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07/21/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 07/21/2025 21:32

Adnan Hyder, Scholar Dedicated to Improving Health Policies for Low- and Medium-Income Nations, Named Dean of Boston University’s School of Public Health

Adnan Hyder, Scholar Dedicated to Improving Health Policies for Low- and Medium-Income Nations, Named Dean of Boston University's School of Public Health

He founded the first US center devoted to studying corporate influence on health, and has also focused on global gun violence

Adnan Hyder, who will become dean the School of Public Health August 15, has researched and promoted better healthcare in low- and middle-income nations for decades. Photo by Heather Morgan Photography for GW Milken Institute School of Public Health

University News

Adnan Hyder, Scholar Dedicated to Improving Health Policies for Low- and Medium-Income Nations, Named Dean of Boston University's School of Public Health

He founded the first US center devoted to studying corporate influence on health and has also focused on global gun violence

July 21, 2025
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  • Rich Barlow
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Adnan Hyder, a globally renowned doctor and scholar who has devoted a quarter of a century to improving healthcare in low- and middle-income countries, will be the new dean of Boston University's School of Public Health, as well as the University's Robert A. Knox Professor, effective August 15. The professorship supports a faculty member who demonstrates excellence in teaching, scholarship, and research, as well as impact on society.

Hyder is the senior associate dean for research and innovation and a professor of global health at the George Washington University (GWU) Milken Institute School of Public Health. He pioneered research in healthcare systems in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East, says Gloria Waters, BU provost and chief academic officer. He also worked in those regions to promote injury prevention and biomedical ethics.

"I started my career with the mission of social justice, and it aligns so well with SPH [at Boston University]," Hyder says, "a top-10 school of public health that has grown so much, but did not forget its roots. My focus is to be in service of a mission and a community that knows its worth, and I have found it at SPH.

"BU further attracted me with its quest for excellence, equity, and justice, and its openness to innovation and strong new leadership. I also want a school of public health to be an engaged citizen of a great university, and I can see SPH playing that role here at BU."

"We are thrilled that Dr. Hyder is joining us at Boston University during this important moment for public health in the United States and across the world," BU President Melissa Gilliam says. "His strong experience as a leading interdisciplinary researcher, innovative scholar, and advocate for improved global healthcare will serve the School of Public Health well. I look forward to working closely with him and continuing to strengthen the ties between the Charles River and Medical campuses."

At GWU, Hyder led the first US center dedicated to studying corporate influence on health and policy via products such as tobacco, alcohol, ultra-processed foods, and fossil fuels. That work includes studying the firearms industry. Hyder cochairs a commission on global gun violence in collaboration with Britain's Lancet medical journal, seeking remedies based on research and best practices. "My career has been about developing research capacity in low-middle income countries, and that has spanned topics like injury/trauma, violence, and noncommunicable diseases," he says.

Waters adds that Hyder's research, supported by the National Institutes of Health, "has additionally made significant contributions" to injury prevention and noncommunicable diseases in those regions.

"It was evident from the outset," she says, "that his principle-driven approach and ability to articulate a clear, compelling organizational vision, develop important new fields of research, and build strong rapport across all constituencies are an ideal fit for our needs at SPH. … We believe strongly that Dr. Hyder's leadership, and the collaboration of a truly elite community of researchers, teachers, practitioners, and support staff, position SPH for a new era of excellence."

As for the to-do list facing him at SPH, Hyder says that "all schools of public health are facing challenges to their funding, research support, and educational enterprise currently. We will work on these together as a community, and grow our research, increase our student network, build our financial health, and promote our core mission. We will engage locally, enhance our national impact, and continue to build the global reputation of SPH-and work together to strengthen our impact across research, education, and service.

"We must take care of our own community, to ensure SPH is the best place to work for all faculty, staff, and students," he adds. "I believe in the social accountability of academic institutions and making our work relevant and useful to real people. BU is a great place to do this, and we will discuss and strategize more about doing it better in the coming years. I am grateful that the leadership of BU is entrusting me with this responsibility and their vision of building great academic programs, efficient operations, and a culture of caring."

A native of Pakistan, who earned his medical degree at that nation's Aga Khan University School of Medicine, Hyder moved to the United States in 1992 and received a master's in public health and a PhD from Johns Hopkins. He spent several years on the Hopkins faculty, where he developed a research center before moving to George Washington University in 2008,

Hyder succeeds Sandro Galea as SPH dean. The school has been led this year by Dean ad interim Michael Stein, an SPH professor and chair of health law, policy, and management.

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  • Rich Barlow

    Senior Writer

    Rich Barlow is a senior writer at BU Today and Bostonia magazine. Perhaps the only native of Trenton, N.J., who will volunteer his birthplace without police interrogation, he graduated from Dartmouth College, spent 20 years as a small-town newspaper reporter, and is a former Boston Globe religion columnist, book reviewer, and occasional op-ed contributor. Profile

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