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Céline Gounder | |
---|---|
Member of the COVID-19 Advisory Board | |
In office November 2020 – January 2021 | |
President-Elect | Joe Biden |
Co-chairs | David A. Kessler Vivek Murthy Marcella Nunez-Smith |
Personal details | |
Born | Céline R. Gounder April 22, 1977 United States |
Spouse | |
Education | Princeton University Johns Hopkins University University of Washington |
Occupation | Physician, medical journalist |
Website | celinegounder |
Céline R. Gounder (born April 22, 1977) is an American physician and medical journalist who specializes in infectious diseases and global health. She was a member of the COVID-19 Advisory Board transition team of then-incoming U.S. president Joe Biden.[1] In 2022, she joined the Kaiser Family Foundation as senior fellow and editor-at-large for public health at Kaiser Health News.[2]
Céline R. Gounder was born in the U.S. on April 22, 1977,[3] the daughter of a French mother, Nicole Pantanelli, from Normandy and Raj Natarajan Gounder, a Tamil-Indian father from Perumpalayam near Erode.[4][5][6] At age 16, she began attending Princeton University, and graduated in 1997 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in molecular biology.[2][7] In 2000, she received a Master of Science degree in epidemiology from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health with her thesis "Field evaluation of a rapid immunochromatographic test for tuberculosis".[3] At the University of Washington School of Medicine, she earned a Doctor of Medicine degree in 2004.[7][8] While in medical school, she co-founded the International Health Group, which advocates for doctors training to serve disadvantaged people around the world.[8][9] She completed her residency in internal medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital.[8]
Gounder's first position was as a post-doctoral fellow at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, where she researched TB and HIV in sub-Saharan Africa and served as Director for Delivery in the Consortium to Respond Effectively to the AIDS/TB Epidemic, which was funded by the Gates Foundation.[7][8] She then joined the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene working on control of TB in the city.[7][8]
Starting in 2018, Gounder practiced medicine part-time while addressing her long time concerns with health issues as a medical journalist.[8] She was on the editorial advisory board of TEDMED[10] and has published articles about infectious disease and other medical topics in media including The New Yorker and The Atlantic, and has appeared on TV news and talk shows.[8]
In 2017, Gounder founded Just Human Productions, a non-profit media organization that uses storytelling in an effort to impact public health.[11] Gounder produced the podcast American Diagnosis, focusing on diverse health topics. With the rise of COVID-19, she created the podcast Epidemic, which she cohosted with Biden-advisor Ron Klain.[2]
On November 9, 2020, Gounder was named as a member of the COVID-19 Advisory Board of U.S. president-elect Joe Biden.[12]
As of 2021, Gounder is also an assistant professor at the NYU medical school.[13]
While pursuing her master's degree at Johns Hopkins, Gounder was inducted into the Delta Omega Public Health Honor Society in 2000.[14] In 2004 when she graduated from University of Washington School of Medicine, she was awarded the James W. Haviland Award for "outstanding clinical competence and for unusual promise as a leader of medicine in the future".[15] In 2010, she was awarded the W. Leight Thompson, MD Excellence in Research Award at Johns Hopkins.[16] Also that year, she was the recipient of the Arthur M. Dannenberg, Jr. Award at Johns Hopkins, and was an Ashoka Changemaker Finalist.[17]
In 2017, Gounder was listed in People Magazine's 25 Women Changing the World in 2017 for her contributions to health care.[18]
Gounder was elected a fellow of the Infectious Diseases Society of America in 2016 and elected to the National Academy of Medicine in 2023.[19][20]
Gounder was married to sports journalist Grant Wahl from 2001 until his sudden death in 2022.[21] They lived with their two dogs in New York City.[22]