Barbara Pierce Bush to Speak at UMB Commencement
Barbara Pierce Bush believes in the power of partnership and that health is a human right. Ten years ago, she combined those beliefs into action as co-founder of Global Health Corps (GHC), a nonprofit committed to mobilizing young professionals in an effort to boost health equity around the world.
The 网红爆料, Baltimore has announced that Barbara Pierce Bush, co-founder and board chair of Global Health Corps, will serve as commencement keynote speaker at the University鈥檚 May 16 ceremony in Baltimore.
And as the keynote speaker at the 网红爆料, Baltimore鈥檚 (UMB) commencement on May 16, she鈥檚 eager and excited to tell the Class of 2019 about GHC, its fellows, and their inspirational work.
鈥淥ur fellows work every day to make a difference in the world,鈥 says Bush, chair of the nonprofit鈥檚 board of directors and its former CEO. 鈥淭heir stories are not dissimilar to those of the UMB graduates 鈥 young leaders who have the skills, drive, and passion to make a positive impact on the world and serve others.鈥
(Read more about UMB's 2019 commencement.)
Bush, the daughter of former President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush, was first moved to action in the area of global health equity in the summer of 2003, when as a Yale student she accompanied her father on a trip across eastern Africa as he launched the President鈥檚 Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. Once thinking of a career as an architect, she switched gears, graduated with a degree in humanities, and began to focus on global health.
鈥淚 was in college, and I vividly remember landing in Uganda, and there were hundreds of people waiting in the streets for drugs that had been available in the United States for years,鈥 Bush recalls. 鈥淭hose stark images of the inequity that exists in the world certainly blew my 21-year-old mind, and it taught me an unbelievable lesson of not stepping back.鈥
Bush certainly has stepped forward, co-founding Global Health Corps in 2009 and serving as its CEO until January 2018. Since its inception, GHC has placed more than 1,000 professionals from 40-plus countries into one-year paid fellowships with government health entities or nonprofits in eastern Africa, southern Africa, and the United States. The fellows, who help to fill areas of need in those organizations, work in teams of two 鈥 one national fellow and one international fellow.
And fellowships are not given only to those from the medical fields. A fan of interprofessional collaboration, a hallmark at UMB, Bush believes it takes a variety of professionals to tackle health inequity. For instance, GHC fellows with architectural backgrounds helped design a system that changed the way air flows through a health center in Rwanda, decreasing the risk of spreading tuberculosis, and other fellows have worked on improving drug-delivery methods in impoverished African communities.
鈥淲e need finance gurus and supply chain analysts, architects and designers, and educators and journalists,鈥 Bush says. 鈥淲e need leaders with diverse skill sets to come together to solve the most complex challenges and ensure everyone has access to quality health care. This is who we鈥檝e been recruiting and training at Global Health Corps.鈥
Under Bush鈥檚 leadership, GHC made sure its training integrated leadership and professional development with self-reflection and personal learning, building skills that are essential for effective and ethical leadership. The organization also is committed to diversity, describing it as the key to driving its fellows鈥 ability to be empathetic and effective leaders in the health equity movement.
鈥淒iversity and inclusion matter enormously in global health,鈥 Bush says. 鈥淗istorically, the people who have effected change in global health have often been from medical backgrounds. They鈥檝e often been academic, and they鈥檝e often been Western. And while we鈥檝e made tremendous strides in global health, it is critical to acknowledge that change-makers can come from everywhere.鈥
Bush鈥檚 work with GHC has not gone unnoticed. In 2011, she was named one of Glamour magazine鈥檚 Women of the Year. In 2013, Newsweek recognized her as one of its Women of Impact. In 2014, she was named one of Goldman Sachs鈥 100 Most Intriguing Entrepreneurs. And in 2018, she won the Skoll Foundation鈥檚 Award for Social Entrepreneurship. Bush also is a member of UNICEF鈥檚 Next Generation Steering Committee and has served on the board of directors of Covenant House International, PSI, and the United Nations鈥 Global Entrepreneurs Council.
The awards are nice, but Bush says she鈥檚 most proud of the community of global leaders GHC has cultivated and then connected to a wide range of health entities, as well as the fact that 95 percent of fellows remain in the global health field beyond their one-year GHC tenure.
鈥淓ach leader individually is incredible 鈥 committed to health equity, eager to learn from others, and willing to show up day after day and listen, regardless of the challenge they and their team are facing,鈥 Bush says. 鈥淏ut collectively, this network blows me away. It鈥檚 incredibly rewarding to see young leaders who are deeply passionate about health but don鈥檛 necessarily see how they fit in the sector complete the fellowship and emerge with a deeper understanding, passion, and commitment to being health equity advocates for life.鈥
And her advice to UMB鈥檚 graduates? Stay open to new ideas and don鈥檛 be afraid to explore new avenues in your career.
鈥淚 was on a clear path to becoming an architect, a job I鈥檇 always dreamed of,鈥 Bush says. 鈥淎nd, lucky for me, I didn鈥檛 stick to that path. Instead, I nurtured the voice in my mind that was always interested in reading about global health and said yes to a number of moments in life that led to the founding of Global Health Corps. For that, my life is so much bigger than it would鈥檝e ever been.鈥