Incoming vice president-elect Joe Biden wants to make Covid-19 history — and he has selected a team that includes some of the nation’s top female public health experts — to do just that.
The women make up roughly half of the group of leading public health experts tasked with helping Biden, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris and their transition team as they prepare to tackle the virus on day one of Biden’s presidency.
“Integrating those diverse perspectives is a strength because it helps us identify the fissures and the fractures that we should fix to be a stronger country together,” said Dr. Nahid Bhadelia, an infectious diseases physician and medical director of special pathogens units at Boston Medical Center.
Dr. Bhadelia continued, “You don’t see injustices and you don’t see barriers unless you understand the point of view that you’re trying to represent.” She recounted learning that lesson from former Surgeon General David Satcher during a speech he made in Boston’s Faneuil Hall, and it came to her mind when she saw the list of people named to Biden’s advisory board. “[He said] it’s not just where you sit at the table, but it’s what you bring to it.”
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Bringing more women to the table is a philosophy Biden appears to be implementing in his choice of senior leaders throughout his administration, starting with his groundbreaking pick of former Sen. Kamala Harris, the first woman of color to appear on a major-party presidential ticket, as his V.P. He also selected an all-female White House communications team, and named four women to top roles on his economic team, including the country’s first female Treasury Secretary.
And now, of course, his Covid-19 task team.
Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith, an expert on healthcare equity for marginalized communities, is one of three co-chairs on Biden’s Transition COVID-19 Advisory Board.
Also included is FDA and National Security Council veteran Dr. Luciana Borio; HIV and tuberculosis expert and former NYC Department of Health Assistant Commissioner Dr. Celine Gounder; Dr. Julie Morita, executive vice president of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and former head of the Chicago Department of Public Health; and Loyce Pace, executive director and president of Global Health Council.
More recently, Biden announced three additional members of the Advisory Board, including two women: Jane Hopkins, a former executive vice president of the SEIU who is also trained as a nurse specializing in mental health; and Jill Jim, executive director at Navajo Nation Department of Health.
Those seven women are working with nine men to hone the Biden Administration’s approach to eradicating Covid-19. Members of the Advisory Board and others chosen by Biden will lead his administration’s response to the virus, replacing the Trump team led by Vice President Mike Pence, Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar, Dr. Deborah Birx and Dr. Anthony Fauci.
When Trump announced the formation of his own Task Force on January 29, 2020, not one woman was included among the 12 original members. Dr. Birx was added as Task Force Coordinator in February.
Defeating the virus won’t be an easy task, with the virus already killing more than 280,000 Americans, with experts predicting the most difficult days ahead as winter approaches. Not to mention, the team will be tasked with implementing an unprecedented vaccine distribution effort — Biden’s only hope for managing the crisis going forward.
“We can’t forego the important work that needs to be done between now and then to get our country through the worst wave yet in this pandemic to reduce the spread, to save lives,” Biden said at an event announcing his task force last month. The public health experts he selected will be charged with helping his presidential transition team implement his campaign’s seven-point plan to defeat the virus, turning it into “a blueprint that we can put in place as soon as Kamala [Harris] and I are sworn in office in January.”
Members of Biden’s transition advisory board would be prime picks to take center stage on his future White House task force. Among them are a diverse slate of experts with varied professional focus areas and personal backgrounds.
“The way that the task force members were chosen really represents the challenges that we face during this pandemic,” Bhadelia said. She pointed to task force members who are subject matter experts on emerging infectious diseases, on medical countermeasures and with prior government experience.









