Dr. Maryam Al-Nesf Al-Mansouri
Head of Adult Allergy and Immunology Division- Hamad Medical Corporation & Assistant Professor, College of Medicine, Qatar University.
Dr. Maryam Ali Al-Nesf Al-Mansouri, MD, ABHS, MScR, is Assistant Professor in Internal Medicine at the College of Medicine-QU and Weill Corneal Medical college-Qatar. She is Head of Allergy and Immunology Division of HMC since 2016 and the Program Director for the combined Allergy and Immunology Fellowship training program since 2014, an ACGME-I accredited program since 2018. She is also a core faculty in Internal Medicine Residency Program in Qatar.
Dr. Al-Nesf was granted the MD degree from Sultan Qaboos University, Oman, and the Arab Board of Medical Specialization in Internal Medicine. She pursues her higher education by doing the fellowships in Pulmonary Medicine, followed by Allergy and Clinical Immunology in Qatar-HMC & Cambridge, UK. She passed EAACI/UEMS Exam in Allergology and Clinical Immunology in 2014, and completed a Master’s degree in research (MSc R) from the University of Bristol/ UK (School of Cellular and Molecular Medicine) in 2019. She is a research fellow pursuing a Ph.D. in Molecular Medicine in the Center of Metabolism and Inflammation, Division of Medicine, University College of London/ UK.
Dr. Al-Nesf received multiple grants under Qatar Foundations (QNRF) and HMC-IRGC cycles. Dr. Al-Nesf mentored many Master’s degree and Ph.D. students at Qatar University as well as residents and fellows in HMC. She has multiple publications in high-impact peer-reviewed journals and book chapters and participated in writing consensus, protocols, and guidelines locally in Qatar and internationally. She has been leading the establishment of Qatar’s pollen & fungal calendar and atlas since 2016. Her research interest focuses on investigating personalized, precision medicine and OMICs approaches in allergy, immunology and lung diseases, non-communicable diseases, and COVID19 disease and vaccine. Her main clinical interest is focused on primary immunodeficiency, airways diseases, systemic inflammatory diseases, and generalized allergic disorders.