Who we are-Inseok Lee 2019-12-06T13:17:12+09:00

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Who we are

GHDP Member Introduction

Inseok Lee
PhD Candidate, MPH, MSc

Education
2011 BA, Health Policy and Management, Inje University
2013 MPH, Division in International Health, Yonsei University
2015 MSc, Health, Community and Development, London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)
2019 – PhD Candidate, Institute for Global Health, University College London (UCL)

Work Experience
2014-16 Project Manager, Maternal Health Improvement Project through Facilitating Community Health Workers in Shinyanga, Tanzania, Good Neighbors International
2017-19 Project Officer, Project for Improving Community-based Primary Health Care through CHPS Strengthening, KOICA CHPS+ Project

Inseok Lee is currently a PhD candidate at Institute for Global Health, University College London (UCL), conducting a research titled ‘To determine the impact of different CHW incentive packages on the motivation and performance of CHWs in the Upper East Region of Ghana’.

He completed his MPH in the international health at Yonsei University and his MSc in the Health, Community and Development at London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).

Inseok worked as a project manager of the ‘Maternal Health Improvement Project through Facilitating Community Health Workers in Shinyanga, Tanzania ($5M/4Years)’ in the Good Neighbors International Tanzania office for two years. He also has two years of field work experience in Ghana as a project officer of the ‘Project for Improving Community-based Primary Health Care through CHPS Strengthening, KOICA CHPS+ Project ($9M/5Years)’.

He has worked as an external expert for KOICA, KOFIH and NGOs to support project design, feasibility assessment, monitoring and evaluation in developing countries.

Inseok has expertise in the community health development, community mobilization and behavior change, reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health. In particular, his main interest is community development through facilitating community health workers in developing countries.

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