Members of the Develop Country NGO Constituency Delegation 

Name Organization.............. Country of work
Board Members
Deliana Garcia Migrants Clinicians Network United States
Alternate Board Members
Katy Kydd Wright Global Fund Advocates Network (GFAN) Canada
Delegation Members
Joanne Carter Results US United States
Alex Runswick Results UK United Kingdom
Patrick Bertrand Global Health Advocates France
Mona Drage LHL International Tuberculosis Foundation (LHL International) Norway
Jennifer Peake Results International Australia Australia
Laszlo Madaras MCN (Migrant Clinicians network) United States
Mike Frick TAG (Treatment Action Group) United States
Dr Ralf Otto-Knapp DZK (German Central Committee against Tuberculosis) Germany
Brit Hacker DZK (German Central Committee against Tuberculosis) Germany
Silvia Kelbert JHPIEGO United States
Jennifer Kurylowicz YWAM Medical & Training Ship - Campus Australia/Papua New Guinea
Dr Salman Khan International Federation of Medical Students’ Association (IFMSA) Denmark

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Board delegations are formed independently by Board constituencies. If you would like to join this constituency, please contact the Stop TB Board Affairs Team at [email protected].

To reach the Constituency Focal Point (CFP) of this delegation, please contact:Selamawit Bekele - [email protected]

 

Deliana Garcia has worked for 30 years to meet the health care needs of migrant workers and other underserved mobile populations. With expertise in reproductive health, access to primary care, chronic care management and infectious disease control and prevention, Del is responsible for the development of MCN’s Health Network, a global system of bridge case management to provide continuity of care and health records transfer across international border for migrants. She serves as a liaison between the governmental and nongovernmental health organizations of the United States and other countries.
Katy Kydd Wright is a Senior Policy Advisor and coordinates the Global Fund Advocates Network. Katy, who is based in Ottawa, Canada, spent close to a decade working for Canadian Parliamentarians in various roles at the House of Commons. Her work to introduce the first Canadian Access to Medicines regime, adopted in 2004, brought her into the field of community and civil society advocacy in global health. Katy was the Director of Campaigns at RESULTS Canada, where she led global health and poverty-related campaigns. In 2012, shortly after the formal launch of the Global Fund Advocates Network, Katy joined International Civil Society Support to coordinate GFAN and bring together voices to support a fully funded and effective Global Fund. GFAN hosted the Community and Civil Society Platform for the TB High-Level Meeting in 2018, and Katy has been a participant of the Developed Country NGO delegation to the Global Fund board since 2015. Katy joined the Developed Country NGO Delegation to the Stop TB Partnership Board in October 2019.
Joanne Carter is the Executive Director of RESULTS and RESULTS Educational Fund since 2008. She works with key U.S. administration and congressional allies, partner organizations, and technical agencies to orchestrate U.S.A. and international campaigns to tackle major diseases of poverty, increase access to education, expand economic opportunity for the poorest, and reform World Bank and International Monetary Fund policies. Under her leadership, RESULTS/REF has grown to include chapters now found in every state in the US. In that time, RESULTS was instrumental in the creation and expansion of the Child Survival and Health Programs Fund, expansion of global TB funding, and provisions that require U.S. representatives to the World Bank and IMF to oppose user fees for primary health and education. As founding Project Lead for ACTION, Joanne has helped build this global health advocacy partnership across ten countries on five continents and guide its efforts to help mobilize billions of dollars of financial resources to end diseases of poverty and ensure equitable access to health.