MHRP
MAJ Paul Adjei, MD, MS, is a physician specialist in infectious diseases and a research physician at MHRP.
MAJ Adjei received his medical degree from the University of Ghana Medical School (2004), before emigrating to the USA to receive his internal medicine residency at Rochester General Hospital, New York (2009-2012), where he also served as Medical Chief Resident (2012-2013) and faculty member (2012-2014). He worked as an internal medicine hospitalist from 2014 to 2017 including serving as a medical director.
He received his infectious diseases research fellowship at Tufts Medical Center, Boston, and MS in clinical research from the Tufts University Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute as a T32 fellow (2017-2020) where his research focused on HIV Drug Therapy and Viral Load Testing Coverage in the World Health Organization (WHO) European Region, and Transmitted HIV Drug Resistance in Neonates in Namibia.
MAJ Adjei is an assistant professor of medicine at the Uniformed Services University School of Medicine with clinical privileges at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center where attends on the internal medicine and infectious diseases services. He is a scientific reviewer for the Clinical Infectious Diseases, Journal of Infectious Diseases, Open Forum Infectious Diseases, Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, and the Military Medicine journals; and currently serves on various committees of the infectious diseases society of America (IDSA), including the HIVMA Clinical Fellowship Committee, IDSA COVID-19 Volunteers, and the Medical Education Community of Practice.
MAJ Adjei’s current research portfolio includes MHRP’s core vaccine and monoclonal antibody trials, one of which he is about to present on today.