Isidore Sieleunou
Isidore Sieleunou is Medical Doctor. He holds a Masters in Public Health (ITM, Antwerp) and a Masters in Health Economics (CERDI, Clermont-Ferrand). He has more than 10 years of experience in Public Health and Health Economics. He currently works with AEDES as Technical Assistant for a PBF project in Cameroon. He is one of the co-facilitators of the Harmonization for Health in Africa Community of Practice (CoP) “Financial Access to Health Services”.
Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/pub/isidore-sieleunou/22/72/b12
Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/pub/isidore-sieleunou/22/72/b12
Jean-Benoît Falisse
Jean-Benoît Falisse is a doctoral student at Oxford University. His research focuses on the community governance of basic social services in fragile states. He is an advisor to the Dutch NGO CORDAID on projects of reinforcement of health facility committees in Burundi and South Kivu, DRC. Jean-Benoît has previously worked for the United Nations, NGOs and research institutions in the African Great Lakes and India. His background is in Development Economics, History and Philosophy.
Comité éditorial / Editorial Committee
Allison Kelley
Allison Gamble Kelley is a health economist trained at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies with more than 15 years experience providing technical assistance on health financing systems and health insurance, economic and policy analysis, public-private partnerships, and health system strengthening across Africa. She is currently the senior facilitator for the HHA Community of Practice on Financial Access to Health Care. She is also involved in several other south-south learning initiatives, including the Ministerial Leadership Initiative, the Joint Learning Network for Universal Health Coverage, and the Network for Africa – a CoP for public-private partnerships in the health sector.
Gamble Kelley’s formative research, technical assistance, and training has focused heavily on community-based health insurance schemes, and specifically how to increase their coverage of the rural poor and their contributions to overall health financing strategies. Since 2007 she has also worked to promote more effective engagement with the private health sector in Africa to increase its contribution to health sector goals. She has provided policy advice on health financing, public-private partnerships and health systems strengthening to senior levels of local and national governments across Africa as well as to major international organizations. Gamble Kelley formerly worked in Washington for the World Bank and for Abt Associates, where she managed Abt’s extensive portfolio of health projects in West Africa for almost 10 years. She is currently an independent consultant based in France since 2006.
Linkedin: http://fr.linkedin.com/pub/allison-gamble-kelley/6/988/655
Gamble Kelley’s formative research, technical assistance, and training has focused heavily on community-based health insurance schemes, and specifically how to increase their coverage of the rural poor and their contributions to overall health financing strategies. Since 2007 she has also worked to promote more effective engagement with the private health sector in Africa to increase its contribution to health sector goals. She has provided policy advice on health financing, public-private partnerships and health systems strengthening to senior levels of local and national governments across Africa as well as to major international organizations. Gamble Kelley formerly worked in Washington for the World Bank and for Abt Associates, where she managed Abt’s extensive portfolio of health projects in West Africa for almost 10 years. She is currently an independent consultant based in France since 2006.
Linkedin: http://fr.linkedin.com/pub/allison-gamble-kelley/6/988/655
Bruno Meessen
Bruno Meessen is economist (M.A., PhD, Université Catholique de Louvain). He is based at the Health Policy and Financing Unit of the Department of Public Health, at the Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium (www.itg.be). His main domain of expertise is health sector reform, health care financing, performance-based financing and pro-poor strategies in low- and middle-income countries. His current regions of focus are sub-Saharan Africa and South-East Asia. He is the lead facilitator of the African Performance-Based Financing Community of Practice.
Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/bruno-meessen/7/437/496.
Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/bruno-meessen/7/437/496.
