Four years before Ban Ki-moon made headlines
around the world as the eighth Secretary-General of the United Nations (UN),
Dr. Lee Jong-wook – known to his friends and colleagues as JW; as the
Schweitzer of Asia to others –became the first Korean national to head a United
Nations agency, the World Health Organization (WHO).
For 23 years with WHO, he set about improving
the health of the poor on the international stage, eventually ascending to the
role of director-general. Just three years into his appointment as the
organization’s sixth director-general, he would meet his untimely death in
Geneva on May 22, 2006 in the midst of preparing for the annual World Health
Assembly, a meeting of the 192 Member States. A life of hard work and
dedication cut short too soon, he was only 61 years old.
Dr. Lee’s work and vision as a world leader in
public health were well reflected upon his death by then United Nations
Secretary General Kofi Annan in a statement: he was “a strong voice for the
right of every man, woman and child to health prevention and care, and
advocated on behalf of the very poorest people.”
True to this remark, Dr. Lee pledged to help
the poorest and most marginalized people in the world. He tirelessly visited 60
countries in the three years of his Generalship; traveled to nearly every
Member State in his career spent with WHO believing health interventions are a
must to reduce poverty. He was convinced that disease risk was directly linked
to a nation’s poverty level and focused on dealing with healthcare problems in
poor countries.
According to Paul Benkimoun who wrote in his
article, How Lee Jong-wook Changes WHO, for the Lancet in 2006, Dr. Lee was
among the least likely to be elected director-general in 2003 of a six-name
shortlist that included UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot.
Nonetheless, his experience spanning for more
than 20 years at all levels, including technical, managerial and policy
positions, proved to be his key strength coming into the top position at a time
of global public health crisis, including the severe acute respiratory syndrome
(SARS) epidemic, the emergence of H5N1 avian influenza virus and the highly
politicized H.I.V. and AIDS treatment.
He knew the ins and outs of WHO better than
most. Once elected, Dr. Lee tackled every challenge bravely, listened intently
and grasped both the political and technical issues in public health. However,
his tenure was not without difficulties and failures.
For instance, “3 by 5,” the AIDS treatment
program targeting to deliver antiretroviral (ARV) therapy to 3 million people
in developing countries, fell short of its goal and was widely criticized.
However, some saw his firm commitment to the
program differently: Dr. William Foege, an international health leader at the
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, regarded the program’s failure as
“insignificant compared to the courage to promote a vision of what the world
should be doing.”
Also speaking of Dr. Lee’s willingness to take
responsibility for failure, Dr. Jim Yong Kim, Dr. Lee’s close friend and
one-time aide who now heads the World Bank Group as its 12th president, said
that his leadership in a way “fundamentally changed people’s attitude to the
possibility of treatment for a chronic disease in settings of poverty.”
From leading an effort to eradicate polio in
the Western Pacific to implementing GDF to ensure access to tuberculosis
medicines to his very last day working as director-general, he strived to make
a difference in every program he managed and every life he touched, while
maintaining a sense of purpose and his humor.
Survived by his wife and son, Dr. Lee’s legacy
continues today, largely through the enduring mission of WHO. And in a more
personal way, his wife Reiko is also carrying out his mission through her own
work with non-governmental organization Mujeres Unidas (Women Together), a Partners
in Health project in Peru, in the shantytown of Carabayllo. Dr. Lee Jong-wook
was selected by Time Magazine in 2004 as one of the world’s 100 most
influential people who shaped our lives.
Established in 2008, the Dr. Lee Jong-wook Memorial Prize for Public Health awards a person or persons, an institution or institutions, a governmental or non-governmental organization or organizations that have made an outstanding contribution to public health. Awarded once a year, the prize consists of a plaque from the founder and a sum of money, which will not exceed US $100,000. The Prize aims at rewarding work that has extended far beyond the call of normal duties, and it is not intended as a reward for excellent performance of duties normally expected of an official occupying a government position or of a governmental or intergovernmental institution. The 2014 Dr. Lee Jong-wook Memorial Prize for Public Health was awarded to the Czech Society of Cardiology, together with Professor Sinata Koulla-Shiro of Cameroon.