Education
University of Paris.
University of Paris.
Having obtained his medical degree from Paris University, Daniel began an international health career in 1971 in the context of emergency humanitarian medical missions to Biafra (Nigeria), and Peru. He was engaged in a movement with Bernard Kouchner which resulted in the foundation of Médecins Sans Frontières, of which he was the first physician working in the field (1973, Burkina Faso). Having left World Health Organization in 1991, Daniel was over a period of eight years a Lecturer in the Department of Population and International Health of the Harvard School of Public Health and a Senior Associate of the Harvard-based François-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights.
With Jonathan Mann, with whom he was closely associated over a period of twelve years, he co-authored and co-edited a number of publications including two volumes of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome in the World, in 1992 and 1996, respectively.
While Mann is the person most associated with the movement that seeks to integrate public health and human rights by conceptualizing them as interdependent, it is fair to say that in a less public manner Tarantola played (and continues to play) an equally key role in working to establish "health and human rights" as integral to the on-the-ground work of IGOs, states, and Non-governmental organizations. From 1998–2004, Daniel rejoined the World Health Organization headquarters in Geneva as a Senior Policy Adviser to the Director General with a specific focus on health and human rights, Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome and communicable diseases, and family health.
Additionally during the latter part of this period, Daniel occupied the function of Director of the World Health Organization Department of Immunization, Vaccines and Biologicals. In 2005, upon retiring from the World Health Organization, Daniel took up a professorship at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, leading a cross-Faculty research initiative on Health and Human Rights involving the Faculties of Medicine, Law and Arts and Social Sciences.
In 2010, Daniel relocated to his own country, France.
His current work aims at exploring the interface and synergies between health, development and human rights as they relate, among other topics, to: Human Immunodeficiency Virus, Hepatitis C, poverty and human development, climate change, indigenous populations, migration, refugees and post-disaster impact mitigation. He continues to be very active in the field of immunization for which he chairs a number of programme evaluations and strategic planning.
Early in his career, Daniel worked over almost two decades with the World Health Organization on large scale international health programmes, including the eradication of smallpox from Bangladesh (1974–1978), childhood disease control programmes (1979–1984), the Expanded Programme on Immunization, the Control of Diarrhoeal Diseases Programme, the Acute Respiratory Infections Programme and as a senior member of the team who designed and started the launching of the World Health Organization Global programme on Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (1987–1990).