After finishing a medical degree in Amsterdam in 1972, Coutinho worked in tropical medicine in
Guinea-Bissau and
Senegal. During this time, he worked in the areas liberated by the
African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde during the latter stages of the
Guinea-Bissau War of Independence. His work brought him into contact with future leaders of Guinea-Bissau, such as
Francisco Mendes and
Luís Cabral. He subsequently worked on the eradication of
smallpox in
Bangladesh, the last major outbreak of the disease, the experience of which led him to focus on public health and infectious diseases for his future career. In 1989 Coutinho was appointed professor of epidemiology at the Academic Medical Centre of the
University of Amsterdam. In 2000, he became co-editor of
AIDS, the official journal of the
International AIDS Society. In February 2005 he joined the
National Institute for Public Health and the Environment as director of the Centre for Infectious Disease Control. In 2021, Coutinho was critical of the slowness in the Dutch government's response to vaccinating the population during the
COVID-19 pandemic. In 2022, his recollections and photographs of his time in Guinea-Bissau were published under the title "Guinea-Bissau's struggle for freedom through the eyes of a young doctor". A review of the work, noted, "the power of Coutinho’s account of the independence struggle in Guinea-Bissau lies in the sober description of the daily practice of the armed struggle." ==References==