Dr. Margaret Chan was nominated by the Executive Board of the World Health Organization for the post of Director-General.
The Director-General is WHO's chief technical and administrative officer, and Dr. Chan is the first Chinese national to hold this position, or any other commanding position in a United Nations organization.
The nomination will be submitted to the World Health Assembly, which will meet for a one-day special session on Thursday, 9 November to appoint the next Director-General.
The procedures for the current nomination and election process were decided following the sudden death of Dr. Lee Jong-wook, WHO Director-General, on 22 May 2006. At its meeting on 23 May, the WHO Executive Board agreed on an "accelerated process" for electing a Director-General.
On Monday the Executive Board selected a short list of five candidates. This week the Board interviewed the five candidates and selected Dr. Chan as its nominee.
Dr. Chan is a well-known public figure because of her record of leadership in fighting disease first in Hong Kong, and more recently at WHO. During her nine-year tenure as Director of Health, Dr. Chan confronted the first human outbreak of H5N1 avian influenza in 1997 and successfully defeated Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in Hong Kong in 2003. She also introduced primary health care 'from the diaper to the grave' with a focus on health promotion and disease prevention, self-care and healthy lifestyles. In 2003, she joined WHO and rose to the position of Representative of the Director- General for Pandemic Influenza as well as Assistant Director-General for Communicable Diseases.
Now 59, Dr. Chan obtained her Medical Degree from the University of Western Ontario in Canada and a public health degree from the National University of Singapore.
The WHO Executive Board is composed of 34 Members who are technically qualified in the field of health. The main functions of the Board are to give effect to the decisions and policies of the World Health Assembly, to advise it and generally to facilitate its work.