Nain Yuh Mirabel Joins the GIN Board of Trustees
Oct 13th 2025
Geneva, Switzerland – September 2025
eBASE Africa is delighted to announce that Nain Mirabel Yuh, Program Manager for Gender, Equity, and Inclusion, has been elected to the Board of Trustees of the Guidelines International Network (GIN). Her election was confirmed during the GIN2025 Conference held in Geneva, Switzerland.
Mirabel brings a strong background in evidence synthesis, guideline implementation, and inclusive research, focusing on bridging global guidance with local realities in low-resource and fragile settings. At eBASE Africa, she leads efforts to make evidence and guidelines more practical and inclusive, especially for women and people with disabilities.
She has contributed to several international initiatives that promote innovation in evidence use and has presented her work at multiple global platforms, including the TEN Learning Series, where she highlighted how storytelling and community-led approaches can improve guideline uptake.
“I am honoured to join the GIN Board,” said Mirabel. “I hope to contribute to making guidelines more usable, equitable, and locally owned.” She added.
About the GIN Board of Trustees
The Board of Trustees provides overall governance and strategic direction for GIN. Trustees are elected by members and are responsible for ensuring transparency, compliance, and accountability under Scottish charity law. The Board works closely with the Executive Committee, which includes the Chair, Vice-Chair, Treasurer, and Executive Officer, to implement GIN’s strategic priorities and strengthen collaboration across its global network.
About the Guidelines International Network (GIN)
Founded in 2002, the Guidelines International Network (GIN) connects organizations and individuals working to improve healthcare through evidence-based guidelines. As of April 2025, GIN includes 119 organisational members and 139 individual members from 56 countries, all united by a shared goal: to strengthen healthcare quality by using and implementing evidence-based guidance. GIN facilitates collaboration, knowledge exchange, and continuous improvement across the guideline community while reducing duplication of effort worldwide.
Mirabel’s election reflects the growing contribution of young African researchers to global evidence leadership and underscores the importance of diverse perspectives in shaping equitable and context-relevant healthcare guidance.