“Health is the Foundation for Human Potential”: Highlights from the Seoul Peace Prize Awards Ceremony

Direct Relief receives the Seoul Peace Prize at an awards ceremony in Seoul on April 28, 2025.
Direct Relief receives the Seoul Peace Prize at an awards ceremony in Seoul on April 28, 2025.

Editor’s Note: Direct Relief was honored as the 2025 Seoul Peace Prize recipient at a ceremony in Seoul, South Korea on April 28. Dr. Byron Scott, Direct Relief’s CEO, accepted the award on the organization’s behalf in a speech focused on the importance of nonpartisan support and local partnership in a changing geopolitical and ecological landscape.

Below are highlights from his speech.


Direct Relief’s mission to provide life-saving medical resources is a collective effort. This recognition belongs to all those who have shared in our mission, from our tireless staff to the incredible partners who offer their time, resources, and expertise.

But above all, we must recognize the strength of the local health professionals we support around the world.

It is these dedicated individuals – doctors, nurses, community health workers, counselors, and many thousands of others – who truly understand the needs of their own communities worldwide.

Our mission is simple: We use our expertise in sourcing, transporting, and distributing medical aid, and our decades of experience responding to emergencies and supporting communities, to empower local providers to bring health and a brighter future to the patients they serve.

A registered nurse at Urban Health Plan in the Bronx, NY, a long-time Direct Relief partner, vaccinates a young patient in April 2025. (Photo by Sean Collier on behalf of Direct Relief)

We know that peace is not just about the absence of conflict, but the presence of dignity, opportunity, and hope for all people.

Too often, conflict, economic and political instability, and a rapidly changing environment impact the lives of vulnerable people, depriving them of their health and their welfare. War prevents people from accessing nutritious food, giving birth safely, or treating a deadly disease like cancer. A tropical storm kills untold thousands in the years after it destroys houses, crops, and livelihoods.

But even when these forces remain relatively stable – which they are not at this moment – that stability cannot compensate for lack of health. As the present Dalai Lama so eloquently reminds us, “Peace, in the sense of the absence of war, is of little value to someone who is dying of hunger or cold.”

For us, this prize is a reminder that peace begins in the most fundamental way—in supporting the health and well-being of every person. When health is compromised, so too is the potential of individuals and communities. But when health is protected, people can pursue their education, their work, and their dreams. Their lives, and the lives of their community members, countrypeople, and fellow citizens of the world, are protected and allowed to flourish. This is the peace we aim to foster every day.

Direct Relief’s simple mission has remained unchanged since its founding in 1948: to improve the health and lives of people affected by poverty and emergencies by providing the essential medical resources needed for their care.
However, this simplicity masks the complexity of the challenges we face. Health is not just about treating illness—it’s about strengthening the systems that allow individuals and communities to access the care they deserve.
That is why we focus on supporting local health systems, because sustainable change comes from within communities, where healthcare providers are closest to the needs of the people.

Dr. Keith Winfrey, chief medical officer at NOELA Community Health Center, examines a patient. (Courtesy photo)

These needs are many and diverse. Physicians working with people fleeing horrific violence in Sudan need insulin to treat diabetes and medical refrigerators in which to store them, while health workers need dedicated supplies to manage and prevent cholera. A field hospital caring for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh needs field medic supplies, so providers can go into the camps to reach their patients. A Puerto Rican health center, whose patients’ lives were shattered by Hurricane Maria, needs reliable, resilient power. Patients in Nepal need high-quality, reliable medical oxygen.

We provide not only supplies but also the resources that empower local health professionals to continue their critical work. Whether it’s by sending vaccines to prevent disease, delivering insulin to children in need, or providing medications to hospitals in conflict zones, we make sure that the right resources arrive in the right hands, at the right time.

While many of these efforts make the world news—like the responses to the devastation of war or the aftermath of disasters—just as much of Direct Relief’s work happens quietly, behind the scenes. It’s the cold chain logistics that ensure life-saving insulin and vaccines reach the most remote communities in pristine condition, even when a conflict or typhoon has cut them off from the world. It’s the investments we’ve made in solar-powered health facilities in under-resourced areas from the U.S. to the Philippines to Sierra Leone, ensuring that health professionals have the power they need to keep operating even when local electricity is unavailable.

With funding from Direct Relief, the Sierra Leone’s Ministry of Health commissioned a solar power installation project to support the energy needs of the Bo Government Hospital. The installation will provide reliable power for 70% of the hospital’s energy intake. (Courtesy photo)

I’d like to discuss two examples of ongoing work that speak to building resilience over time, in collaboration with healthcare providers and community groups. Every situation and every place is unique, so no one emergency response or long-term program can capture the scope of Direct Relief’s work. We learn from each response and each partner, and some elements of our support are universal.

But two very different emergencies show how profoundly an emergency impacts health, and the flexibility and range that each situation demands.

In January, wildfires erupted across Los Angeles County. These fires displaced hundreds of thousands of people; destroyed tens of thousands of homes; polluted air, soil, and water.

Direct Relief has worked with partners in these communities for many years, and there are so many people who need ongoing support: low-income communities who rely on a local clinic, agricultural workers, unsheltered individuals, and many more. But in a tragedy like this, the emergent needs are tremendous, and highly urgent.

Our staff transported medicine and equipment to evacuation shelters where medically fragile older adults were congregating, and to health care providers working on the ground to get people their medications and treat their wounds. Search and rescue teams who were evacuating people through the smoke and downed power lines received deliveries of equipment and emergency funding.

Direct Relief Pharmacy Specialist Pacience Edwards delivers essential medications, including diabetes medications, respiratory therapies, and other requested medications to the Pasadena Convention Center on the evening of Jan. 9, 2025. The convention center is hosting hundred of evacuees, including many older adults and medically vulnerable people. (Direct Relief photo)

Direct Relief staff distributed respirators and hygiene items. Our experience responding to wildfires in Hawaii told us that we needed to have protective equipment ready for thousands of people braving toxins and smoke to return to their homes.

Because disasters so disproportionately hurt low-income and other vulnerable people, we’ve focused on groups working to reduce the disparities caused by disasters. Direct Relief grants will provide mental health support for children, caregivers, and unsheltered individuals affected by the fires. Another will fund safety training and protective equipment for cleanup crews. Because so many medically vulnerable older adults live in the area, we’re working to make sure they find new long-term housing.

Recovery after a catastrophe on that scale will take years. And supporting the existing network, helping health care providers and community advocates carry out their work amid the neighborhoods and people they know, will continue to be indispensable.

In the aftermath of the Los Angeles wildfires, Venice Family Clinic remains a lifeline for people in need. Direct Relief is supporting Venice Family Clinic by providing emergency funding, medications, and critical medical supplies to ensure uninterrupted patient care. (Photos by Bimarian for Direct Relief)

That’s a lesson our years of work in Ukraine have only reinforced for us. When the conflict with Russia escalated to a full-scale invasion of Ukraine three years ago, medical supply chains collapsed, and people fled the country or sought safety far from home. Injuries from the shelling were horrific. People with diabetes, cancer, or kidney disease couldn’t access the care they needed to stay alive. Providing the most urgent care, immediately, was everyone’s highest priority.

Now, things have changed. Ukrainians have three years of living with conflict behind them, and many of the systems that were temporarily disabled by war have been at least partially restored. Our goal is to bolster the systems that are already in place, so that they can be resilient in the years to come and meet health needs, even if peace is long in coming.

Dr Andriy Petrenko with Zhytomyr Hub director Daria Sivtseva during a medicine delivery to the Zhytomyr Multidisciplinary Support Hospital (Courtesy photo).

We’re working with Ukraine’s Ministry of Health to distribute medicine wherever it’s needed, with particular attention to the communities where displaced people have sought safety. Ukrainian doctors – infectious disease specialists, nephrologists, internal medicine providers – are providing much-needed care to children through a mobile outreach program. People whose limbs were amputated are receiving prosthetics and underground rehabilitation.

Mental health will be the next frontier. Direct Relief already supports psychosocial services in Ukraine, including a pediatric program aimed at children displaced or severely affected by the conflict. But an entire nation grieves for lost family and friends. They’ve witnessed the unimaginable, their limbs have been amputated, their homes and livelihoods are gone. Rebuilding their lives, and recovering their mental and physical health, will not happen overnight. With strategic precision and partnership, all of this can happen in the years to come.

A psychologist at the ‘Kimnata Pidtrymky’ (Support Room) conducts an group session with young Kharkiv residents. (Courtesy photo)

The world is growing increasingly partisan, but Direct Relief’s work is not. The forces of government, climate change, geopolitics, and economics may shift over time, but people everywhere still need and deserve to be healthy. Our neutrality allows us to operate in even the most politically sensitive environments, from conflict zones to countries with limited healthcare infrastructure, ensuring that aid is delivered where it is needed—without prejudice, without bias.

By maintaining our independence, we can continue to serve those most in need, regardless of their nationality, religion, or political affiliation.

At Direct Relief, we recognize that healthcare is not just a service; it’s a fundamental human right. We stand alongside doctors, nurses, and healthcare workers who uphold this oath in some of the most challenging environments imaginable. We are their partners, providing the tools, the medicine, and the resources they need to care for those who would otherwise be left behind.

A physician examines a patient at F.J. Grante Memorial Hospital in Greenville, Liberia. (Courtesy photo)

Direct Relief’s work is grounded in the belief that health is the foundation for human potential. When a child is able to receive life-saving insulin, or a mother is able to give birth in a safe environment, we are witnessing not just an individual transformation but the potential for an entire community to thrive.

Let me briefly share just a few of the countless stories that illustrate the life-changing impact of our mission of nonpartisanship, collaboration, and partnership.

More than a decade of conflict in Yemen has reignited fresh hostilities in recent days, but women and girls can receive maternal and antenatal care at clinics run by well-trained, well-equipped midwives. Women with breast cancer receive treatment at a specialized clinic. Tens of thousands of patients have new access to high-quality medical oxygen.

MedGlobal Yemen trainers demonstrate the use of a portable ultrasound device at a training for midwives. (Photo courtesy of MedGlobal Yemen)

In Haiti, where Direct Relief has worked for many years, political and economic instability has caused widespread security challenges, making it harder than ever for Haitians to get essential medicines and health care. In recent months, we leveraged our logistical expertise and close local partnerships to ensure that new shipments of insulin reached children with diabetes.

When Hurricane Beryl devastated islands across the Caribbean last year, Direct Relief had already strategically placed caches of essential medicines and supplies throughout the region, as it does in communities around the world where people are vulnerable to hurricanes, typhoons, and other tropical storms. These early shipments were used to meet the most emergent need, while our organization launched a multifaceted response designed to increase disaster resilience and health outcomes in the region.

These are not just stories—they are real outcomes made possible by our unwavering commitment to precision, efficiency, and collaboration.

A woman tends to her 11-day-old baby, born the day after the March 2025 earthquake, while sheltering in the grounds of Yadanar Guu Pagoda in Amarapura, Myanmar. (Photo by Kaung Myat for CPI)

As we look to the future, lasting change will depend on collaboration and listening. Effective action does not come from acting as outsiders, at a primarily global level. It comes from working closely with communities everywhere, and from learning from local leaders, healthcare providers, and advocates about the goals that best serve each unique place.

At Direct Relief, we collaborate with hundreds of companies, humanitarian organizations, and governments to deliver aid effectively. Through these partnerships, we are able to leverage cutting-edge technologies, data-driven insights, and private-sector expertise to solve some of the world’s most pressing health challenges.

Peace is not just the absence of conflict—it is the presence of opportunity, equity, dignity, and health for all people. And this is what Direct Relief strives to create through our work—by making sure that everyone, regardless of where they live or their ability to pay, has access to the healthcare they need to live a full and healthy life.

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