African Scientist Champions New Era of Equitable Medical Research

Dr. Monique Wasunna, a pioneering African medical researcher, has transformed neglected disease treatment through DNDi, championing locally-led research while fighting against colonial-era medical research legacies.

Dr. Monique Wasunna

In a powerful keynote address at the 2024 American Society of Tropical Medicine & Hygiene (ASTMH) annual meeting, Dr. Monique Wasunna highlighted the transformation of African medical research from colonial exploitation to locally-led innovation.

As Africa Ambassador for the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi), Wasunna has dedicated her career to fighting diseases that affect the world’s most vulnerable populations. Her commitment was forged early in her career when a young patient with visceral leishmaniasis died in her arms. “This disease that has taken my friend, I will do anything in my power to help other patients. I will be their advocate,” she told Global Health NOW.

A distinguished physician and tropical medicine specialist, Wasunna has held several leadership positions, including Chief Research Officer at the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI). Her contributions to neglected disease research earned her France’s National Order of Merit, Kenya’s Distinguished NTD Researcher Award, and recognition as a Mycetoma Ambassador. As founding chair of the Leishmaniasis East Africa Platform, she advanced clinical research and capacity building across the region. Her work with DNDi since 2003 has focused on developing treatments through R&D collaborations and advancing universal health coverage.

Dr Monique Wasunna awarded Officer of the French National Order of Merit for her work helping neglected patients.

Through her work with DNDi, Wasunna has helped develop new treatments for neglected tropical diseases, including breakthrough therapies for sleeping sickness that replaced dangerous arsenic-based drugs. She emphasized that success in medical research requires addressing fundamental infrastructure challenges in remote areas, from poor roads to inadequate medical facilities.

Wasunna criticized the inequitable distribution of COVID-19 vaccines as “another form of imperialism,” but remained optimistic about Africa’s scientific future. She pointed to significant progress in African research institutions since the 1970s and emphasized the importance of supporting young African scientists.

The scientist highlighted three successful DNDi partnerships that developed treatments for visceral leishmaniasis, falciparum malaria, and sleeping sickness as examples of what can be achieved through equitable collaboration. These successes, she argued, demonstrated how decolonizing science can lead to better health outcomes for all.


Read about Dr. Wasunna’s keynote speech at the 2024 ASTMH annual meeting, by Matthew Davis: Monique Wasunna Calls for ‘Decolonizing Science to Benefit Us All’

Read more about Dr. Wasunna in an article by Dayna Kerecman Myers, Managing Editor of Global Health NOW, from November 25, 2024: Neglected Diseases Are Fierce, But So Is Monique Wasunna

Listen to Dr. Wasunna talk about her work in this video from DNDi:

DNDi staff are passionate about fighting neglected diseases!

Related Articles

DNDi Researcher Helps Address Tropical Diseases Emerging in North America

Delali Attipoe, Executive Director of DNDi North America, leads efforts to develop treatments for overlooked illnesses. Her work becomes increasingly vital as climate change spreads tropical diseases to new regions, including parts of the United States.

The Team Hunting for Chagas Disease in the U.S.

Follow Dr. Norm Beatty and his team at the University of South Florida as they track down the “kissing bug” that transmits Chagas disease, an often silent neglected tropical disease now found in the U.S.

Celluloid Samaritans: Favorite Films About Global Health Heroes

A short list of movies about real and fictional medical heroes.


Subscribe to the newsletter so that you never miss an uplifting story of medical humanitarians improving lives worldwide.

About Angels in Medicine

Angels in Medicine is a volunteer site dedicated to the humanitarians, heroes, angels, and bodhisattvas of medicine. The site features physicians, nurses, physician assistants and other healthcare workers and volunteers who reach people without the resources or opportunities for quality care, such as teens, the poor, the incarcerated, the elderly, or those living in poor or war-torn regions. Read their stories at www.medangel.org.

Interested in writing for Angels in Medicine? Know about an Angel we should interview? Drop me a note at harry@medangel.org.

Leave a Comment