Nadia A. Sam-Agudu, MD, CTropMed

Nadia A. Sam-Agudu, MD, CTropMed​

Senior Research Faculty, IRCE-IHVN; Senior Technical Advisor,
Paediatric HIV, CPHI-IHVN

Areas of expertise ​

  • Pediatric Infectious Diseases
  • Implementation Science

Educational Qualifications

  • Mayo Clinic Medical School (MD)
  • University of Minnesota Medical School (Pediatric Residency, General Pediatrics and Fellowship, Pediatric Infectious Diseases)
  • University of Minnesota Medical School/CDC/ASTMH-Certificate in Clinical Tropical Medicine and Traveler’s Health

Biography

Prof. Nadia Sam-Agudu is a pediatric clinician-scientist who serves as the Senior Technical Advisor for Paediatric HIV and a senior research faculty at the Institute of Human Virology, Nigeria.  Prof. Sam-Agudu is a Professor of Pediatrics in Global Pediatrics and Infectious Diseases, and the Director of Global Pediatrics Program at the University of Minnesota Medical School, Minnesota, USA.

Prof. Sam-Agudu graduated from the Mayo Clinic Medical School in 2002, and thereafter completed her training in Pediatrics and Pediatric Infectious Diseases at the University of Minnesota, USA. Her career focuses on the control and elimination of infectious diseases of public health importance among African children, specifically HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria. She focuses on applying implementation science methodology in her research, to generate evidence, advance and scale up the application of these evidence-based health strategies into health service delivery in Africa with special focus on West and Central Africa. Current and past projects include evaluating peer support for pregnant women, and for caregivers of children living with HIV; transitioning HIV-infected adolescents to adult care and treatment; advancing strategies and services for optimal sexual and reproductive health among adolescents living with HIV; the prevention of malaria among infants and school-age children. Prof. Sam-Agudu has served as Principal Investigator, Project Director or Mentor for projects supported by the World Health Organization, the US National Institutes of Health, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the International AIDS Society.