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جائزة أفضل موظف في أميركا تُمنح إلى لبنانية أنقذت 7 ملايين طفلاً

جبلنا ماغازين – عدة مصادر

حصدت اللبنانية - الأميركية رنا أحمد الحجّة، جائزة أفضل موظف فيدرالي أميركي للعام 2014 تقديراً لجهودها في التصدي لأمراض إلتهاب السحايا والإلتهاب الرئوي الذي يتسبب بوفاة حوالي 400 ألف طفل في العالم سنوياً. وهي تمكنت من إقناع 60 بلداً باستخدام لقاح خاص بهذه الأمراض. ومن شأن هذه المبادرة أن تساهم في إنقاذ 7 ملايين طفل بحلول عام 2020.

رنا أحمد الحجة، وهي من طرابلس، كرّمتها الحكومة الأميركية ومنحتها جائزة أفضل موظف فيدرالي لهذا العام، من بين آلاف كبار الموظفين في الولايات المتحدة.

رنا الحائزة على الدكتوراه في أمراض الأوبئة والفيروسات، تحدث عنها تقرير خاص في تلفزيون "المستقبل"، قائلاً إنها نموذج عما يجده اللبناني المتفاني في بلاد الاغتراب.
وهنا تقرير "المستقبل":

 

بدورها، وسائل الإعلام الأميركية أضاءت على إنجازات هذه الموظفة المتفانية من بلاد الأرز:

Dr. Rana Hajjeh, Director of the Division of Bacterial Diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, received the 2014 Federal Employee of the Year prize, one of the highest honors in public service.

The award, which is presented by the Partnership for Public Service, recognizes a federal employee each year for their noteworthy involvement in issues related to international affairs and national security.

Dr. Hajjeh received this honor for directing an international campaign to persuade developing countries to use a vaccine to fight bacterial meningitis and pneumonia. The initiative is expected to save the lives of 7 million children by 2020.

In 2004, the CDC reported that Haemophilus Influenzae type b (Hib) was “the leading cause of bacterial meningitis deaths and the second leading cause of bacterial pneumonia deaths worldwide and [accounted] for approximately 400,000 deaths of children each year.” These deaths could have been prevented through Hib conjugate vaccines. In the United States, the vaccines were introduced into the immunization program for infants in 1990. Following the United States’ lead, most industrialized countries also introduced these vaccines. However, in portions of Africa and Asia, the use of these vaccines was limited due to poverty.

Dr. Hajjeh worked tirelessly for nine years to convince 60 countries to employ the vaccine.

Born in Lebanon, Dr. Hajjeh studied medicine at the American University of Beirut. She completed her residency in internal medicine and infectious diseases at Emory University in Atlanta. Dr. Hajjeh became passionate about public health while training at the CDC as an Epidemic Intelligence Service officer.

“With clinical medicine you have a patient, you treat them, they improve, and it’s a relatively instant reward. But in public health, you have to be patient, because the reward involves providing services to a large group of people and it takes time,” she told the Partnership for Public Service. “We all go into medicine thinking we will save lives, but you really do it on a large scale when you are working on interventions at the population level—especially in many of the developing countries.”

A 21-year employee of the federal government, Dr. Hajjeh will continue to help foundations and world health groups to implement other life-altering vaccines in developing nations.