Anna Schuh
Professor Anna Schuh completed academic and clinical haematology training in Oxford, United Kingdom. From 2006 to 2014, she acted as the clinical director of the haematology laboratories including molecular diagnostics of Oxford University NHS Hospital Trust, one of the largest NHS trusts in the UK.
She was appointed as a professor of the University of Oxford in 2014. She led over 50 early and late phase clinical trials in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia as a principle or chief investigator. A number of these have changed clinical practice for patients in the UK and worldwide. She served as chair of the UK CLL forum from 2015 to 2018, was the chair of the National Cancer Research Institute Collaborative Group for Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia from 2018 to 2022, and was appointed to the board of the iwCLL in 2019 where she established the Global Partnership Committee.
She is the founder and clinical director of the Oxford Molecular Diagnostics Centre with fifteen members of staff. She established an online part-time multidisciplinary MSc programme in Precision Cancer Medicine with students from six continents.
She became a senior member of MUHAS faculty in Dar es salaam, Tanzania, in 2019 where she actively contributes in the MMed programme for haematology, delivers bedside teaching of residents and supervises MSc and PhD students.
Professor Schuh has authored or co-authored over 150 peer-reviewed publications. Her h-index is 50 with over 8000 citations since 2017. She holds a patent in non-invasive prenatal diagnosis, has been a co-founder of two biotechnology start-ups and of Seren, a social enterprise to improve access to DNA-based diagnostic in sub-Saharan Africa.
Recent Events and Presentations
Innovate4Health: How IP and Innovation Are Solving Global Health Challenges
Watch now for an event releasing a report by ITIF, the Geneva Network, and the University of Akron School of Law profiling 24 pioneering case studies from five regions—Latin America, Africa, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Middle East and North Africa—where IP rights have enabled innovators to create impactful health solutions, particularly in the developing world.