Senait Fisseha is an Ethiopian academic at University of Michigan working with reproductive endocrinology and infertility and director of international programs at the Susan Buffet Foundation. Fisseha has a J.D. degree and is known for her work as an advocate for global reproductive health, rights and gender equality. She is the founder of the Center for International Reproductive Health Training at the University of Michigan. She chaired the election campaign of Tedros Adhanom, the first African Director General of the World Health Organization, in 2016-17.
Fisseha's work has centered on improving global women's health. After the completion of her fellowship at the University of Michigan, she joined the institution as junior faculty and later earned a tenure track position, which resulted in a full professorship. In her time at the University of Michigan, Fisseha has been appointed to various academic and administrative positions. She has served as the medical director of Michigan's Center for Reproductive Medicine, chief of division for reproductive endocrinology & infertility, and as the co-director of the medical school's Path of Excellence in Global Health & Disparities. Fisseha led the creation of the Center for International Reproductive Health Training at the University of Michigan and held the title of founding executive director of the center until 2015. The CIRHT was founded to serve as a collaboration platform for University of Michigan faculty and faculty from medical institutions in sub-Saharan Africa and South East Asia where the reported maternal mortality rates are high. The goal of the center is to alleviate the burden of maternal mortality and to promote reproductive health and reproductive justice in these regions. Senate played a key role in founding the center and as a facilitator of the collaboration between her colleges at the University of Michigan and faculty at medical institutions in her native Ethiopia. Fisseha secured a $25 million grant to pilot the CIRHT program with St. Paul's Hospital Millennium Medical College in Addis Ababa. As part of the partnership, a pre-service training module was developed for the physicians, nurses, and midwives. After the successful first implementations of the module in SPHMMC, it was adopted by nine other institutions in the country. Fisseha was appointed as the director of International Programs at the Buffett Foundation in 2015, where she oversees international grant making and continues to advocate for global reproductive justice. Fisseha chaired the campaign and transition of the director-general of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the first African elected director-general of WHO. She later served as his Chief Adviser. Since 2019, Fisseha has been a member of the Lancet–SIGHT Commission on Peaceful Societies Through Health and Gender Equality, chaired by Tarja Halonen.
Willows Foundation for Reproductive Health, Member of Board of Directors
WomenLift Health, Member of the Global Advisory Board
Awards
The Ethiopian Ministry of Health honored her with the highest award given in recognition of profound contribution to the health sector in 2013. In 2016, she received the early distinguished career achievement award from the University of Michigan medical center alumni society. She was also one of only 20 recipients of the University of Michigan Bicentennial Alumni Award for her "global leadership in expanding reproductive health services, especially in developing countries." The Association of Women in Business in Ethiopia has nominated her for the "Women of Excellence" award in 2016. She was also listed as one of the 100 most influential Africans of 2018 by the New Africa Magazine.
Publications
Senait has published articles in the fields of reproductive endocrinology, infertility, and medical ethics. She conducts research on infertility, including the use of alternative medicine, the reproductive potential of cancer patients after chemotherapy, and postmenopausal reproduction.
Personal life
Senait met her husband Tewodros Fesseha, a plastic surgeon, while she was conducting research at the University of Michigan. She is a mother of four children, three boys and a girl.