Dr Pate will take over as the CEO of Gavi from Dr Seth Berkley on August 3, 2023.
Pate was selected as the CEO following a yearlong recruitment process personally overseen by the Chair of the Gavi Board, Prof José Barroso.
In a press statement made available to our correspondent on Monday, Gavi said 344 people across diverse gender and geographical backgrounds applied for the position but Pate was selected for the position.
Described as a proven global health leader with experience at the national and international levels, Dr Pate will lead Gavi as it continues its work to support routine immunisation, outbreak response, and COVID-19 vaccinations around the world.
“While serving as Global Director for Health, Nutrition, and Population of the World Bank and Director of the Global Financing Facility at the World Bank between 2019 and 2021, he led the Bank’s $18 billion COVID-19 global health response and represented the Bank on various boards, including those of Gavi, the Global Fund, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, and UNAIDS.
“He is currently the Julio Frenk Professor of Public Health Leadership at Harvard Chan School of Public Health and has served on several health-focused boards and expert panels in the public, private, and not-for-profit sectors during his career,” the statement read in part.
Commenting on the appointment, Prof Barroso said, “Dr Muhammad Ali Pate stood out in a field of world-class candidates. With his knowledge and experience of both national immunization programming and international emergency response and global finance, I am confident that Gavi will continue to build on its vision and mission, as well as navigate the many challenges and opportunities we will face.”
Speaking on his appointment, Dr Pate said, “I’m deeply honoured to be joining Gavi as its incoming CEO. Gavi is one of the most impactful organisations in global health, a testament to the great work of the Alliance partners and Secretariat staff. It will be my privilege to lead it, building on the work of Dr Seth Berkley, and continue to support countries to scale up critical routine immunisation programmes, reach more zero-dose children, expand access to new vaccines, transform primary health care systems, and help fight outbreaks and future pandemics.”
Also, Dr Berkley said, “Leading Gavi and helping the Alliance to continually surpass itself in terms of saving lives, protecting children, and supporting countries during global health emergencies have been the greatest honour of my career. I am proud and humbled to have been part of what the Alliance has achieved, and I am confident in its future under Muhammad’s leadership: having worked with him during his time as Minister and at the World Bank, I know he understands intimately the landscape we work in and will be uncompromising in his drive for public health equity.”
Berkley has led Gavi for more than half of its existence, making it a centrepiece within the global health landscape, including recently co-establishing COVAX to serve countries during the unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic, having so far shipped nearly 1.9 billion COVID-19 vaccine doses to 146 countries.
Since Dr Berkley took the helm in 2011, the Alliance has averted 11.8 million future deaths (compared to 4.5 million between 2000 and 2010); and has helped immunise more than 676 million children – more than double the 305 million children reached between 2000 and 2010.
“Gavi has added a number of new vaccines to its portfolio during his tenure, including for HPV, polio, cholera, and malaria, and in its current strategy cycle is focusing on reaching zero-dose children across marginalised communities.
“The Alliance also played an increasingly influential role in emergency response, developing vaccine stockpiles for diseases such as cholera and introducing innovative financing mechanisms to fund the emergency purchase of Ebola and COVID-19 vaccines. The economic result of Gavi’s expansion of activities during his tenure has been profound, unlocking over $160 billion of economic benefits compared to $24 billion in its first ten years,” the statement added.