The Global Virus Network (GVN), a coalition of the world’s
leading medical virology research centers working to prevent
illness and death from viral disease, today announced the addition
of ten members to its Board of Directors; Kathleen Kennedy Townsend
as Chairperson, Lisa Paulsen, Romain Murenzi, G. Steven Burrill,
Salim S. Abdool Karim, Andrew Cheng, Longde Wang, N. Scott Fine,
Nicolas De Santis and Raj Shah. The announcement was made today by
Robert C. Gallo, co-founder of the GVN and Chair of GVN’s
Scientific Leadership Board.
“The addition of these new Board members will add valuable
resources to the GVN and will greatly enhance GVN’s global
visibility,” said Dr. Gallo, Director of the Institute of Human
Virology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. “One of
the biggest lessons we learned after discovering the first human
retroviruses, including co-discovery of HIV as the cause of AIDS,
and developing the HIV blood test, is that researchers need a GVN
to share and disseminate important information seamlessly, without
government politics or financial limitations. Having such an
organization will result in millions of lives being saved.”
As Chair of the Board, Kathleen Kennedy Townsend will bring
global leaders together to support the mission of the GVN. “The
global community faces serious threats from new viruses every day,
including SARS, Hantavirus, Dengue, West Nile and the specter of
pandemic influenza viruses,” said Kennedy Townsend. “Our best
defense is a rigorous and worldwide research network poised to
engage in any outbreak situation. GVN is the very safety net that
we need to protect the health of the world’s citizens from new
viral threats. To put this safety net in place requires support
from governments, the private sector, and citizens. I will bring
all of these partners together to protect human health through GVN
and its many partners.”
Lisa Paulsen, President and CEO of the Entertainment Industry
Foundation, which is widely known for its groundbreaking and
unprecedented initiatives that galvanize the nation in support of
critical healthcare issues, will broaden GVN’s reach. “Facilitating
collaboration and information-sharing among scientists and doctors
can play a huge role in moving research forward. The GVN presents
an opportunity to help save so many lives, and I look forward to
contributing to its success,” said Paulsen.
Romain Murenzi is the Executive Director of the Academy of
Sciences for the Developing World in Trieste, Italy, and former
Minister of Science and Technology, Rwanda, where he has been a key
architect of its country’s education, science and technology
renaissance after years of civil war and genocide. Dr. Murenzi, who
now deals with scientific issues and capacity building for all low-
and mid-income nations, said: “The world faces dreadful epidemics
almost every year. These epidemics, in fact, trigger severe
consequences especially in poorest countries, where they affect
social life, development and economy. However, every menace to
mankind can be turned into an opportunity for advancement and
progress. This goal can be met through science, technology,
innovation and shared knowledge. Therefore, it is with great
pleasure that I welcome joining the Global Virus Network Board of
Directors and the opportunity to give my contribution to this
global undertaking.”
G. Steven Burrill, Founder and CEO, Burrill & Company, said
“The viral disease challenge in this world is expanding unchecked,
with global populations on the move and new ‘bugs’ mutating faster
than we can address them.” Burrill continued, “My 45 years in
working to build some of the leading companies in the world –
Pharmasset as an example, where I was chairman for over 7 years
from its earliest days to its major successes in Hepatitis C – have
provided me with an intimate knowledge of how we can build major
companies from great discoveries and bring real solutions to the
great healthcare challenge. It’s a real pleasure to be a part of
this team.”
Salim Abdool Karim, President of the South African Medical
Research Council and Director of CAPRISA (Center for the AIDS
Program of Research in South Africa) at the University of
KwaZulu-Natal said, “By increasing its reach in Africa, GVN is
well-placed to make an impact with innovative solutions to a number
of human viral diseases that threaten Africa and beyond.” As a
clinical infectious diseases epidemiologist, co-leader of the
CAPRISA 004 tenofovir gel trial, which demonstrated efficacy of
topical antiretroviral microbicides to prevent both HIV and HSV-2
infection, a longstanding leader in training of future virologists
and key voice in South Africa on evidence-based policymaking, Dr.
Karim will bring his research experience and leadership on how best
to impact on emerging and re-emerging viral infections.
Andrew Cheng is Senior Vice President of HIV Therapeutics and
Development Operations at Gilead Sciences, Inc., a Bay Area-based
biopharmaceutical company focused on developing innovative
medications for life-threatening diseases such as HIV/AIDS,
hepatitis, respiratory and cardiovascular disease, and cancer. Dr.
Cheng said, “I applaud the vision and objectives of the GVN, which
are very much in line with Gilead’s own mission and heritage in
working to address unmet medical needs. Gilead also is a strong
supporter of innovative public-private partnerships that aim to
prevent and control viral epidemics. I am delighted to support and
help guide GVN’s important work.”
“China has high prevalence of viral diseases such as hepatitis
B,” said Professor Longde Wang, President of the Chinese Preventive
Medicine Association. “We have also had the serious SARS attack. We
have learned a lot from the response to these diseases,” continued
Professor Wang. “So the prevention and control of viral diseases
are the main tasks for the government. In order to do the work
well, we should learn from international experts through the
GVN.”
N. Scott Fine, a Principal at Scarsdale Equities in New York,
said “I’m honored to be joining the distinguished members of the
GVN and will do whatever I can to support its mission of protecting
humanity from viral threats that can wreak enormous harm on
civilization itself. I’m proud to be aligned with Dr. Gallo and
other globally renowned virologists in the quest for a safer and
healthier planet.”
Nicolas De Santis is President & Secretary General of Gold
Mercury International, the London based globalization and strategic
vision advisory think tank founded in 1961. De Santis brings his
European, corporate and foundation expertise to build GVN both
strategically and internationally. “There are few health &
scientific collaboration projects that are as global and of the
professional scale of the Global Virus Network. As our planet’s
population grows exponentially, GVN’s role will become central in
preventing, protecting and curing present and future generations.
GVN will work with key global governance stakeholders including
international organizations, governments, foundations, the
scientific community, corporations and more in order to achieve its
global mission,” said De Santis.
Raj Shah, Chairman & CEO of CTIS, Inc. said, “The promise
and commitment of having a healthy world by eliminating health
disparity can’t be achieved without building a solution that deals
with virus management.”
The ten new appointees will join founding Board of Directors
members Tim Moynahan (previously served as founding Chair), Mathew
Evins, Terry Lierman, Dr. Tony Cernera, along with Dr. Robert
Gallo, Dr. Reinhard Kurth of Germany and Dr. William Hall of
Ireland, who co-founded GVN.
About Global Virus Network (GVN)
The Global Virus Network (GVN) is a non-profit organization
comprised of leading medical virologists from Argentina, Australia,
Belgium, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Ireland, Israel,
Italy, Japan, Russia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, the Netherlands,
the United Kingdom, the United States of America, and other
nations. The GVN’s mission is to combat emerging pandemic viral
threats and current viral killers through international
collaborative research, training the next generation of medical
virologists, education and advocacy.