Dr. Reddy is Secretary General, SHARE (Science Health
Allied Research & Education) and a graduate of Gandhi Medical College. It
is almost impossible to find any one like Dr. Reddy. He single handedly
undertook the global health initiative through the REACH program in India.
Despite his professional commitments and his family responsibilities, Dr. Reddy
took that bold, innovative step in creating the REACH concept through which
thousands of indigent persons are receiving both health care and counseling in
disease prevention and the importance of community health.
Born September 15, 1936 in a small town in India to a
family with modest means, Dr. Reddy attended medical school in Hyderabad and,
in 1967, became a member of the Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh. UK, and
migrated to the United States where he has achieved success as a clinician,
researcher and teacher. In 1971 Reddy became a member of the faculty of the
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and was appointed Director of the
Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory of Pittsburgh's Presbyterian University
Hospital. He has authored more than 100 articles in journals as well as a book,
'Pericardial Disease'. In 1995 the cardiology fellows awarded him the Fellows
Teaching Award. He was elected President of the Laennec Society of the American
Heart Association and appointed a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians,
Edinburgh, U.K.
However, P. S. Reddy's professional career is only
part of what makes him a recipient of the Most Distinguished Alumni Award. At
the peak of his career he decided to reclaim the true meaning of medicine:
service for the sake of service, not for glory or monetary gain.
He has spent most of his time for many years in
"giving back" to India. He co-founded and promoted a charitable foundation,
SHARE, principally funded by North Americans of Indian origin. Under his
direction SHARH built MediCiti, a nonprofit hospital, and a rural hospital as
well as supporting infrastructure in Andhra Pradesh with the purpose of
encouraging health careers, research, and service. He envisioned a replicable
model of cost-effective promotive, preventive and curative health care delivery
for the rural poor in India and has led its implementation. REACH (Rural
Effective Affordable Comprehensive Health Care), launched in 1994 to develop a
viable model of health care delivery so that "Health Care for All" becomes a
reality. REACH may very well serve as a model that the World Health
Organization is likely to embrace.