Home
Quality Matters

Main navigation

  • Supply Chain
  • Global Health
  • Dietary Supplements & Food

Mobile Menu

  • Global Health
  • Medicines
  • Dietary Supplements & Food
  • Contributors
  • Videos
  • USP.org
  • Contact us

Follow Us

  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Youtube
Archil Salakaia

Archil Salakaia

Director of Technical Core Programs, PQM+

Mr. Salakaia has more than 20 years of experience in public health, including programmatic and pharmaceutical management of tuberculosis, pharmaceutical systems strengthening, and public health program management. Prior to joining USP, he worked at Management Sciences for Health (MSH) for USAID-funded programs in various technical and management positions and as Director of the National Center for Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases in Tiblisi, Georgia. He obtained his medical degree from the Tbilisi State Medical University, and his master’s degree in public health from the Netherlands School of Public Health and Care Research.

Global Health
 // July 02, 2024

Reflecting on results from four years fighting TB in the Kyrgyz Republic

In 2022,

Archil Salakaia
Presha Regmi
Archil Salakaia Presha Regmi
Reflecting on results from four years fighting TB in the Kyrgyz Republic
Global Health
 // September 21, 2023

Beyond TB medicines: How quality assurance is elevating health systems in Central Asia

In Central Asia and Eastern Europe, multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) accounts for a sign

Archil Salakaia
Presha Regmi
Archil Salakaia Presha Regmi
tuberculosis diagnosis
Global Health
 // March 24, 2017

Increasing the Supply of a Life-Saving Anti-TB Medicine

Despite progress in the global fight against the tuberculosis (TB) epidemic, TB kills more people

Archil Salakaia
Archil Salakaia
World TB Day

Get the latest from Quality Matters to your inbox

Follow Us

  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Youtube

Footer

  • Contributors
  • Videos
  • USP.org
  • Contact

Footer Copyright

  • Commenting Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

© The United States Pharmacopeial Convention