Professor Wendy Susan Stevens is the head of the department of Molecular Medicine and Haematology at the University of the Witwatersrand, a position she’s been in since 2003. She is also the founder and head of the National Priority Programmes which was designed to establish and maintain laboratories to deal with National Programmes for HIV and TB in the public sector. Her recent accomplishment is her being called to serve as a member of the Covid-19 ministerial advisory committee. There she worked on novel Covid-19 molecular and rapid diagnostic validations from April till now. She said she chose to be in civil service because of her curiosity, problem solving skills and strong academic bent. “I realised very quickly that your average South African did not receive adequate laboratory services. Working on the front line with patients has demonstrated to me first-hand, the gaps within the clinical and laboratory interface. In addition, the long term, equally passionate colleagues I have worked with in the past and again more recently on Covid, make it very easy to turn up for work daily”, she said. Overall, she has been in civil service for over 30 years.
“I realised very quickly that your average South African did not receive adequate laboratory services. Working on the front line with patients has demonstrated to me first-hand, the gaps within the clinical and laboratory interface,” she said.