Chan, Margaret

Chan, Margaret
▪ 2007

      On Nov. 8, 2006, Margaret Chan, a former director of the Hong Kong Department of Health, was nominated to succeed Lee Jong Wook of South Korea as director general of the World Health Organization (WHO). Following Lee's unexpected death on May 22, Chan and 10 other candidates were recommended for the post by their respective governments, and after four rounds of balloting by WHO's executive board, Chan emerged as the nominee. Her selection was confirmed during a special session of the World Health Assembly on November 9. Supporters praised Chan's ability in handling crisis situations, pointing to her experience in managing an outbreak of avian (bird) flu in 1997 and in responding to the world's first outbreak of SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) in 2003. Chan was set to officially assume the director general's post in early January 2007, and her term was scheduled to run until June 2012.

      Chan was born in 1947 in Hong Kong. She attended Northcote College of Education in Hong Kong before moving to Canada, where she earned B.A. (1973) and M.D. (1977) degrees from the University of Western Ontario. She also received a Master of Science degree in public health (1985) from Singapore National University. She joined the Hong Kong Department of Health in 1978, rising to the directorship in 1994. She served as director for nine years, during which time she focused on communicable disease surveillance and response and on improving training for public health professionals.

      Chan's leadership during a time of crisis was widely commended after the first human cases of the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus appeared in Hong Kong in 1997. Her response included an order to destroy the city's entire poultry stock—some 1.5 million birds. The order, carried out within three days, allowed authorities to bring the outbreak under control and possibly avert a pandemic. Chan also elevated her international profile with her management of the 2003 SARS outbreak that claimed the lives of nearly 300 persons in Hong Kong, though some critics faulted her for not acting more aggressively after the outbreak initially appeared in China's neighbouring Guangdong province.

      From 2003 to 2005 Chan served as director of WHO's Department of Protection of the Human Environment, and from 2005 until her appointment as director general, she was WHO's assistant director general for communicable diseases. In her first speech after accepting the director general's post, Chan outlined her specific goals of improving the health of people in Africa and of women around the world. “All regions, all countries, all people are equally important,” she stated. “But we must focus our attention on the people in greatest need.”

Sherman Hollar

* * *

▪ Chinese civil servant
born 1947, Hong Kong

      Hong Kong-born Chinese civil servant who became director general of the World Health Organization (WHO) in January 2007.

      Chan attended Northcote College of Education in Hong Kong before moving to Canada, where she earned B.A. (1973) and M.D. (1977) degrees from the University of Western Ontario. She also received a Master of Science degree in public health (1985) from Singapore National University. She joined the Hong Kong Department of Health in 1978 and became its director in 1994. She served as director for nine years, during which time she focused on communicable disease surveillance and response and on improving training for public health professionals.

      Chan's leadership during a time of crisis was widely commended after the first human cases of the deadly H5N1 bird flu virus appeared in Hong Kong in 1997. Her response included an order to destroy the city's entire poultry stock—some 1.5 million birds. The order, carried out within three days, allowed authorities to bring the outbreak under control and possibly avert a pandemic. Chan also elevated her international profile with her management of the 2003 SARS outbreak, which claimed the lives of nearly 300 persons in Hong Kong, though some critics faulted her for not acting more aggressively after the outbreak initially appeared in China's neighbouring Guangdong province.

      From 2003 to 2005 Chan served as director of WHO (World Health Organization)'s Department of Protection of the Human Environment, and from 2005 until 2007 she was WHO's assistant director general for communicable diseases. Chan succeeded Lee Jong Wook of South Korea as director general of WHO a few months after his unexpected death. She and 10 other candidates were recommended for the post by their respective governments, and, after four rounds of balloting by WHO's executive board, Chan emerged as the nominee. Her selection was confirmed during a special session of the World Health Assembly on November 9. Supporters praised Chan's ability in handling crisis situations, pointing to her experience in managing the bird flu and SARS outbreaks.

      Chan officially became director general in early January 2007. In her first speech after taking the position, she outlined her specific goals of improving the health of people in Africa and of women around the world. “All regions, all countries, all people are equally important,” she stated, “but we must focus our attention on the people in greatest need.”

Sherman Hollar
 

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

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