Cori Fordham

Cori Fordham is a Malaria and Family Planning Program Specialist for HC3. She is a public health professional with experience in program development, implementation, evaluation, and research. Prior to joining the Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs and its HC3 project, Cori served as a Global Health Corps Fellow in Burundi. She also completed a Master of Public Health from the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill. While at UNC, she worked as a graduate research assistant on a project to improve maternal referrals in rural Ghana, conducted a statewide assessment of injury and violence prevention activities in North Carolina, and provided technical support to a mobile health promotion project in India.

Corazon Flores

I’m currently working as Assistant Regional Director from the Department of Health – National Capital Region.

Clive Mutunga

Family Planning and Environment Technical Advisor
USAID I Bureau for Global Health
Office of Population and Reproductive Health
Policy, Evaluation, and Communication Division

Clare Hanbury

In 1983, Clare Hanbury qualified as a teacher and began her career teaching 6-14 year old children in schools in Kenya and Hong Kong. For many years, Clare worked for The Child-to-Child Trust based at the University of London’s Institute of Education where she worked to help embed ideas of children’s participation in health and nutrition into government and non-government child health and education programmes in numerous countries. Clare continued to work to promote these ideas as a freelance adviser and trainer. She has worked in East, West and Southern Africa, Pakistan, Cambodia, Vietnam and the Yemen. In 2008, Clare founded a website www.lifeskillshandbooks.com to promote lifeskills work with children and young people and to promote a lifeskills approach to health education. In 2013, Clare founded Children for Health www.childrenforhealth.org a British Registered Charity that provides accurate engaging health information and inspiring programmes to use fun methods to mobilise children as health activists in their families and communities. Since the inception of Children for Health, Clare has worked alongside government and international non-government partners with programmes in Lesotho, Mozambique, Nigeria, Pakistan and Sierra Leone. Clare has an MA in Education in developing countries and an MSc in International Maternal and Child Health and these from the University of London’s Institute of Education and Institute of Child Health respectively.

Claire Slesinski

Program Specialist at the Center for Communication Programs at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, supporting SBCC projects in Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America. Areas of interest include gender transformative programming, communication, and advocacy; HIV/AIDS prevention programs and communication; and the use of entertainment education for behavior change.