. His latest

bestseller, War of the Worldviews, co-authored with Leonard

Mlodinow, attempts to elevate the conversation around science

and religion in a way that is constructive rather than polarizing.

Chopra is the recipient of the 2010 GOI Peace Award, 2010

Starlite Humanitarian Award, 2010 Art for Life Honoree, 2009

Oceana Partners Award, 2006 Ellis Island Medal of Honor

presented by the National Ethnic Coalition of Organizations

Foundation and 2002 Einstein Humanitarian Award through

the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in collaboration with the

American Journal of Psychotherapy.

He is a fellow of the American College of Physicians, a member

of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, Adjunct

Professor of Executive Programs at the Kellogg School of

Management at Northwestern University and Senior Scientist

with The Gallup Organization.

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31GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

INTRODUCTION CHriSty tUrLinGtOn bUrnS, Director/Producer,

NO WOMAN, NO CRY;

Founder, Every Mother

Counts; Global Maternal

Health Advocate; Model

With nearly 30 years in the fashion

industry, Christy Turlington Burns has estab-

lished a diverse career as a model, writer,

entrepreneur, spokesperson, advocate,

philanthropist and filmmaker. Concurrent

with the launch of her documentary NO

WOMAN, NO CRY, she launched Every

Mother Counts, an advocacy and mobi-

lization campaign to increase education

and support global maternal mortal-

ity reduction. She supports numerous

campaigns including the post-war rebuild-

ing of El Salvador, preventative healthcare,

including smoking prevention and cessation

and is an advocate for maternal health

for both CARE and (RED).

MODERATORGary M. COHEn, Executive Vice President,

BD (Becton,

Dickinson & Co.)

Gary Cohen and BD

are extensively engaged in health

collaborations across the public, private

and nonprofit sectors. Cohen founded

Together for Girls, a partnership to

address the many consequences of

sexual violence against girls. He serves

as Board Chair for CDC Foundation and

CDC/Corporate Roundtable on Global

Health Threats and as Board Director of

GBCHealth, the Perrigo Company, the US

Fund for UNICEF and the Accordia Global

Health Foundation. He earned a BA from

Rutgers College and an MBA from the

Rutgers Graduate School of Management.

SPEAKERS SaraH brOWn, CEO, Office of Gordon

and Sarah Brown; Global

Patron, White Ribbon

Alliance for Safe

Motherhood; President,

PiggyBankKids

A passionate advocate for global health

and education, Sarah Brown works with

government, business and non-profit

leaders to help ensure that every child

receives an education, targeting the

67 million who have never had a day at

school. As Global Patron of the White

Ribbon Alliance for Safe Motherhood, she

is a leading voice in the maternal mortal-

ity campaign. Brown is also President of

PiggyBankKids, which supports charitable

projects for vulnerable children. A prolific

user of social media, more than 1 million

people follow @SarahBrownUK on Twitter.

naVEEn raO Co-Chair, Maternal Health

Pillar, MDG Health

Alliance Lead, Merck for

Mothers, Merck & Co

Dr. Naveen Rao leads

Merck for Mothers, Merck’s signature

initiative to reduce maternal mortality

around the world. Rao is responsible for

leveraging the company’s science and

business expertise to accelerate prog-

ress in reaching Millennium Development

Goal 5. He has held numerous leadership

positions at Merck including Head of

Medical Affairs for Merck’s Asia-Pacific

region and Managing Director of Merck’s

subsidiary in India. Rao is board certified

in internal medicine and a fellow of the

American College of Physicians.

bEnJaMin SCHWartz Senior Director for

Health, CARE USA

Dr. Benjamin Schwartz

joined CARE as the

Senior Director for Health Programs in

2009, overseeing CARE’s health initiatives

in maternal and child health, nutrition,

sexual and reproductive health, HIV/AIDS,

and infectious diseases. Previously,

Schwartz spent 22 years at the Centers

for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),

and the National Vaccine Program Office,

U.S. Department of Health and Human

Services. His work included a program to

reduce antimicrobial resistance, a collab-

orative surveillance and research network

on new vaccines and leading pandemic

influenza planning activities.

rHOnDa i. zyGOCKi Executive Vice President,

Policy and Planning,

Chevron Corporation

As Executive Vice

President of Policy and Planning for

Chevron Corporation, Rhonda Zygocki’s

responsibilities include strategy and

planning; policy, government and public

affairs; and health, environment and safety.

Previously, as VP of Policy, Government

and Public Affairs, she oversaw Chevron’s

US and international government relations

and communications. Zygocki serves on

the boards of directors of GBCHealth and

the U.S. Energy Association; the board

of trustees of the San Francisco Ballet;

and the advisory board of the Woodrow

Wilson International Center for Scholars

Canada Institute.

MATernAL heALTh: MiLesTone MoMenTs on The PATh To heALThier MoTherhoodPreparing to be a thriving mother begins long before the moment of delivery or even pregnancy.

This panel will pinpoint several critical junctures in a woman’s life where interventions can have profound

impacts on maternal health: from girls’ education and access to family planning, to prevention of mother-

to-child transmission of HIV/AIDS, to childbirth and beyond. We’ll explore insights from corporate and NGO

perspectives, including overcoming pervasive barriers, the crucial role of frontline healthcare workers; and

the need for holistic approaches to maternal wellness.

SpOnSOrED by:9:45 aM - 11:05 aM

LOCatiOn: Grand BallroomDay 2MAy

152012

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32 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

11:40 aM – 12:10 pM

LOCatiOn: Grand BallroomDay 2MAy

152012

infLUenCinG for ChAnGe – TACkLinG soUTh AfriCA’s diABeTes ePideMiC: A Conversation with Madam Bongi ngema-Zuma, first Lady of south AfricaHaving experienced first-hand her own mother’s struggles with diabetes and the tremendous impact the

disease is having in her own country, South Africa’s First Lady, Madam Bongi Ngema-Zuma, became a

woman on a mission. Her goal: to use her position of influence to educate South Africans on a health issue

plaguing more than 1.9 million people nationally. The WHO estimates that more than 340 million people are

living with diabetes worldwide and deaths due to the disease are projected to double by 2030. In South

Africa, close to 80% of the population remains undiagnosed, and women and children are now bearing the

brunt of this largely preventable health issue. Similarly, other low- and middle-income countries are now

facing a dual burden of both infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS and non-communicable diseases like

diabetes. In fact, 80 percent of people living with diabetes reside in developing countries. This has serious

implications for national health systems and businesses alike.

Join John Tedstrom, GBCHealth President & CEO, in conversation with Madam Ngema-Zuma as they discuss

the challenges facing South Africa and the African continent as a whole in managing NCDs such as diabetes.

Hear how she is using her foundation and influence as a vehicle to raise awareness among government,

businesses and other stakeholders to take greater action on this issue.

SPEAKERS

JOHn E. tEDStrOM, President and CEO, GBCHealth

John Tedstrom joined GBCHealth in 2006 and

has since focused on leveraging the many gains

made by GBCHealth in its earlier years—

a strong membership base, technical programs, and partnerships.

Tedstrom has led the development of an expanded mandate

and strategy for GBCHealth, beginning with tuberculosis and

malaria to an updated strategy that focuses on an array of health

issues. He has also led the expansion of GBCHealth’s geographi-

cal reach through a merger with Trans Atlantic Partners Against

AIDS (TPAA), an organization he founded and led prior to joining

GBCHealth. Tedstrom also serves on the Global Health Advisory

Committee of the Clinton Global Initiative.

MaDaM GLOria bOnGi nGEMa-zUMa, First Lady, South Africa

As First Lady, Madam Gloria Bongi Ngema-Zuma

provides leadership on interagency councils in

support of presidential community develop-

ment programs. In 2010, she founded The Bongi Ngema-Zuma

Foundation, which addresses health (with a special focus on

diabetes), education and rural development. As a conduit for

Madam Ngema-Zuma’s passion for creating awareness about

diabetes, the Foundation seeks to empower women and children

and promote rural development, education and health central to

diabetes and associated diseases.

SpOnSOrED by:

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33GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

LUnCh keynoTe

KEYNOTE SPEAKER: deAn ornish, M.d.

Founder and President, Preventive Medicine

Research Institute; Clinical Professor of Medicine,

University of California, San Francisco

For over 34 years, Dr. Dean Ornish has directed

clinical research demonstrating for the first

time that comprehensive lifestyle changes may

begin to reverse even severe coronary heart disease, without

drugs or surgery. Medicare agreed to provide coverage for this

program, the first time that Medicare has covered a program of

comprehensive lifestyle changes. He directed the first random-

ized controlled trial demonstrating that comprehensive lifestyle

changes may stop or reverse the progression of early-stage

prostate cancer. His current research shows that comprehensive

lifestyle changes affect gene expression, “turning on”

disease-preventing genes and “turning off” genes that promote

cancer and heart disease.

Ornish was appointed by President Clinton to the White House

Commission on Complementary and Alternative Medicine Policy

and appointed by President Obama to the White House Advisory

Group on Prevention, Health Promotion, and Integrative and

Public Health. He was elected to the California Academy of

Medicine and chaired the Google Health Advisory Council

2007-2009. Ornish received his medical training in internal

medicine from the Baylor College of Medicine, Harvard Medical

School and the Massachusetts General Hospital.

12:30 pM – 2:00 pM

LOCatiOn: Grand BallroomDay 2MAy

152012

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35GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

MDG HEaLtH aLLianCE: A PLAn for drivinG ProGressThis session serves as the official introduction of the newly-created MDG Health Alliance. Comprised of

eminent leaders from the private, public, and nonprofit sectors working with the Health and Education

Cluster of the Secretary General’s MDG Advocates, the MDG Health Alliance seeks to accelerate progress

toward achieving the health-related Millennium Development Goals. This conversation will outline new

approaches to mobilize improvement in the health of women and children by 2015.

aMbaSSaDOr MarK r. DybUL, former U.s. Global Aids Coordinator; Co-director of the o'neill institute

for national and Global health Law, Georgetown University

Ambassador Mark Dybul serves as Co-Director at the

O’Neill Institute and is a distinguished scholar on the

Georgetown faculty. Previously, Dybul served as the U.S.

Global AIDS Coordinator, leading the implementation of the

President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief and overseeing

all U.S. government engagements in the Global Fund to

Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

LEitH GrEEnSLaDE, Co-Chair, Child health Pillar, MdG health Alliance; Co-founder and Co-Chair, isha koach

Leith Greenslade is a private social investor and

philanthropist. She co-founded and co-chairs Isha Koach,

a fund that invests in social entrepreneurs whose work

benefits vulnerable women and children. She served as

Policy Advisor and Speechwriter to the Deputy Prime

Minister of Australia and Minister for Health, and Chief of

Staff to the Shadow Minister for Social Security and the

Status of Women.

JOHn f. MEGrUE, Chair, PMTCT Pillar, MdG health Alliance; Ceo, U.s., Apax Partners, L.P.

John Megrue actively champions extreme poverty

eradication and global health system development, with

a focus on mothers and children. He chairs the Business

Leadership Council, an initiative of the private sector to

support the Global Plan: Towards the Elimination of New

HIV Infections Among Children by 2015. He serves on the

boards of the MDG Health Alliance and Grameen America.

JOy pHUMapHi, executive secretary, African Leaders Malaria Alliance (ALMA)

During Phumaphi's tenure, ALMA has grown to include

41 heads of state, pioneered innovative financing for

malaria drugs and commodities and led the develop-

ment and implementation of a robust accountability

mechanism. She served as Vice President & Head of the

Human Development Network at the World Bank, Minister

of Health of Botswana and Assistant Director-General at

the World Health Organization.

naVEEn raO, Co-Chair, Maternal health Pillar, MdG health Alliance; Lead, Merck for Mothers, Merck & Co., inc.

Dr. Naveen Rao leads Merck’s new signature initiative to

reduce maternal mortality around the world. Previously,

Dr. Rao served as Head of Medical Affairs for Merck’s

Asia-Pacific region and Managing Director of Merck’s

subsidiary in India. He is board certified in internal

medicine, which he practiced in New York City for 10 years.

Diana L. tayLOr, Co-Chair, Maternal health Pillar, MdG health Alliance; Managing director, wolfensohn

fund Management; former new york state superintendent of Banks

Diana Taylor joined Wolfensohn Fund Management

L.P. in 2007. Previously, she served as New York State

Superintendent of Banks, Chairwoman of the New York

State Banking Board and Vice President for KeySpan

Energy. Taylor chairs the boards of ACCION International

and New York Women’s Foundation and serves on the

boards of Citigroup, Brookfield Properties and Sotheby’s.

JEffrEy C. WaLKEr, Chair, frontline health workers Pillar, MdG health Alliance; former Chairman and Ceo,

CCMP Capital Advisors, LLC

Jeff Walker, previously Chairman and CEO of CCMP Capital

and Chairman of the JPMorgan Chase Foundation, is a

powerful advocate for social enterprise to collectively

address the world’s greatest development challenges.

He serves on the boards of the MDG Health Alliance,

University of Virginia’s Undergraduate Business School and

Council of Foundations, and the Visiting Committee at the

Harvard Business School.

MODEratOr

Special session

panELiStS

3:00 pM - 4:00 pM

LOCatiOn: Grand BallroomDay 2MAy

152012

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36 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

MAY 14

Un WOMEn anD tHE iMpOrtanCE Of HEaLtH

9:45 aM

MiCHELLE baCHELEt, Under-Secretary General

and Executive Director,

UN Women

Under Michelle Bachelet’s

leadership, UN Women will lead, support

and coordinate the work on gender

equality and the empowerment of

women at global, regional and country

levels. As President of Chile from 2006 to

2010, one of Bachelet’s major successes

was her decision to spend on issues such

as pension reform, social protection

programs for women and children, and

research and development, despite the

financial crisis.

riCHarD EDELMan

4:00 pM

riCHarD EDELMan, President and CEO,

Edelman

Richard Edelman is the

president and CEO of the

world’s largest independent public rela-

tions firm with wholly owned offices in

60 cities and more than 4,000 employ-

ees worldwide. Edelman has extensive

experience in marketing and reputation

management, with current assignments

for Hewlett-Packard, SAP, and PepsiCo.

He has counseled several countries

on economic development programs,

including Egypt, Israel and Mexico.

MAY 15

a nEW WOrKpLaCE brEaSt CanCEr tOOLKit

9:30 aM

nanCy G. brinKEr, Founder and CEO, Susan

G. Komen for the Cure

Nancy Brinker is

regarded as the leader

of the global breast cancer movement. In

one generation, Komen for the Cure has

become the world’s largest grassroots

network of breast cancer survivors and

activists fighting to save lives, empower

people, ensure quality care for all and

energize science to find the cures. In

2009, President Barack Obama honored

Brinker with the Presidential Medal of

Freedom and she was named Goodwill

Ambassador for Cancer Control for the

World Health Organization.

tHE GLObaL fUnD: WHat’S aHEaD fOr tHE fUnD anD tHE priVatE SECtOr

12:15 pM

brian a. brinK, M.D., Chief Medical Officer,

Anglo American plc

Dr. Brian Brink has been

with Anglo American

for 30 years. In his current role as Chief

Medical Officer, he advises companies

around the world on a broad range of

health-related issues, concentrating

heavily on how to respond effectively

to HIV/AIDS and TB. He currently leads

the Private Sector Delegation for of the

Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis

and Malaria, and sits on the boards of

various health and human rights NGOs

and is an independent director of

Discovery Holdings.

rEnUKa GaDDE, Vice President, Global

Health, BD (Becton,

Dickinson and Co.)

Providing leadership for

BD’s Global Health activities in emerging

and developing countries, Renuka Gadde

is responsible for external engagement

with ministries of health, international

agencies and non-government organi-

zations, as well as internal engagement

across BD units in support of the compa-

ny’s strategies, products and programs

that advance global health needs and

efforts. She has been instrumental in

establishing collaborative initiatives in

sub-Saharan Africa with organizations

such as PEPFAR, the George W. Bush

Institute, and the International Council

of Nurses.

tHE QUESt fOr a tUbErCULOSiS VaCCinE

2:00 pM

JiM COnnOLLy, President and CEO, Aeras

Jim Connolly joined

Aeras as President and

CEO in 2010 after more

than two decades of pharmaceuti-

cal industry experience. As Executive

Vice President and General Manager of

Wyeth Vaccines from 2005 to 2009,

he played a leading role in expanding

access to the breakthrough pneumococ-

cal vaccine Prevnar to more than 100

countries and 35 national immunization

programs, including numerous emerg-

ing and developing countries, where

pneumococcal disease is a major cause

of child mortality.

LOCatiOn: Grand BallroomSpOtLiGHtS

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37GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

MAY 15

innOVatiVE partnErSHipS fOr GLObaL HEaLtH: HOW priVatE SECtOr rESOUrCES anD ExpErtiSE HELp DriVE GaVi’S MiSSiOn

2:10 pM

DaViD fErrEira, Managing Director for

Innovative Finance &

Head of Washington DC

office, GAVI Alliance

Immediately prior

to joining GAVI, David Ferreira was

the founding investment manager of

Soul City Broad-Based Empowerment

Company, an investment company

owned by a South African public health

non-profit. Prior to this, he was a found-

ing partner in Praxis Capital and has

worked for the Development Bank of

Southern Africa and the World Bank.

Ferreira began his career in South Africa

as a human rights and labor lawyer and

subsequently practiced with the New

York firm Davis Polk & Wardwell focusing

on capital markets financings.

DianE WHitty, Executive Director,

J.P. Morgan

Diane Whitty joined J.P.

Morgan in 2010 and is

co-head of J.P. Morgan Private Bank’s

Philanthropy Centre. The Philanthropy

Centre provides clients with insights and

services to help meet their financial and

philanthropic goals through innovative

advice, thought leadership and collab-

orative opportunities. Whitty has held

leadership positions at Save the Children

as Senior Vice-President of corporate

relations and Executive Vice-President

of marketing, communications and

development at the US Fund for UNICEF.

tHE pOWEr Of zinC tO iMprOVE CHiLD HEaLtH

4:00 pM

MiCHaEL E. aGG, Senior Vice President,

Teck Resources Ltd

Michael Agg was

appointed Senior

Vice President, Zinc for Teck Resources

Limited in August 2008 and is very

involved in the Zinc and Health program.

Prior to his current role, he held the

positions of General Manager of Teck

Cominco’s Cajamarquilla Zinc Refinery

in Peru, General Manager of Trail

Operations, and Vice President, Refining

and Metal Sales. Agg holds an Honors

Bachelor of Science in Mechanical

Engineering from Imperial College in

London, England.

In 2011, Agg announced plans to move

into retirement.

LOCatiOn: Grand BallroomSpOtLiGHtS

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39GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

DinnEr

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40 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

SaraH brOWn,

Ceo, office of Gordon and sarah Brown;

Global Patron, white ribbon Alliance for safe

Motherhood; President, PiggyBankkids

A passionate advocate for global health and education

issues around the world, as CEO of the Office of Gordon

and Sarah Brown, Brown works with government, busi-

ness and non-profit leaders to help ensure that every

child around the world receives an education targeting

the 67 million who never have a day at school. As Global

Patron of the White Ribbon Alliance for Safe Motherhood,

she is a leading voice in the maternal mortality campaign.

Brown is also President of PiggyBankKids, which

supports charitable projects that create opportunities

for vulnerable children and young people. An avid and

prolific user of social media, more than 1 million people

follow @SarahBrownUK on Twitter.

barbara bUSH,

Ceo and Co-founder, Global health Corps

Barbara Bush is CEO and co-founder of Global Health

Corps, an organization that aims to mobilize a global

community of emerging leaders to build the move-

ment for health equity. Over the past two years, Global

Health Corps has sent 126 fellows from eight countries

to work with governments and nonprofit health organi-

zations in Burundi, Uganda, Tanzania, Malawi, Rwanda

and the United States. Before GHC, Bush worked for two

years in educational programming at the Cooper-Hewitt

National Design Museum, where she supported design-

thinking programs for high school students and faculty in

Louisiana, Texas, Minnesota and New York.

After graduating from Yale University, she worked for

Red Cross Children’s Hospital in Capetown, South Africa

and interned for UNICEF in Botswana. She has traveled

regularly with the UN World Food Programme, focus-

ing on the importance of nutrition in ARV treatment.

Bush is a member of UNICEF’s Next Generation Steering

Committee and is on the Board of Directors of Covenant

House International and PSI.

ray CHaMbErS,

United nations secretary-General’s special envoy

for Malaria

Ray Chambers is a philanthropist and humanitarian

who has directed most of his efforts towards help-

ing children. He is founding Chairman of the Points of

Light Foundation and Co-Founder, with Colin Powell,

of America’s Promise — The Alliance for Youth. He also

co-founded the National Mentoring Partnership and the

Millennium Promise Alliance. Chambers is the co-founder

of Malaria No More, with Peter Chernin. He is Founding

Chairman of the New Jersey Performing Arts Center and

is former Chairman of Wesray Capital Corporation, which

he co-founded with William E. Simon.

LOCatiOn: Cipriani Wall Street 54 Wall Street at William St, New York, NYDinnEr SpEaKErS

aiGbOJE aiG-iMOUKHUEDE,

Group Managing director and Ceo, Access Bank plc;

Co-Chair, Board of directors, GBChealth

Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede’s banking career spans more

than two decades. He spent over 10 years at Guaranty

Trust Bank Plc (GT Bank) and subsequently led a dynamic

team of accomplished bankers as the Managing Director

and Chief Executive Officer of Access Bank Plc. In this

role, he was responsible for transforming the bank into a

world-class financial services provider. Aig-Imoukhuede’s

visionary leadership has inspired Access Bank's rapid

and unprecedented growth over the past eight years,

ranking the Bank among the top four banks. In 2007,

Aig-Imoukhuede was ranked among the top 10 Most

Respected CEOs in the annual PricewaterhouseCoopers

Most Respected Companies and CEO Survey. In 2011,

he was awarded the prestigious National Honor of

Commander of the Order of the Niger in recognition of

his contributions to the development of the Nigerian

economy and named the “2011 Ernst & Young West Africa

Entrepreneur of The Year.”

Page 45: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

41GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

CarOLyn S. MiLES,

President and Chief executive officer,

save the Children

Carolyn S. Miles is President & Chief Executive Officer

for Save the Children, the leading independent organi-

zation creating lasting change in the lives of more than

70 million children in need in the United States and

120 countries around the world. Miles joined the orga-

nization in 1998 and spent the last seven years as COO.

During her tenure as COO, Save the Children doubled

the number of children it reaches with food, educational,

and other programs, and helped grow the organization’s

budget – 90 percent of which goes directly to programs

serving children – from $250 million to more than $550

million. Earlier, she worked in Hong Kong for American

Express and as an entrepreneur. In Asia, she confronted

massive deprivation of the region’s children and

committed herself to their welfare.

Sir MarK MOODy-StUart,

Chairman (ret.), Anglo American plc

Sir Mark Moody-Stuart is the former Chairman of

GBCHealth and former Chairman of Anglo American

plc, a global mining and natural resources company.

From 1998 to 2001 Moody-Stuart was Chairman of Royal

Dutch Shell plc and Chairman of The “Shell” Transport

and Trading Company from 1997 to 2001, after having

served six years as both Managing Director of Shell

Transport and Managing Director of Royal Dutch Shell

plc. He remains on the board; is a Director of HSBC

Holdings plc and Accenture, a Governor of Nuffield

Hospitals; and a Vice President of the Liverpool School

of Tropical Medicine.

MiCHaEL E. SnEED,

vice President, Global Corporate Affairs,

Johnson & Johnson

Michael Sneed is responsible for the corporation’s global

marketing and communications functions. Sneed joined

Johnson & Johnson in 1983 as a Marketing Assistant

for Personal Products Company. During his tenure he

held positions of increasing responsibility in marketing

including Vice President of Worldwide Consumer

Pharmaceuticals, Managing Director of McNeil Consumer

Nutritionals Europe and Global President of Personal

Products Company all within the Johnson & Johnson

family. Sneed is a member of the board of trustees

at Macalester College and a member of the board of

directors of Family Service Association. He also serves

on the Advisory Board of LaSalle University’s Graduate

Pharmaceutical Marketing Program.

LOCatiOn: Cipriani Wall Street 54 Wall Street at William St, New York, NYDinnEr SpEaKErS

Page 46: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

42 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

Presented in Partnership with Johnson & Johnson

The GBChealth fronTLine heroes AwArd

2012 winner:

mothers2mothers

THe FrOnTline HerOes in Health award recognizes

on-the-ground health workers who are making a difference

in people’s lives.

GBCHealth is pleased to join Johnson & Johnson in presenting this year’s award

to mothers2mothers in honor of its more than 1,500 HIV-positive Mentor Mothers

who deliver life-saving information to women who are also HIV-positive.

Founded in 2001 at one site in South Africa, mothers2mothers now reaches

approximately 250,000 women a year at almost 600 sites in seven countries in

sub-Saharan Africa.

The organization trains and employs mothers living with HIV to mentor

HIV-positive pregnant women and new mothers in health facilities. These Mentor

Mothers work side by side with doctors and nurses as paid members of the health

care team, supporting women to deliver babies free from HIV/AIDS and educat-

ing them so they can stay alive to raise their families. The program has served as

a powerful force in preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV and in helping

mothers living with HIV stay healthy.

Accepting the award on behalf of the Mentor Mothers is Tlalane Phofoli, a site

coordinator at a busy clinic in Maseru, Lesotho. Phofoli was diagnosed with HIV in

2002. When she became pregnant in 2008, she was determined to have a healthy

child but had nowhere to turn, as her local clinic gave her no advice. On her own,

she researched information on preventing mother-to-child HIV transmission and

gave birth to a healthy daughter.

In 2009, mothers2mothers opened a program in her local community. Phofoli

now dedicates her time to providing education and support to the women of her

community. She is seen as an intrinsic part of the understaffed healthcare delivery

team. “I hope for all HIV-positive women to know about preventing mother-

to-child transmission like the back of her hand so we can all have HIV-negative

babies,” Phofoli said. “For now, we cannot get rid of HIV but we can contribute

to a future HIV-free generation.”

for more information, visit www.m2m.org

Page 47: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

43GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

2012 winner:

heineken

The GBCHealth Business leadership award is presented annually

to a business leader or company that has demonstrated an endur-

ing commitment to and excellence in the effort to create a healthier

world. We are delighted to honor HeineKen with this award.

For more than two decades HEINEKEN has demonstrated its commitment to

tackling some of the most challenging global health issues of our time. From the

company’s decision in 2001 to offer Highly Active Antiretroviral Treatment (HAART)

as part of its employee medical benefits package to providing an essential corpo-

rate voice in shaping global health policy, HEINEKEN has been a trailblazer in the

global health space.

Among its many health-related efforts, HEINEKEN has a comprehensive malaria

program across its African operation that includes distribution of nets, rapid diag-

nostics, ACT treatment and Intermittent Preventive Treatment care for employees,

families and communities. HEINEKEN represents the Private Sector on the Board

of the Stop TB Partnership as well as the Advisory Group of the Private Sector

Delegation to the Board of the Global Fund to Fights HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and

Malaria. In this capacity, HEINEKEN plays a leading role in shaping the private

sector’s position on global health policy and operations related to the Global

Fund and Stop TB Partnership. And through its HEINEKEN Africa Foundation and

Subsidiary Nigerian Breweries, the company has entered into a partnership with

the Hajia Gambo-Sawaba Hospital in Zaria, North Nigeria to focus on eliminating

occurrences of Vesico-vaginal fistula (VVF) among women in the community. The

program targets the root causes of poor health – curing those women who have

VVF, offering a mechanism to prevent its occurrence through the clinic and staff,

and empowering women and their families to reduce stigma associated with VVF.

HEINEKEN’s corporate culture demonstrates a deep-rooted commitment to the

social and economic well-being of its employees and its consumers. Tackling

difficult issues is part of the company’s DNA, yet HEINEKEN has executed much

of its health-related work with little focus on securing public fanfare. GBCHealth is

delighted to recognize HEINEKEN’s work that has made a tremendous difference

in the health and well-being of the company’s employees and the communities in

which it operates.

Accepting the award will be Mrs. Charlene de Carvalho-Heineken.

The GBChealth BUsiness LeAdershiP AwArd

Page 48: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

OUr ViSiOn

A global business community that is fully contributing its assets, skills, influence and reach to making

a healthier world for employees, their families, and their communities.

OUr MiSSiOn

To leverage the power and resources of the business community for positive impact on global

health challenges.

OUr apprOaCH

GBCHealth accomplishes its mission by supporting member companies through the following efforts:

• Convene and connect businesses, governments, multilaterals and civil society for the purpose of

knowledge and idea sharing on global health

• Drive the creation of high-impact partnerships and collective actions

• Provide recognition and visibility to members for the global health work they support

• Champion best practices in business engagement on health

• Represent business in key global health settings

• Provide advisory services and guidance to individual member companies, as needed

GBCHealth Global Headquarters

110 William Street, Suite 1800

New York, NY 10038

Tel: +1 212 584 1600 • Fax: +1 212 584 1699

www.gbchealth.org

Page 49: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

45GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

GBCHealth is proud to announce the Winning and Commended

Companies for the 2012 Business Action on Health Awards.

This year’s winners – AztraZeneca, Chevron, PrePex, Cisco,

freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold, hP, standard Chartered,

sumitomo and vestergaard frandsen.

WOrKpLaCE/WOrKfOrCE EnGaGEMEnt: GEnEraL

WinnEr: CHEVrOn COrpOratiOn

(CarDiOVaSCULar HEaLtH prOGraM)

Safeway Inc. (Health Care Program)

Vale (Showing You Care – Chemical Dependency

Prevention and Treatment)

Volkswagen South Africa (Workplace Health and Wellness)

WOrKpLaCE/WOrKfOrCE EnGaGEMEnt: SpECiaL fOCUS On aiDS, tUbErCULOSiS anD MaLaria

WinnEr: frEEpOrt-McMoran COppEr & GOLD inC.

(intEGratED MaLaria COntrOL prOGraM)

Mabati Rolling Mills Ltd. (Comprehensive Workplace &

Community HIV & AIDS Program)

COMMUnity inVEStMEnt: GEnEraL

WinnEr: StanDarD CHartErED

(SEEinG iS bELiEVinG)

Kraft Foods Foundation (Mitigating Hunger &

Ensuring Future Resilience & Stronger Households (FRESH))

PepsiCo (Enhancing Life & Livelihoods (ELL) in Bangladesh)

COMMUnity inVEStMEnt: SpECiaL fOCUS On aiDS, tUbErCULOSiS anD MaLaria

WinnEr: aStrazEnECa (intEGratinG MaLaria,

HiV anD tb trEatMEnt in CEntraL UGanDa

in partnErSHip WitH aMrEf)

Royal Dutch Shell plc (Health-In-Motion)

ArcelorMittal (Fighting Malaria)

appLiCatiOn Of COrE COMpEtEnCE

WinnEr: CiSCO SyStEMS inC. (COnnECtinG SiCHUan)

WinnEr: SUMitOMO CHEMiCaL COMpany (OLySEt® nEt)

SC Johnson (Community Cleaning Services)

partnErSHipS/COLLECtiVE aCtiOn

WinnEr: HEWLEtt-paCKarD COrpOratiOn (DiSEaSE

SUrVEiLLanCE anD MappinG prOJECt

WitH pinG anD CHai)

BASF (Strategic Alliance for the Fortification

of Oil and Other Staple Foods)

ExxonMobil Corporation (NightWatch)

Microsoft (Research4Life – A Library-in-a-Box)

tECHnOLOGy fOr HEaLtH

WinnEr: prEpEx by CirC MEDtECH (nOn-SUrGiCaL aDULt

MaLE CirCUMCiSiOn fOr HiV prEVEntiOn)

Vodafone Group PLC (SMS for Life)

Metropolitan Health Risk Management (pty) Ltd.

(BankMed: HIV Program)

Dimagi Inc. (CommCare ASHA)

HEaLtH anD bEyOnD: EraDiCatinG rOOt CaUSES Of pOOr HEaLtH

WinnEr: VEStErGaarD franDSEn (CarbOn fOr WatEr)

Thomson Reuters Foundation

(Women’s Health and Opportunity Reporting)

2012 GBChealth BUsiness ACTion on heALTh AwArd winners And CoMMended CoMPAnies

bUSinESSaCtiOn On HEaLtH

aWarDS

2012

Page 50: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

46 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

GBChealth BoArd MeMBers

BoArd of direCTorsCO-CHairMEn: aiGbOJE aiG-iMOUKHUEDE Chief Executive Officer, Access Bank plc

MUHtar KEnt Chairman and CEO, The Coca-Cola Company

DirECtOrS: Gary M. COHEn Executive Vice President, BD (Becton, Dickinson & Co.)

GiLLES péLiSSOn Former Chairman and CEO, Accor

MaLVa rabinOWitz Principal, Deloitte Consulting, LLP

JOHn tEDStrOM, pH.D. President and CEO, GBCHealth

rHOnDa zyGOCKi Executive Vice President, Chevron Corporation

CorPorATe Advisory BoArdCHairMan: WiLLiaM H. rOEDy MTV Networks International (ret.)

MEMbErS: aLan r. batKin Eton Park Capital Management

Sir riCHarD branSOn Virgin Group of Companies

CyntHia CarrOLL Anglo American plc

CLarEnCE p. CazaLOt Jr. Marathon Oil Corporation

aMbaSSaDOr MarK DybUL O’Neill Institute, Georgetown University; George W. Bush Institute

JOSEpH W. DziEDziC The Brink’s Company

CHriStOpHEr J. KirUbi Haco industries

JOnatHan KLEin Getty Images

brUnO LafOnt Lafarge

Sir MarK MOODy StUart Anglo American plc (ret.)

riCHarD pLEpLEr HBO

aLbErt J. SiEMEnS FHI 360

DaViD StErn National Basketball Association (NBA)

ratan n. tata Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd

JEan-françOiS Van bOxMEEr HEINEKEN N.V.

CHarLES zHanG SOHU.com Inc.

LEGaL COUnSEL SiMpSOn tHaCHEr & bartLEtt, LLp

afriCa

• Access Bank plc (Nigeria)

• Afrox (South Africa)

• ALAFA (Lesotho)

• AngloGold Ashanti (South Africa)

• Bidco Oil Refineries Ltd (Kenya)

• Cimpogest (Mozambique)

• De Beers (South Africa)

• Debswana Diamond Company (Pty) Ltd

(Botswana)

• Del Monte Kenya Limited (Kenya)

• Discovery Health (South Africa)

• Eskom (South Africa)

• Ford Motor Company of South Africa

• Gold Fields Ghana Ltd

• Haco Industries Ltd (Kenya)

• Impala Platinum (South Africa)

• Independent Newspapers (Pty) Limited

(South Africa)

• Magadi Soda (Kenya)

• Mercedes-Benz South Africa

• Micato Safaris (Kenya)

• Nando’s (South Africa)

• Nigeria LNG Ltd. (Nigeria)

• Power Technics (Kenya)

• Royal Bafokeng Holdings (South Africa)

• Sappi Ltd (South Africa)

• Shanduka Group (South Africa)

• Standard Bank (South Africa)

• Wilderness Holdings Limited

(South Africa)

aMEriCaS

• Abt Associates (USA)

• Abbott Fund (USA)

• Accenture (USA)

• American Express Company (USA)

• American Institutes for Research (USA)

• Barrick Gold Corporation (Canada)

• BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company)

(USA)

• BioScrip (USA)

• Black Entertainment Television (BET)

(USA)

• Bloomberg (USA)

• BMO Financial Group (Canada)

• Booz & Company (USA)

• The Brink’s Company (USA)

• Bristol-Myers Squibb (USA)

• Burson-Marsteller (USA)

• Business for Social Responsibility (BSR)

• Carlson (USA)

• CDC-BRTA (USA)

• Chevron Corporation (USA)

• Cisco (USA)

• Civicom, Inc. (USA)

• The Coca-Cola Company (USA)

• Dalberg Global Development Advisors

(USA)

GbCHealth MEMbErS anD SUppOrtErS

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47GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

GbCHealth MEMbErS anD SUppOrtErS (cont’d)

• Dell (USA)

• Deloitte (USA)

• DNA Genotek Inc. (Canada)

• The Dow Chemical Company (USA)

• Dow Jones & Company (USA)

• Edelman (USA)

• EDG Consulting Engineers (USA)

• Eli Lilly and Company (USA)

• The Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS

Foundation (USA)

• Estée Lauder Companies (USA)

• Exxon Mobil Corporation (USA)

• Facebook (USA)

• Family Health International (FHI) (USA)

• Ford Foundation (USA)

• Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold (USA)

• FSG Social Impact Advisors (USA)

• FTI Consulting (USA)

• GAVI Alliance (USA)

• General Motors (USA)

• Gerson Lehrman Group (USA)

• Getty Images (USA)

• Global Health Corps (USA)

• Goldman Sachs Group (USA)

• Halliburton (USA)

• Hawthorn Capital Inc. (USA)

• HealthHIV (USA)

• Hewlett-Packard Company (USA)

• Home Box Office (HBO) (USA)

• Howard Delafield International (HDI)(USA)

• International Partnership for Microbicides

(USA)

• JG Black Book of Travel (USA)

• JN-International Medical Corp. (USA)

• John Hopkins University Center for

Communications Programs (USA)

• Johnson & Johnson (USA)

• Levi Strauss & Co. (USA)

• M·A·C Cosmetics (USA)

• Management Sciences for Health (MSH)

(USA)

• Marathon Oil Corporation (USA)

• Massachusetts General Hospital Center

for Global Health (USA)

• Mayo Clinic (USA)

• McKinsey & Company (USA)

• Medtronic (USA)

• Merck & Co., Inc. (USA)

• Mothers2Mothers (USA)

• Mylan (USA)

• National Basketball Association (NBA)

(USA)

• Newmont Mining Corporation (USA)

• Nike, Inc. (USA)

• Noble Energy (USA)

• Nyhus Communications LLC (USA)

• NYSE Euronext, Inc. (USA)

• Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide (USA)

• OraSure Technologies (USA)

• Pact, Inc. (USA)

• PATH (USA)

• Pfizer Inc (USA)

• POZ Magazine (USA)

• Product (RED) (USA)

• RBC (Canada)

• The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, L.L.C.

(USA)

• Russell Reynolds Associates (USA)

• RTI International (USA)

• Salesforce.com Foundation (USA)

• Save the Children (USA)

• SC Johnson (USA)

• Scotiabank Group (Canada)

• Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett LLP (USA)

• TD Bank Financial Group (Canada)

• Teck (Canada)

• Thomson Reuters (USA)

• Noel Group (USA)

• Vale (Brazil)

• VH1 (USA)

• Viacom International (USA)

• Walgreens Co. (USA)

• Wood Group (USA)

• United Nations Foundation (USA)

• University Research Co., LLC (USA)

• Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated

(USA)

• Waggener Edstrom Worldwide (USA)

• Winston & Strawn LLP (USA)

• World Vision (USA)

• Young & Rubicam (Y&R) (USA)

aSia / paCifiC

• Asian Development Bank (ADB)

• BHP Billiton (Australia)

• China Northeast General Pharmaceutical

Factory (China)

• Horizon Research Group (China)

• Hub One International (China)

• Inno (China)

• Modicare (India)

• Ranbaxy (India)

• RPG Enterprises (India)

• RRR Industries (India)

• Shanghai Desano Pharmaceuticals

Holding Company Limited (China)

• Sohu.com (China)

• SRF Ltd (India)

• Sumitomo Chemical (Japan)

• Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd (India)

• ZMQ Software Systems (India)

EUrOpE

• Anglo American plc (UK)

• AREVA Group (France)

• Bayer AG (Germany)

• Bestnet A/V (Denmark)

• bioMérieux (France)

• BMW Group (Germany)

• Boehringer Ingelheim (Germany)

• BP (UK)

• Coca-Cola Hellenic Bottling Company S.A.

(Greece)

• Consolidated Contractors International

Company S.A.L. (CCC) (Greece)

• CTC Media, Inc. (Russia)

• Dance4Life (Amsterdam)

• Designers Against AIDS (Belgium)

• Deutsche Post DHL (Germany)

• Diageo (UK)

• EastOne LLC (Ukraine)

• EDUN (Ireland)

• Enka (Turkey)

• EUK Consulting (UK)

• Financial Times (UK)

• FTSE (UK)

• GDF SUEZ (France)

• Generation Investment Management LLP

(UK)

• HEINEKEN (Netherlands)

• HSBC (UK)

• Intesa Sanpaolo (Italy)

• International SOS (UK)

• Lafarge (France)

• Mota-Engil, Sgps, S A (Portugal)

• MTV Networks International (UK)

• Nokia Corporation (Finland)

• Novartis (Switzerland)

• ORTEC (Netherlands)

• Pearson plc (UK)

• Publicis Groupe (France)

• R.K.C. (Ukraine)

• Renaissance Capital (Russia)

• Rio Tinto (UK)

• Robert Bosch GmbH (Germany)

• Royal Dutch Shell plc (Netherlands)

• SABMiller (UK)

• Sanofi (France)

• Sentinel Consulting Ltd (UK)

• Service Médical International (SMI)

(France)

• Siemens (Germany)

• SSL International plc (UK)

• Standard Chartered Bank (UK)

• Syngenta Crop Protection (Switzerland)

• System Capital Management (Ukraine)

• TNK-BP (Russia)

• Transocean (Switzerland)

• TV5Monde (France)

• Unilever (Netherlands/UK)

• Vestergaard Frandsen Inc. (Switzerland)

• Virgin Group (UK)

• Vodafone Group Plc (UK)

• Volkswagen (Germany)

• Xstrata (Switzerland)

Page 52: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

48 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

prEMiEr MEMbErS

abt aSSOCiatES

Abt Associates is a mission-driven, global leader

in research and program implementation in the

fields of health, social and environmental policy,

and international development. With offices in

nearly 40 countries, Abt Associates was ranked as

one of the top 20 global research firms in 2011 and

was named one of the top 40 international

development innovators.

http://www.abtassociates.com

aCCEntUrE

Accenture is a global management consulting,

technology services and outsourcing company,

with more than 246,000 people serving clients in

more than 120 countries. Combining unparalleled

experience, comprehensive capabilities across all

industries and business functions, and extensive

research on the world’s most successful compa-

nies, Accenture collaborates with clients to help

them become high-performance businesses

and governments.

http://www.accenture.com

EDG COnSULtinG EnGinEErS

EDG Inc. is a full-service, multi-discipline,

international consulting firm serving the oil and

gas and industrial markets. Founded in 1982,

we are a global, privately held company. We

have firmly established ourselves as a leader in

providing cost-effective, innovative and complete

solutions for Upstream and Midstream industries,

including Oil and Gas, Marine and Terminals and

Cement and Bulks.

http://www.edg.net/

tHE finanCiaL tiMES

The Financial Times (FT) is one of the world’s

leading business news and information organiza-

tions, recognized internationally for its authority,

integrity and accuracy. The FT has a combined

paid print and digital circulation of 604,856. The

newspaper is printed in 22 cities globally and has

a daily circulation of 319,381. FT.com has 285,475

paying FT digital subscribers and over 4.5 million

registered users.

http://www.ft.com

GOLD fiELDS GHana

Gold Fields is one of the world’s largest producers

of gold with annual production of 3.5 million gold

equivalent ounces. Currently operating eight

mines in Australia, Ghana, Peru and South Africa,

Gold Fields also has an extensive and diverse

global growth pipeline with four major projects

in resource development and feasibility.

http://www.goldfields.co.za

HaLLibUrtOn COMpany

Halliburton is one of the world’s largest providers

of products and services to the energy industry.

With nearly 70,000 employees in approximately

80 countries, the company serves the upstream

oil and gas industry throughout the lifecycle of

the reservoir – from locating hydrocarbons and

managing geological data, to drilling and formation

evaluation, well construction and completion, and

optimizing production through the life of the field.

http://www.halliburton.com

HEWLEtt-paCKarD (Hp)

HP creates new possibilities for technology to

have a meaningful impact on people, businesses,

governments and society. The world’s larg-

est technology company, HP brings together a

portfolio that spans printing, personal computing,

software, services and IT infrastructure to solve

customer problems.

http://www.hp.com

MayO CLiniC

Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit worldwide leader in

medical care, research and education for people

from all walks of life. Doctors from every medi-

cal specialty work together, joined by common

systems and a philosophy of “the needs of the

patient come first.” Mayo Clinic is governed by a

33-member Board of Trustees.

http://www.mayoclinic.org

MEDtrOniC

Medtronic is one of the world’s largest medical

technology companies. It partners with medical

professionals to develop life-changing technolo-

gies that improve the way chronic diseases are

treated. Medtronic focuses on overall disease

management, helping patients throughout the

entire continuum of their care – from prevention

to post-treatment follow up.

http://www.medtronic.com

GBChealth’s newesT MeMBers

Page 53: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

49GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

MErCEDES-bEnz SOUtH afriCa (MbSa)

MBSA is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the global

company, Daimler AG. Daimler AG is one of

the world’s biggest producers of premium cars

and commercial vehicles. Today MBSA manu-

factures Mercedes-Benz cars and trucks for the

local market and for export to the USA. MBSA’s

headquarters, marketing and support divisions are

located in Zwartkop, Gauteng.

http://www.mercedes-benzsa.co.za

nObLE EnErGy

Founded by Lloyd Noble in 1932, Noble Energy

has 80 years of success in the energy industry.

As one of the first independent producers to

explore in the Gulf of Mexico, the company helped

shape the industry and its own future success.

Today, Noble Energy is an S&P 500 company with

reserves of 1.2 billion barrels of oil equivalent and

assets totaling over $16 billion.

http://www.nobleenergyinc.com

SEntinEL COnSULtinG UK

Sentinel Consulting provides practical solutions

for people operating in remote areas. Sentinel’s

expertise is in health, safety and logistics, with a

strong emphasis on ethical practice and long-term

relationships with clients. The company is built

around a network of experts serving clients which

include mineral exploration companies, expedition

and tour operators, educators, NGOs and indi-

viduals operating on every continent.

http://www.sentinelconsulting.co.uk/

tECK

Teck is a diversified resource company committed

to responsible mining and mineral development.

Teck’s business units focus on copper, steelmak-

ing coal, zinc and energy. Headquartered in

Vancouver, Canada, Teck owns or has an interest

in 13 mines in Canada, USA, Chile and Peru, as

well as one metallurgical complex. Teck is also

actively exploring for copper, zinc and gold in the

Americas, Asia Pacific, Europe and Africa.

http://www.teck.com/

WOOD GrOUp

A leading international energy services company,

Wood Group comprises three businesses—

Engineering, Wood Group PSN and Wood Group

GTS. Powered by the passion and expertise of

our people, we provide a range of engineering,

production support, maintenance management

and industrial gas turbine overhaul & repair

services to the oil & gas and power generation

industries worldwide.

http://www.woodgroup.com

affiLiatE MEMbErS

aSian DEVELOpMEnt banK

bEStnEt a/V

bUSinESS fOr SOCiaL

CiSCO

DanCE4LifE

EUK COnSULtinG

fOrD MOtOr COMpany Of SOUtH afriCa

HUb OnE intErnatiOnaL

innO

JOHn HOpKinS UniVErSity CEntEr

fOr COMMUniCatiOnS prOGraMS

MaSSaCHUSEttS GEnEraL HOSpitaL

CEntEr fOr GLObaL HEaLtH

GBChealth’s newesT MeMBers (cont’d)

Page 54: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

50 GBChealth AnnUAL ConferenCe 2012

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Page 55: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012

sPeCiAL ThAnks To oUr sPonsors

pLatinUM SpOnSOrS

GOLD SpOnSOrS

brOnzE SpOnSOrS

SiLVEr SpOnSOrS

SUppOrtinG SpOnSOrS

CSRWIRE

FINANCIAL TIMES

MDG HEALTH ALLIANCE

partnErS

Page 56: GBCHealth Annual Conference Program 2012