A young African woman earned a Mastercard Foundation Scholarship and graduated with distinction from the University of Cambridge.


A brilliant young African woman, Favour Peters, has achieved outstanding academic success by graduating with Distinction in Population Health Sciences from the prestigious University of Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Her journey is a powerful story of resilience, excellence, and purpose, made possible through the Mastercard Foundation Scholarship, which fully funded her master’s program.
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Favour’s Academic Journey
Favour began her academic pursuit at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) in Ghana, where she graduated in 2022 with First-Class Honours in Rehabilitation Science. Her exceptional performance earned her the Mastercard Foundation Scholarship to pursue a master’s degree at Cambridge.
“My Cambridge experience has been a profoundly enriching journey and one of the most transformative seasons of my life,” Favour shared. “Looking back now, my heart is so full.”
Academic Excellence and Research Impact
During her time at Cambridge, Favour excelled as both a researcher and a leader. Her dissertation, which earned a Distinction, focused on modeling the impact of heterogeneity in vaccine coverage on measles outbreaks across England and Wales, using a spatially explicit meta-population model framework.
Her work demonstrated advanced analytical skills and a deep understanding of how data-driven research can improve public health systems globally — particularly in Africa, where vaccine coverage remains a pressing issue.
Global Representation and Leadership
Favour’s achievements extended beyond the classroom. Through the Kufuor Scholars Program, she traveled to the United States to present her research at the University of Denver, where she won First Place for Outstanding Paper Presentation at the 2025 Sustainable Development in Africa Conference.
She also published three research papers in high-impact journals including Taylor & Francis, Wiley, and Nature, and moderated key sessions at both the Africa Together Conference and the Inaugural OxBridge African Scholars Summit, organized by the African Society of Cambridge University (ASCU).
Mentorship and Community Impact
Favour’s dedication to community and mentorship was equally remarkable. As a Student Ambassador at Wolfson College, she hosted webinars for aspiring African scholars and mentored 12 African students who later secured top scholarships in the UK.
She also served as the Students’ Representative for her Population Health cohort, fostering collaboration and inclusivity within the Cambridge community.
“This entire experience would not have been possible without the Mastercard Foundation Scholars Program at Cambridge,” she said. “They believed in me and invested in my vision to reshape the landscape of post-infection outcomes globally.”
Favour expressed gratitude to her supervisor, Dr. Andrew Conlan, and to the Mastercard Foundation community, describing them as her “second family.”
“By far, the greatest gift Cambridge gave me was its remarkable community — like-hearted people who held my hand through it all,” she added.
READ ALSO: 20-Year-Old Lady Earns Biomedical Engineering Degree, Wins Full Medical School Scholarship
SOURCES: ALLSCHOOL, SCHOLARSHIP REGION
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