Friday

DR MAHA AL MOZAINI | ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR AT APPLIED MEDICAL LABORATORY SCIENCES, KING SAUD UNIVERSITY, KSA

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This Harvard Medical Schooltrai­ned researcher who was raised in the US left her cushy, establishe­d life in Boston to return home to Saudi Arabia in 2013.

She then launched an immunocomp­romised host research programme (ICH) at King Faisal’s Hospital that initially targeted studying how to help recipients of organ transplant­s (who take drugs to suppress immunity so that their body will accept the new organ) fight infections. The programme also studied hereditary diseases that weakened the immune system, such as Lupus or Multiple Sclerosis. She then extended the programme’s purview to a notorious immunodefi­ciency virus – HIV.

‘I returned because I wanted to start something in Saudi. I’d learned, got all the skills and even then it meant starting from scratch and facing obstacles,’ she says.

The obstacles came thick and fast. To start with, there was a lack of existing HIV research in the GCC – even the WHO website has no official numbers of HIV carriers or other data. This meant that Dr Al Mozaini had to start a database from scratch documentin­g patients who visited the HIV clinic at King Faisal Hospital for treatment.

‘The lack of research was a shame because how would you understand how to combat the virus in our region when we have different genetic background­s and environmen­tal factors from the West? We might even have a different strain of the virus so vaccines being developed abroad might not work for us,’ she explains.

While she held the fort on the research end of things, collecting data from patients, she found herself struggling with funding for two years. ‘I got support for research on transplant patients but not HIV because it’s considered a taboo topic. But winning the L’Oreal-Unesco fellowship in 2015 changed everything. People paid attention to a Unesco-funded HIV research and suddenly weren’t afraid to talk about HIV and AIDS,’ Dr Mozaini recollects.

She counts the positive media impact as one of her major accomplish­ments.

Overall, commendabl­e accomplish­ments have been manifold for Dr Al Mozaini’s ICH programme: her research has made it to a number of publicatio­ns and received patents within just four to five years of being establishe­d.

She also got a non-profit organisati­on for women living with HIV approved last November after a five-year struggle to register it. Recently, she enlisted medical students as volunteers and conducted a widespread survey in Saudi to assess the general population’s knowledge and awareness of HIV.

Based on the findings, she’s is now devising an awareness programme to dispel misconcept­ions, such as that sharing utensils spreads HIV.

‘We want to increase awareness to reduce new infections as well as target stigma and discrimina­tion because HIV carriers live better lives than diabetic patients if given proper care and medication,’ she tells me.

‘It’s a problem, we’re a ticking bomb. And we’re the only region that tests people for HIV in marriage, employment and education.’

Her non-profit aims to save female carriers of HIV from stigma – most are inadverten­t victims who’ve contracted the virus through heterosexu­al contact with their husbands. Meeting some of them was heart-breaking, recalls Dr Al Mozaini: ‘A young girl aged 19 had contracted it as a foetus from her mum and couldn’t go to college because of her condition. An HIV positive widow had to take care of her kids without a job. These stories piled up and someone needed to do something,’ she recounts.

Doing what no one before them has done characteri­ses the women in Dr Mozaini’s family, who are a microcosm of what Saudi women are capable of. Her oldest daughter is the first female Saudi electrical engineer who works out in the field for a reputed oil company; her second daughter is a biotech major and the third is on her way to becoming a psychiatri­st.

Has she decoded the holy grail of parenting – raising a successful child? The proud mother laughs, saying she’s done nothing but expose them to a variety of topics in play and learning – from Lego and electric toys to museum trips and books, without sidelining anything because of a gender bias.

Dr Al Mozaini also extends her trailblazi­ng mentoring to other young women in STEM through informal mentoring. ‘We don’t have a [mentoring] network establishe­d for female scientists in the region yet and this is what I advocate for. ‘Science is a really hard profession that comes with a lot of disappoint­ments and frustratio­ns. It’s constant, you can’t go home and switch off, so the right advice helps.’

In the absence of such networks, she values the opportunit­y of being a jury member at this year’s fellowship to discover talented Saudi women who are go-getters. ‘It’s amazing. We were never under the spotlight, but now we have so many opportunit­ies our leadership is providing as part of vision 2030.

‘Saudi women are in for a bright future, so watch out world.’

We want to increase awareness to reduce new infections as well as target stigma and discrimina­tion because HIV carriers live better lives than diabetic patients if given proper care and medication’

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