Academic Jobs - Home of Higher Ed Logo

DNDi and Dubai Health Partnership Advances Neglected Diseases Research and Training in UAE

Submit News
a close up of a typewriter with a paper on it
Photo by Markus Winkler on Unsplash

The Landmark MoU Between DNDi and Dubai Health

In a significant step for global health research, the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi) and Dubai Health have formalized a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to propel research and training efforts against neglected diseases. Signed on February 10, 2026, at the World Health Expo Dubai (WHX), this partnership marks DNDi's first formal collaboration in the Middle East. Dr. Hanan Al Suwaidi, Deputy CEO and Chief Academic Officer of Dubai Health as well as Provost of Mohammed Bin Rashid University of Medicine and Health Sciences (MBRU), and Dr. Luis Pizarro, Executive Director of DNDi, affixed their signatures in the presence of dignitaries including the French Ambassador to the UAE.

This agreement establishes a robust framework for joint endeavors in medical education, cutting-edge research, and hands-on clinical training. It aligns perfectly with the UAE's vision to become a global hub for healthcare innovation, leveraging Dubai's integrated academic health system to address pressing global health inequities. Researchers and students in the UAE now have unprecedented access to DNDi's expertise in needs-driven drug development.

What Are Neglected Diseases and Why Do They Matter?

Neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), also known as neglected diseases, encompass a group of infectious conditions primarily affecting impoverished communities in tropical and subtropical regions. These include parasites, bacteria, viruses, and fungi that cause debilitating illnesses like sleeping sickness (human African trypanosomiasis), Chagas disease, leishmaniasis (both cutaneous and visceral forms), mycetoma, dengue, and others. Globally, over one billion people suffer from NTDs, leading to chronic disability, stigma, and economic loss estimated in billions annually.

In the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, NTDs such as cutaneous leishmaniasis remain endemic, with historical data showing millions affected by hookworm, fascioliasis, and trachoma. Though less prevalent in affluent UAE, the proximity to endemic zones and migration flows underscore the need for preparedness. Climate change exacerbates vector-borne diseases like dengue, making regional research vital. This partnership positions UAE academics at the forefront of combating these 'diseases of poverty' through innovative research outputs.

DNDi's Proven Impact in Drug Development

Founded in 2003 as a not-for-profit research and development (R&D) organization, DNDi has revolutionized treatment for neglected patients. Partnering with over 130 public and private entities, it has delivered 13 affordable treatments for six deadly diseases since inception, with a portfolio exceeding 40 projects including 20+ new chemical entities.

  • Fexinidazole: First all-oral treatment for sleeping sickness, replacing toxic injections and treating both forms.
  • Pediatric formulations for Chagas disease: Lifesaving for children, addressing a critical gap.
  • New regimens for visceral leishmaniasis and malaria adaptations.

These innovations have saved millions of lives, demonstrating a patient-needs-driven model that bypasses traditional profit motives. DNDi's success in clinical trials and regulatory approvals offers a blueprint for UAE researchers aiming for high-impact publications.

Dubai Health: Pioneering UAE's Academic Health Ecosystem

Dubai Health operates as the emirate's first integrated academic health system, encompassing six hospitals, 26 ambulatory centers, 21 medical fitness facilities, and MBRU. This structure fuses clinical care, education, and research, embodying the 'Patient First' ethos. MBRU, its academic arm, has graduated 170 doctors since 2016 and excels in translational research, such as the first Arab Pangenome Reference identifying novel genetic variants for precision medicine.

With centers like the Center for Genomic Discovery, Dubai Health fosters interdisciplinary R&D. The DNDi partnership amplifies this by infusing global NTD expertise, promising joint publications and enhanced research profiles for UAE faculty and students. Explore research jobs in this dynamic ecosystem.

Dubai Health and MBRU collaborative research environment in UAE higher education

Core Pillars of the DNDi-Dubai Health Collaboration

The MoU outlines multifaceted cooperation:

  • Joint Research Initiatives: Scoping priority projects in drug discovery, clinical trials, regulatory science, and public health policy.
  • AI Integration: Applying artificial intelligence to accelerate health research, from diagnostics to data analysis.
  • Education and Training: Guest lectures, curriculum co-development, student co-supervision, and exchanges.
  • Knowledge Dissemination: Co-hosting conferences, workshops, and collaborative publications.

Focus areas include viral diseases, pandemic preparedness, and fungal infections like mycetoma, directly supporting high-caliber research outputs.

Empowering UAE Higher Education Through Training Programs

A highlight is MBRU students' participation in DNDi-led fieldwork and clinical research in Africa and Asia. This hands-on exposure to patients and the drug development pipeline—from discovery to delivery—equips future researchers with practical skills. Faculty exchanges ensure bidirectional knowledge flow, fostering joint grant applications and peer-reviewed papers.

In UAE's competitive higher ed landscape, such programs elevate research capacity. MBRU's MD program and genomics focus complement DNDi's needs-driven approach, potentially yielding publications in top journals. Aspiring academics can find opportunities via higher ed faculty jobs.

Targeting Key Neglected Diseases with Research Innovation

DNDi's portfolio targets diseases ripe for UAE involvement:

DiseaseGlobal BurdenResearch Focus
Leishmaniasis1M+ new cases/yearSafer treatments, diagnostics
Dengue400M infections/yearFirst specific treatments
Mycetoma~70K cases/yearAlternative to toxic drugs
Chagas6-7M infectedNew candidates, access

MENA relevance includes leishmaniasis endemicity. Collaborative trials could produce groundbreaking UAE-led studies.

DNDi NTDs Overview
Research on neglected tropical diseases in UAE universities

Boosting Research Publications and Global Visibility

As Research Publication News, this partnership heralds a surge in UAE-originated papers on NTDs. Joint authorship on clinical data, AI applications, and epidemiological studies will enhance academic profiles. Dubai Health's genomic prowess pairs with DNDi's field data for novel insights, aligning with UAE's National Genome Strategy.

Stakeholders anticipate increased Scopus-indexed outputs, mirroring MBRU's pangenome milestone. For career advice, visit how to write a winning academic CV.

Challenges and Solutions in NTD Research

Challenges include low commercial interest, diagnostic gaps, and access barriers. The partnership counters these via open-access models, capacity building, and policy advocacy. Step-by-step: 1) Identify priorities, 2) Secure funding, 3) Conduct trials, 4) Publish and disseminate.

  • Benefits: Accelerated discoveries, trained workforce.
  • Risks: Logistical hurdles in endemic areas—mitigated by DNDi's experience.

Implications for UAE's Higher Education Landscape

This elevates UAE universities like MBRU in global health research rankings. Ties to UAE academic opportunities foster interdisciplinary teams, attracting talent. Broader ecosystem benefits: enhanced research jobs, international collaborations.

A wooden table topped with scrabble tiles spelling news and deep seek

Photo by Markus Winkler on Unsplash

Future Outlook and Global Ramifications

Looking ahead, expect pilot projects by 2027, first joint publications soon after. This sets a precedent for Middle East R&D hubs, contributing to WHO NTD roadmap. UAE researchers poised for leadership. Explore research assistant jobs, postdoc positions, and rate my professor for insights. For jobs, check higher ed jobs and university jobs.

Full Partnership Announcement DNDi Press Release
Portrait of Dr. Elena Ramirez
About the author

Dr. Elena RamirezView author

Academic Jobs In House Author

Discussion

Sort by:

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

New0 comments

Join the conversation!

Add your comments now!

Have your say

Engagement level

Browse by Faculty

Browse by Subject

Frequently Asked Questions

🤝What is the DNDi-Dubai Health partnership about?

The MoU focuses on medical education, research, clinical training for neglected diseases, including joint projects and MBRU student programs.

🦠Which neglected diseases will the partnership target?

Key areas: leishmaniasis, dengue, mycetoma, Chagas, plus viral/fungal infections and pandemic prep. See DNDi diseases.

🎓How does MBRU fit into this collaboration?

As Dubai Health's academic arm, MBRU students join DNDi fieldwork; faculty co-supervise research leading to publications. Research opportunities.

💊What has DNDi achieved historically?

13 treatments for 6 diseases since 2003, e.g., fexinidazole for sleeping sickness. Portfolio: 40+ projects.

📈Benefits for UAE researchers?

Access to global trials, AI tools, publications boost. Ties to career advice.

🌍Global burden of NTDs?

1B+ affected; MENA has leishmaniasis hotspots. Partnership aids regional equity.

✈️Training opportunities for students?

Hands-on in Africa/Asia: patient exposure, drug dev pipeline. Enhances UAE higher ed.

🤖Role of AI in the partnership?

AI for health research acceleration, from diagnostics to analysis.

📚Impact on research publications?

Joint papers expected from trials, studies—elevating UAE's research profile.

🚀How to get involved?

Check higher ed jobs, university jobs, or MBRU/DNDi sites.

🔮Future milestones?

Pilot projects 2027, conferences, treatments advancing.