Class of 2018

This year, the demand exceeded our expectations. The MultiPOD Mentoring Class of 2018 consists of 45 broadly experienced and knowledgeable international Mentors and 50 bright, enthusiastic, and promising Mentees.

The following data suggest that we may be one of the most diverse and large international mentoring programs for Mentees entering the field of Global Health and Human Development.

 
Class of 2018
 

Gender

We made a special effort to recruit more female Mentors this year, and we succeeded. Now, among the 45 Mentors there are 20 women (44%) and 25 men (56%) In contrast, in 2017, only 4 (17%) of our 24 Mentors were women. Among the Mentees, the percentage of men (23%) was similar to that in 2017 (28%). The persistence of this gender disparity among students and young professionals is due to the decreasing number of men and increasing number of women entering the fields of public health and global health across the world.


Geographic distribution

In 2018, our 96 Mentors and Mentees were born in or are currently working or studying in 59 different countries and our reach encompasses 17 time zones, from Vancouver, Canada to Melbourne, Australia:

  • Central and West Africa: Cameroon, DR Congo, Ghana, Nigeria

  • East and South Africa: Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi

  • Middle East and North Africa: Algiers, Egypt, Lebanon, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates

  • North America: Canada, Mexico, United States 

  • ​Central America: Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Panama

  • ​South America: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Peru 

  • ​English and Dutch Caribbean: Bahamas, Jamaica, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago

  • ​Western Europe: Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland

  • ​Northern Europe: Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom

  • ​Southern Europe: Croatia, Italy, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain

  • ​Eastern Europe and Caucasus: Bulgaria, Georgia, Poland, Romania, Ukraine

  • ​Central Asia: Uzbekistan

  • ​South Asia: Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal

  • ​South East Asia: Myanmar, Thailand 

  • ​East Asia: China, Hong Kong (CN)

  • Oceania: Australia

 

Academic and Professional Background

As in 2017, more than 70% of the Mentors are physicians. Among the 50 Mentees, the situation is reversed. There are only nine medical doctors (18%) and the remaining 41 young women and men have been trained in the following disciplines:

Economics, Political Science, Informatics, Multilingual Communications, Neuroscience, Dentistry, Nursing, Microbiology, Music, History, Geography, Physical Therapy, Systems Research, Business Administration, Genomics, Innovation and Management, Food and Nutrition, Psychology, Medical Anthropology, Biomedical Sciences, Epidemiology,  Pharmacy, Sociology, Life Sciences, Health Economics, International Development, Management, Policy Analysis, Finance, Health Systems, and Environmental Studies, among others.


Languages

Although English is our working language, MultiPOD Mentoring's Mentees and Mentors are native speakers of or fluent in forty-five languages.
These include the six official languages of the United Nations (Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian, and Spanish), three of the newly proposed UN official languages (Bengali, Hindi, and Portuguese), and other Asian, European, and African languages (Amharic, Asante, Bulgarian, Burmese, Cantonese, Catalan, Chichewa, Croatian, Danish, Dutch, Fante, Finnish, Ga, Georgian, German, Gujarati, Italian, Krobo, Marathi, Nepali, Norwegian, Persian, Polish, Romanian, Slovenian, Swahili, Swedish, Tagalog, Tajik, Tamil, Telugu, Tigrinya, Turkish, Twi, Uzbek, and Yoruba)

We expect to continue to grow, develop and expand MultiPOD Mentoring in 2019 and beyond. Please join us and become part of this global inter-generational effort to make our Earth a healthier and better world.


List of Mentors and Mentees

List of all the Mentees and all the Mentors that participated in the Class of 2018.

Continuing Mentees

  • Andreea Badache, Romania/Sweden

  • Lauren MacDonald, Canada

  • Shirley Bejarano, Colombia/United States

New Mentees of 2018

  • Adriana Lucía García, Peru/United States

  • Alejandro Torres-Grimaldo, Mexico

  • Alfan Alktebi , United Arab Emirates

  • Ana Núñez Benítez, Spain

  • Anna Frühauf, Germany

  • Beatrice Kamau, Kenya

  • Beatriz Aurelio, United States

  • Berenike Obermayer, Germany

  • Calvin Besong Eta Oben, Cameroon/Ethiopia

  • Charles Eziuzor, Nigeria

  • Charli S. Zhang, China

  • Dalia Atta Hashem, Egypt

  • Dora Maradiaga, Mexico/United Kingdom

  • Eliza Thapa, Nepal/Australia

  • Eru Mesfum, Netherlands/United Kingdom

  • Francis Klevor, Ghana/United States

  • Geyuan Tian, China

  • Ingrid Arreola, United States

  • Jamie Rudman, United Kingdom

  • Jemima Kola-Abodunde, Nigeria/United Kingdom

  • Jonathon Gruba, United States

  • Junu Hada, Nepal/United States

  • Lavinia Alexandra Giurgi, Romania

  • Macarena Torres, Peru

  • Mahdi Abdelwahab, Egypt/Netherlands

  • Manish Kar, India/Canada

  • Margaret, Mengjie

  • Mariska van der Zee, Netherlands

  • Megan Robinson, United States

  • Michele Matta, Lebanon/France

  • Niina-Maria Nissinen, Finland

  • Olajumoke Onaolapo, Nigeria/Netherlands

  • Ophelia Kusi-Tetteh, Ghana

  • Patricia Grau Serra, Spain

  • Pirahami Thayaparan, United Kingdom

  • Pradeep Bhattarai, Nepal

  • Rebecca Vorley, United Kingdom

  • Robert Fain, United States

  • Ruxandra Oroviceanu, Romania

  • Sabrina Ebert, Germany

  • Sabrine Hamdi, Tunisia

  • Sarah Almaraz, United States

  • Sharmin Majumder, Bangladesh/Thailand

  • Shirin Aliabadi, United Kingdom

  • Souheyla Benfrid, Algiers/France

  • Teresa Bevere, Italy

  • Thandar Tun, Myanmar

  • Toyyib Abdulkareem, Nigeria

  • Velia Manyonga, Malawi

  • Vera Disso, Cameroon

  • Veronica Costea, Romania

  • Viveka Guzmán, Ireland

  • Xiang Ren, China

  • Yuxuan Gu, China

Continuing Mentors

Principal Mentor

  • Fernando Zacarías, Mexico/ United States

Main Mentors

  • Alberto Concha-Eastman, Colombia

  • Antonio Gerbase, Brazil, Switzerland

  • Arletty Pinel, Panama

  • Brendan Bain, Jamaica

  • Cesar Gattini, Chile

  • Christian Darras, Belgium

  • Firdosi Mehta, India/Canada

  • Hernán Rosenberg, Chile

  • Juan Manuel Sotelo, Peru, United States

  • Laurent Zessler †, France

  • Rafael Mazín, Mexico, United States

  • Stephen Corber, Canada

Mentor Advisors

  • Adela Páez Jiménez, Spain, Sweden

  • Ann Marie Kimball, United States

  • Diego Bernardini, Argentina

  • Farley Cleghorn, Trinidad and Tobago

  • Jai Prakash Narain, India

  • Maka Tsulukidze, Georgia

  • Paul Nguewa, Cameroon, Spain

  • Rubén del Prado, Suriname, Nepal, Bhutan

  • Stanley Blanco, Bolivia

  • Stefano Lazzari, Italy

New Mentors of 2018

Main Mentors

  • Barbara de Zalduondo, United States

  • Diogo Martins, Portugal

  • Giorgi Pkhakadze, Georgia

  • Isabelle de Zoyza, United Kingdom

  • José Romero Keith, Mexico

  • Lana Augustincic, Croatia

  • Mariela Contreras, Honduras

  • Pia Vracko, Slovenia

  • Sue Griffey, United States

  • Traci Wells, United States

  • Trupti Desai, India

Mentor Advisors

  • Ana Lorena Ruano, Guatemala, Norway

  • Elizabeth Mason, United Kingdom

  • Elyse Myers, United States

  • Katina García Appendini , Mexico

  • Lidia Georgieva, Bulgaria

  • Malika Mirkhanova, Uzbekistan

  • Michelle Amri, Canada

  • Ricardo Mexia, Portugal

  • Ronald Mora Castillo, Costa Rica/France

  • Veronica Foubert, Switzerland

  • Veta Brown, Bahamas

Principal Mentor is also the Program Coordinator and mentors from eight to twelve Mentees per nine-month cycle.
Main Mentor is assigned one or two Mentees for nine months.
Mentor Advisor is available for specific consultations in area of expertise, institutional affiliation, geographic location, etc. from one to four hours per mentoring year.

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Class of 2019