"I spent a year as a nursing assistant. I
worked in the laboratory taking blood samples and seeing how
laboratory diagnostics work. I worked in cardiac care."
Gaining experience
What Ogden lacked was field experience. So, she and her
husband, who she met in graduate school, joined the Peace
Corps. They were assigned to Papua New Guinea in 1987. For
two years she ran a provincial disease control program for
80,000 people, managing on a limited budget, with scarce
medical supplies and drugs.
"And so I ended up trying to work around some of those
obstacles and reach out to women in particular through
non-governmental groups, through smaller women's clubs," she
says, "and try to provide information in a more sensitive
way that would bring them in for services without setting
them up to be ostracized by their community."
That experience taught her some valuable
public health lessons that remain with her today. "Be
flexible. Learn to live with ambiguity. Keep an open mind."
Targeting polio
After
leaving the Peace Corps, Ogden continued to work on
international public health projects.
In 1997, she took the reins of the USAID polio program,
coordinating U.S. efforts with health institutions,
governments, community-based groups and donors around the
world. Ogden says great strides have been made since 1988,
when the World Health Assembly targeted polio for
eradication. The disease then was endemic in 125 countries.
"Now we are only in four countries that have never stopped
polio: India, Nigeria, Pakistan and Afghanistan, and a 99
percent reduction in cases and a huge restriction
geographically of where the virus is located," she says.
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Ogden spends a lot time abroad. So much so that sometimes
her husband and their two sons go with her. She manages
large grants, attends mass immunizations, visits
laboratories and supervises work in many countries. She says
war is no excuse to stop immunization and uses well-honed
diplomatic skills and technical know-how to forge ahead.
Finding solutions
In
2009, Ogden was honored with the USAID Award for Heroism.
Ellyn Ogden and Dr. Baskar, WHO Surveillance Officer in Uttar Pradesh India, locate twins that were both affected by polio - a devastating blow to the family. Guidance was provided on how to care for the children to avoid deformities and where to go for additional rehabilitation.
"I was seen as a credible emissary to negotiate the Days of Tranquility in the eastern Congo among the main warring factions," says Ogden. "I had been discussing cease fires with some of the key forces in Angola when Jonas Savimbi was still there. And even today, I have an opportunity in Afghanistan to see where we can allow safe access and the vaccinators safe passage even though there is on-going conflict.
Ogden works in remote areas, in crowded urban centers and slums. Her first question, like the one she asked of textile workers at a dye pit in Nigeria, is always whether their children have been vaccinated.
"And they said, 'No. There's never been a vaccination team here,'" says Ogden. "And this is after almost 10 years of campaigns."
The children in that forgotten slum were vaccinated the next day.
Ogden cautions that the failure to eradicate polio would be detrimental to public health, not only in communities where polio still exists, but worldwide.
"Because if we can't get this simple 13-cent vaccine to all of the children in the world, how are we going to bring the more difficult things to them?"
Ogden says the fight to eradicate polio is one children of the world deserve. It would rescue four million lives over the next 20 years, she says, and it is our moral obligation to do so.

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