Dr. Gigil Marme is a distinguished senior academic, public health researcher, and healthcare executive with over three decades of clinical and academic experience in resource-limited settings. Beginning his career with a Certificate in General Nursing, he subsequently earned a Bachelor of Health Management (receiving the Academic Excellence Award from the National Health Department), a Master of Public Health, a Graduate Certificate in Health Economics, and a Ph.D. in Public Health Policy from Griffith University, Australia, as a recipient of multiple prestigious Australia Awards. Currently serving at Divine Word University (DWU) as a Senior Lecturer, Acting Head of the Department of Health Management & Systems Development, and Research Coordinator for the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Dr. Marme provides vital strategic leadership over university curriculum design, ethical compliance structures, and institutional research frameworks. His academic career also features extensive international experience, including roles as a sessional academic at Griffith University and an invited guest speaker on infectious disease containment at the Queensland University of Technology.A leading voice on healthcare equity for remote populations, Dr. Marme’s prolific research portfolio specializes in health system structures, policy implementation, health economics, and tuberculosis (TB) infection prevention and control guidelines. His scholarship features numerous high-impact peer-reviewed papers in respected global outlets, including the Journal of Public Health, Antimicrobial Resistance & Infection Control, and Rural and Remote Health, alongside policy-shaping analyses for the DevPolicyBlog. Dr. Marme applies this extensive theoretical baseline directly to his past administrative tenures as the Chief Executive Officer and Hospital Manager for Braun Memorial Hospital and Yagaum Rural Hospital, where he pioneered institutional strategic plans and primary care clinical guidelines. Recognized with the Best Public Health Publication Award (2023) from Griffith University, he actively disseminates his research at major regional forums like the Asia Pacific Health Leadership Congress and serves the broader scientific community as an Adjunct Lecturer for the Australian Centre for the Pacific Island Region and a member of the Pacific Region Infectious Disease Association (PRIDA).