Global Health Matters episode 62: March 2026
The Global Health Matters podcast Global Health Matters [https://tdr.who.int/global-health-matters-podcast] is the podcast from TDR featuring renowned experts as well as emerging voices from across the globe, with a focus on sharing perspectives from low- and middle-income countries. The podcast includes our Signature episodes as well as "Dialogues" and "Trailblazers with Garry."
Trailblazers with Garry: a conversation with Ntobeko Ntusi
Dear listener,
“Trailblazers with Garry" is a series from Global Health Matters, where host Garry Aslanyan [https://www.linkedin.com/in/garry-aslanyan/] sits down with trailblazers — thinkers, leaders, and influencers shaping the future of global health — for short face-to-face conversations, available in both audio and video formats. It’s a chance to get to know the people behind the work and hear their perspectives on the current global health landscape.
For this Trailblazer episode, Garry met up with Ntobeko Ntusi in Cape Town, South Africa. Ntobeko has been president and CEO of the South African Medical Research Council since 2024 after serving as Head of the Department of Medicine at the University of Cape Town. He is deeply passionate about seeing South Africa and the African continent more broadly emerge as a leader in research and innovation. In this conversation, they explore the mentors who have shaped his journey, his vision for the role of science in strengthening African health systems, and how global health can recalibrate power symmetries to advance greater equity.
We hope you enjoy this podcast as much as we do. Please share it with anyone interested in global health. We also love receiving your feedback, so feel free to write to us or send a video or voice message.
Best regards,
The Global Health Matters podcast team
TDRpod@who.int [mailto:tdrpo@who.int]
Coming soon!
We’re excited to introduce The Inside Track, a new series from Global Health Matters offering context, clarity and foresight that you won’t find in traditional news shows. Each episode brings host Garry Aslanyan together with two recurring voices: Catherine Kyobutungi, who brings insight from the frontlines of health research and policy in Africa, and Ricardo Baptista Leite, a physician and global thinker on health, politics and AI. Together, they unpack the headlines with candid conversations grounded in lived experience. If you work in global health and want a better understanding of what’s happening, why it matters and what to watch out for, this series is for you.
Thank you for listening and subscribing!
Find our podcast and follow us on
Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/global-health-matters/id1560933335], Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/292KvxLmzNPnaYmX6SMT2v?si=PqjC5oZnTLOzIhiy..., Amazon Music [https://music.amazon.ca/podcasts/9eb8b085-2ce3-4c67-85ee-33ae558f51ce/gl..., Stitcher [https://www.stitcher.com/show/global-health-matters], SoundCloud [https://soundcloud.com/user-884521002]
or wherever you find your podcasts.
Follow us and engage with our social media handles
[https://www.linkedin.com/company/special-programme-for-research-and-trai... Share https://hq_thespecialprogrammeforresearchtrainingintropicaldiseasestdr.c... Tweet https://hq_thespecialprogrammeforresearchtrainingintropicaldiseasestdr.c... Share [https://hq_thespecialprogrammeforresearchtrainingintropicaldiseasestdr.c... Forward https://hq_thespecialprogrammeforresearchtrainingintropicaldiseasestdr.f...
The Special Programme for Research & Training in Tropical Diseases
World Health Organization ¦ Avenue Appia 20 ¦ 1211 Geneva 27 ¦ Switzerland
TDR, the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases, is a global programme of scientific collaboration that helps facilitate, support and influence efforts to combat diseases of poverty. TDR is hosted at the World Health Organization (WHO), and is co-sponsored by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the World Bank and WHO.
© Special Programme for Research & Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR). All rights reserved.