عمومی | Imperial College London

Emir of Qatar discusses health innovation during Imperial visit

The Amir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al Thani visited Imperial College London and met with Lord Darzi to discuss the latest health innovations.

The Amir of Qatar toured the Institute of Global Health Innovation’s Hamlyn Centre – where Professor the Lord Darzi of Denham demonstrated some of the latest surgical robotics.

A delegation from Qatar, Alistair Burt Minister of State for the Middle East at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and Minister of State at the Department for International Development, Caroline Dineage, the Minister of State at the Department of Health and Chief Medical Officer Dame Sally Davies also attended the visit.

The Amir of Qatar with Lord Darzi and Alistair Burt, Minister for the Middle East

Lord Darzi explained the Hamlyn Centre’s role in developing the Da Vinci surgical robot and how some of his early work was carried out in Doha in Qatar.

The Amir of Qatar was interested in how successful the technology was and what type of operations it was used for.

Lord Darzi said it was proving great for operations, and can help avoid causing damage to important nerves. The robot is most commonly used in cancer, prostate and bowel surgery.

The Amir of Qatar saw a demonstration of the Da Vinci surgical robot

The Amir of Qatar asked whether doctors and surgeons needed a different type of education if they intended to go into robotic surgery.

Lord Darzi said that these are new skills and people require training, similarly to airline pilots learning to fly a different type of aircraft.

Machine Learning

The Amir of Qatar heard how Imperial is working with DeepMind

Lord Darzi then explained that machine learning and artificial intelligence in healthcare was a research priority in the UK – but relied on access to data.

Dr Alan Karthikesalingam, from DeepMind , explained how they are working with Imperial to develop a programme which can accurately diagnose breast cancer from mammogram images.

Lord Darzi said that they expect the programme, which needs to learn from thousands of images, to be able to detect signs of breast cancer as accurately as a radiologist but a lot more quickly.

Chief Medical Officer Dame Sally Davies and Health Minister Caroline Dinenage joined the discussions

The Amir of Qatar also saw presentations from global charity Orbis who are working to prevent and treat blindness, and the World Innovation Summit for Health (WISH) , which partners with the Qatar Foundation .

Qatar connections

Imperial has several links with Qatar including the Qatar Carbonates & Carbon Storage Research Centre (QCCSRC) which aims to advance our understanding of carbonate reservoirs, addressing challenges that include CCS, enhanced oil recovery (EOR) and producing clean fossil fuels.

Imperial is also a partner of the Qatar Biobank , opened in 2015, in partnership with the Qatar Foundation. The centre collects biological samples and data from tens of thousands of Qatari residents to enable large-scale research into the causes of disease.

Imperial were also involved in launching the Qatar Robotics Surgery Centre. Imperial has worked with Qatar Science & Technology Park since 2007 to establish the Centre.

Dr Al-Menhali receiving his award from the Amir of Qatar

Imperial has 13 Qatari students and a recent graduate, Dr Ali Al-Menhali, who did his PhD through QCCSRC, recently won a prestigious prize.

Dr Al-Menhali, who returned to Qatar after his PhD to work for Qatar Petroleum, one of QCCSRC’s sponsors, was awarded the Scientific Excellence Award by the Amir of Qatar for top PhD degree holder during Education Excellence Day.

The award is the highest and most important academic honour in Qatar and the award recognises outstanding research scholars, teachers, students and education institutions.