At the age of 24, Grangaud began practicing medicine at the Hôpital El Kettar in
Algiers. He joined the
National Liberation Front during the
Algerian War, and supplied the soldiers with medicines. After
Algeria gained independence, Grangaud became a member of the commission on health responsible for national immunization. He became a naturalized Algerian citizen in the 1970s. In 1994, he was appointed to the Ministry of Health as an advisor. He was appointed as director of preventative medicine in 2002. In addition to his public career, he served as a professor at the
University of Algiers. Grangaud was the first winner of the Prix Tedjini Haddam from the Académie algérienne d'allergologie. ==References==