Image of Joia Stapleton Mukherjee, MD, MPH

Joia S. Mukherjee, M.D.

Associate Professor of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital
Associate Professor of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Advisory Dean, Francis Weld Peabody Society, Harvard Medical School

Dr. Mukherjee is associate professor of medicine in the Division of Global Health Equity, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and associate professor of global health and social medicine at Harvard Medical School. In the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, she directs the Master of Medical Sciences in Global Health Delivery program and the Program in Global Medical Education and Social Change. She teaches infectious disease, global health delivery and human rights to health professionals and students from around the world. Dr. Mukherjee has helped to create new residency and fellowship training programs for Rwandan and Haitian physicians as well as global health residencies and fellowships for US trainees at Harvard and other American universities.

Dr. Mukherjee is a graduate of the University of Minnesota Medical School, trained in infectious disease, internal medicine, and pediatrics at the Massachusetts General Hospital, and has an MPH from the Harvard School of Public Health. Since 2000, Dr. Mukherjee has served as the chief medical officer of Partners In Health, a nonprofit medical organization focused on reducing global health disparities by strengthening health systems through public sector support and community-based programs. She provides strategic guidance on the implementation of clinical programs at PIH’s sites in Haiti, Rwanda, Malawi, Lesotho, Peru, Mexico, Russia, Sierra Leone, and Liberia and has served as an expert consultant for the World Health Organization and Ministries of Health on of HIV, TB, health systems strengthening and health work force development.

Dr. Mukherjee also serves on the board of directors for Village Health Works (Burundi) and Muso (Mali) and the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti. She advises various grassroots organizations throughout the developing world in their work to deliver health care with a human rights based approach to the poorest of the poor.

Affiliations

  • Division of Global Health Equity, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital
  • Partners In Health

assistantocmo@pih.org
(857) 880-5100

Dr. Mukherjee’s scholarly work focuses on the provision of health as a human right and on the design, implementation, and evaluation of comprehensive health care in resource-poor settings. More specifically, Dr. Mukherjee’s work integrates the principles and practice of social medicine—proximity, reducing barriers through analysis and accompaniment, as well as deployment of history and social theories to understand and remediate health inequities. Dr. Mukherjee’s scholarship highlights the clinical innovation needed to build health systems capable of providing complex care in challenging environments. In 2001, Dr. Mukherjee and her team published a paper in the Lancet describing the first HIV treatment program in Haiti. Based on this work, Dr. Mukherjee was invited to be part of the WHO’s Strategic and Technical Working Group on HIV/AIDS and helped write the first international guidelines on the use of antiretroviral therapy. Similarly, Dr. Mukherjee’s work to demonstrate the feasibility and the scale-up of treatment for drug-resistant tuberculosis (DRTB) in Peru and Russia led to international changes. Dr. Mukherjee was asked to help write the national guidelines (in both countries) and to work with a small team at the WHO to write the first set of international guidelines on the treatment of DRTB. Dr. Mukherjee has authored journal articles, led protocol development, and written book chapters that are foundational in the field Global Health, particularly in the social medicine approach; including first-authored scholarship in the areas of HIV and MDR-TB and in senior authored work in the areas of mental health, Ebola, and maternal-child health. In the last two years, Dr. Mukherjee’s work has been focused on synthesizing these lessons to form a framework for the achievement of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) which is the critical component of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal for health. In all, Dr. Mukherjee’s work is deeply rooted in social medicine—understanding the structural barriers to care and developing innovative solutions to address them.  Infectious disease, since the time of Virchow has a clear link between the social and the biological. Dr. Mukherjee describes herself as a full time scholar and her work over the last twenty years as teacher, researcher and innovator hinges on a bio-social analysis. 

Comprehensive approach to improving maternal health and achieving MDG 5: report from the mountains of Lesotho.
Authors: Authors: Satti H, Motsamai S, Chetane P, Marumo L, Barry DJ, Riley J, McLaughlin MM, Seung KJ, Mukherjee JS.
PLoS One
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Outcomes of comprehensive care for children empirically treated for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in a setting of high HIV prevalence.
Authors: Authors: Satti H, McLaughlin MM, Omotayo DB, Keshavjee S, Becerra MC, Mukherjee JS, Seung KJ.
PLoS One
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High human immunodeficiency virus-free survival of infants born to human immunodeficiency virus-positive mothers in an integrated program to decrease child mortality in rural Rwanda.
Authors: Authors: Franke MF, Stulac SN, Rugira IH, Rich ML, Bucyibaruta JB, Drobac PC, Iyamungu G, Bryant CM, Binagwaho A, Farmer PE, Mukherjee JS.
Pediatr Infect Dis J
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Structural violence: a barrier to achieving the millennium development goals for women.
Authors: Authors: Mukherjee JS, Barry DJ, Satti H, Raymonville M, Marsh S, Smith-Fawzi MK.
J Womens Health (Larchmt)
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Meeting cholera's challenge to Haiti and the world: a joint statement on cholera prevention and care.
Authors: Authors: Farmer P, Almazor CP, Bahnsen ET, Barry D, Bazile J, Bloom BR, Bose N, Brewer T, Calderwood SB, Clemens JD, Cravioto A, Eustache E, Jérôme G, Gupta N, Harris JB, Hiatt HH, Holstein C, Hotez PJ, Ivers LC, Kerry VB, Koenig SP, Larocque RC, Léandre F, Lambert W, Lyon E, Mekalanos JJ, Mukherjee JS, Oswald C, Pape JW, Gretchko Prosper A, Rabinovich R, Raymonville M, Réjouit JR, Ronan LJ, Rosenberg ML, Ryan ET, Sachs JD, Sack DA, Surena C, Suri AA, Ternier R, Waldor MK, Walton D, Weigel JL.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis
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Post-approval translational research itself has diverse ethics.
Authors: Authors: Mukherjee J.
Am J Bioeth
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Perceived discrimination and stigma toward children affected by HIV/AIDS and their HIV-positive caregivers in central Haiti.
Authors: Authors: Surkan PJ, Mukherjee JS, Williams DR, Eustache E, Louis E, Jean-Paul T, Lambert W, Scanlan FC, Oswald CM, Fawzi MS.
AIDS Care
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When one can infect two: a reflection on the impact of HIV discordance on child HIV infection.
Authors: Authors: Binagwaho A, Ratnayake N, Mukherjee J, Mugabo J, Karita E, Pegurri E.
Pan Afr Med J
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Economic risk factors for HIV infection among women in rural Haiti: implications for HIV prevention policies and programs in resource-poor settings.
Authors: Authors: Fawzi MC, Lambert W, Boehm F, Finkelstein JL, Singler JM, Léandre F, Nevil P, Bertrand D, Claude MS, Bertrand J, Louissaint M, Jeannis L, Farmer PE, Yang AT, Mukherjee JS.
J Womens Health (Larchmt)
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Psychosocial functioning among HIV-affected youth and their caregivers in Haiti: implications for family-focused service provision in high HIV burden settings.
Authors: Authors: Smith Fawzi MC, Eustache E, Oswald C, Surkan P, Louis E, Scanlan F, Wong R, Li M, Mukherjee J.
AIDS Patient Care STDS
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