Profiling Ariel Henry, Haitian Neurosurgeon And Prime Minister

 

A neurosurgeon and politician, Ariel Henry was born in Tabarré, Port-au-Prince, Haïti, on November 6, 1949, to Elie Saturné Henry, a lawyer and university theology professor from Petite Rivière de l’Artibonite, and Elvire Cantave Henry, a teacher from Port-au-Prince. Henry has five siblings, Monique Henry, Edlyne Henry Richards, Elie Henry, Jr., and Elvire Henry. He is married to Annie Claude Massiau. They have three sons, Lionel Henry, Isaiah Henry, and Matthieu Henry.

In 1983, Henry received his Doctor of Medicine degree from the Université de Médecine de Montpellier in France. From 1983 to 1985, he worked as an Assistant in Neurosurgery in the Neurosurgery Department at CHU du Gui de Chauliac à Montpellier. He then served as Administrator of the Adventist Hospital of Haiti until 1987. Henry earned a Master of Public Health degree from Loma Linda University in Loma Linda, California, in 1989. In 1990, he completed post-doctoral studies in management methods for international health at Boston University. The same year, Henry joined the Faculty of Medicine at the State University of Haiti until 1995, while also serving as a neurosurgery professor for surgical residents at the State University of Haiti Hospital. He continued as a consultant o Pan American Health Organization (PAHO)/ World Health Organization (WHO) until 1996.

In 2004, Henry was affiliated with the Council of Sages that supported the rebellion that deposed and exiled the country’s president, Jean Bertrand-Aristide. From 2008 to 2011, Henry was Chief of staff to the Minister of Public Health and Population in Haïti. During that period, he addressed strategies and treated people infected by the epidemic of cholera that killed more than 10,000 amid the destructive earthquake of 2010. In 2015, Henry was Minister of the Interior and Territorial Communities. During the beginning of the coronavirus era in 2020, he became a member of the Scientific Unit for the management of the Covid-19. In addition, in 2018, Henry co-authored “Bridging the gap: creating a self-sustaining neurosurgical residency program in Haïti,” published in Neurosurg Focus Volume 45.

On July 20, 2021, Ariel Henry was sworn in as Haïti’s 23rd Prime Minister in Port-au-Prince and the seventh person to hold that position appointed without any legislative approval by the unpopular President Jovenel Moïse, who ruled by decree as the president of Haïti from 2017 until his assassination in 2021. Early in 2022, Prime Minister Ariel Henry escaped an assassination attempt in his native land.

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