This conference is now closed for registrations.

Join us as we proudly present the first Nature Conference held on the African continent.

Brought to you by Nature Conferences in partnership with the Davos Alzheimer's Collaborative, and Aga Khan University, the event will take place in-person September 11th - 12th, 2024 in Nairobi, Kenya. 

This free-to-attend forum will catalyze collaboration and drive change. Attendees will delve into cutting-edge scientific breakthroughs surrounding the epidemiology of dementia, the contributing risk factors and genetics, and advancements in early detection and diagnosis of dementia in Africa and globally. This conference will explore current treatment strategies, trials and programs that promote brain health and prevent dementia in Africa. 

But beyond the scientific discourse lies a vital aspect: community. This event offers a platform to share successes, confront challenges, and foster collaborations essential for shaping the future of dementia research and care in Africa. Attendees will include researchers, industry leaders, local government, policymakers, and individuals with lived experience.

Don't miss your chance to be part of history. Apply to attend now for this transformative conference and be at the forefront of the movement to change lives and shape the future of dementia care in Africa.


Event details

11-12 September 2024
Nairobi, Kenya
In-Person Event

Zul Merali

Zul Merali

Director

Brain and Mind Institute at the Aga Khan University

Dr Zul Merali is the Founding Director of the Brain and Mind Institute at the Aga Khan University. He is a neuroscientist and pharmacologist by training (McGill University, University of Ottawa and Wharton), with over 40 years of academic engagement. Has published over 250 peer-reviewed scientific publications. He has used his proven academic and entrepreneurial ability to add value to forward thinking organizations to help address the mental health problem, locally, nationally and globally. His objectives have been to build and/or re-engineer organizations to deliver outstanding results and motivating and encouraging others towards positive change.​
Edna Bosi​re

Edna Bosi​re

Faculty

Brain and Mind Institute at the Aga Khan University

Dr Edna N Bosire is an Assistant Professor in Medical Anthropology and Implementation Science at the Brain and Mind Institute (BMI), Aga Khan University, Kenya, and the Lead for the BMI’s  Living Lab- East Africa.  She is also an appointed faculty at the Aga Khan University’s department of Population health in Nairobi, and an honorary research scientist at the Developmental Pathways for Health Research Unit (DPHRU) in Johannesburg, South Africa. Previously, Edna worked as a Post-Doctoral Research Scientist for the Blantyre Prevention Strategy (BPS) at Georgetown University’s Centre for Innovation in Global Health (USA) and Kamuzu University of Health Sciences, Malawi. Edna holds a PhD in Medical Anthropology and Public Health from the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa, and MA in Medical Anthropology from the University of Nairobi.  Over the past 15 years, she has used various anthropological, public health, and implementation science theories and frameworks to design and implement health research projects in urban poor settings in Kenya, Tanzania, South Africa, and Malawi. She writes a lot about chronic illnesses and patients experiences with comorbidities and multimorbidity. Her other research interests and contributions are in health systems strengthening, Mental and Brain Health, HIV/AIDS, diabetes, climate change and nutrition.

She is currently the Principal Investigator (PI) for a project titled “Ethnographic study of Attitudes, Perceptions and Knowledge of Dementia in Kenya” funded by the DAVOS Alzheimer’s Collaborative, that is being implemented in Nairobi Kenya; and PI for a Climate change and Mental Health project, funded by Georgetown University (USA), being implemented in Kilifi County, Kenya. Edna has experience and expertise working collaboratively with marginalized communities, and other stakeholders at community levels using community based participatory research approaches (CBPR) and co-creation strategies to ensure that implementation strategies are contextually designed and are people centered. She is well published on her areas of interest. List of publications can be accessed here ‪Edna N Bosire - ‪Google Scholar

Akin Ojagbemi

Akin Ojagbemi

Wellcome Trust International Intermediate Fellow at the University of Ibadan, Nigeria.

Honorary Visiting Senior Lecturer, Centre for Dementia Studies, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, UK

Akin Ojagbemi is a clinical and academic psychiatrist for older people. He is trained in dementia care at the Institute of Psychiatry (IOPPN) King’s College London and leads a multidisciplinary team with in-patient and out-patient responsibilities for mental health of older adults and dementia care in Nigeria. He also an honorary visiting Senior Lecturer at the Centre for Dementia Studies, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, United Kingdom. Akin’s research background is from being part of participants assessment in the key international comparative study of dementia in Nigeria and Indianapolis USA. He now conducts research in Global mental health, epidemiology, mental health systems strengthening and intervention studies within a long-term commitment to develop culturally appropriate and resource-aligned interventions for priority mental health conditions in Nigeria and applicable contexts in West Africa. To date, he has published more than 100 peer reviewed journal articles, 6 book chapters, and 1 monogram, some of which have appeared in The Lancet, JAMA and World Psychiatry. Akin has been an awardee of the US National Academy of Medicine Grand Challenge on Healthy Longevity. In December 2023, he was awarded the Tomani Corah price for excellence which is held by the African Research Excellence Fund (AREF). He is currently developing an innovative task shared intervention on digital platforms for older peoples’ depression and dementia in Nigeria.

George Vradenburg

George Vradenburg

Founding Chairman of the Board

Davos Alzheimer's Collaborative (DAC)

Vaibhav Narayan

Vaibhav Narayan

EVP, Strategy and Innovation

Davos Alzheimer's Collaborative (DAC)

Edem Adzogenu

Edem Adzogenu

Vice Chair

Nigeria Digital Health Initiative

Razak Gyasi

Razak Gyasi

Associate Research Scientist

African Population and Health Research Center

Wambui Karanja

Wambui Karanja

Volunteer

Global Brain Health Institute and the Brain and Mind Institute

Wambui Karanja is a project manager at the Brain and Mind Institute at the Aga Khan University Nairobi. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology Degree from Kenyatta University. With over five years of experience in dementia care and advocacy, she has actively contributed to initiatives addressing this critical health issue. Her background includes leadership roles in the Dementia Education Exchange Program (DEEPIK) at the Alzheimer's and Dementia Organization Kenya (ADOK) and research on perceptions of dementia among informal caregivers in Nairobi during her graduate attachment at the British Institute in Eastern Africa.

She is a Global Atlantic Fellow for Equity in Brain Health,  and as an Atlantic Fellow, Wambui co-led the development of the charter of conduct and checklist for global collaborators to promote equity in applied dementia research. She is a founding member of the Africa Brain Health Network and  currently leading the development of the Africa Brain Health Dashboard in collaboration with University of Capetown, Neuroscience Institute, a project that is supported by the Atlantic Institute. Wambui is an engaged member of the International Society to Advance Alzheimer's Research and Treatment (ISTAART), where she has co-chaired the Low and Middle-Income Countries Workgroup within the Diversities and Disparities PIA. Her primary goal is to advance the understanding of dementia and foster collaborative communities for brain health in Africa.
Chi Udeh-Momoh

Chi Udeh-Momoh

Faculty

Brain and Mind Institute at the Aga Khan University

Chi Udeh-Momoh, PhD, FHEA, is a Translational Neuroscientist specializing in dementia prediction and prevention at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, where she leads the Udeh-Momoh Lab for Global Brain Health Equity, focusing on equitable, culturally informed strategies to promote successful aging. She holds a joint appointment at Aga Khan University Kenya as co-Director of the Imarisha Centre for Brain Health and Aging and Lead of the Genomics and Biomarker Core at the Brain and Mind Institute Kenya, collaborating with global experts to enhance neuroscience research and education in the Global South. In 2018, she initiated the AFRICA-FINGERS project to promote healthy aging in African populations through sustainable interventions. Dr. Udeh-Momoh co-leads the World-Wide FINGERS Biomarker Consortium and the Global CEOi/Davos Alzheimer’s Collaborative, guiding global biomarker harmonization strategies and the implementation of blood-based biomarkers in clinical practice. Her research, funded by major organizations, addresses biopsychosocial determinants of dementia risk and aims to improve brain health equity.

Muthoni Gichu

Muthoni Gichu

Head of the Health and Ageing Unit

Department of Non-Communicable Diseases, Ministry of Health, Nairobi, Kenya

Muthoni Gichu has a passion in empowering individuals and communities to thrive across the lifespan, with a special focus on promoting healthy ageing and reducing the devastating impact of dementia.

With a deep understanding of the complex interplay between public health, economic development, and social policy, I have dedicated my career to driving meaningful change in the lives of older adults, and their caregivers. My work is informed by the latest research and best practices in dementia prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and care, as well as the critical importance of interdisciplinary collaboration and community engagement.

My mission is to champion policies and programs that support the health, wellbeing, and human rights of older adults, while also acknowledging the vital role of caregivers and the broader community in promoting healthy ageing and dementia prevention. I am committed to fostering a society that values, supports, and celebrates the contributions of all individuals, regardless of age or ability.

I acknowledge that healthy ageing is not just a personal aspiration, but a collective responsibility. By working together to create supportive environments, promote healthy lifestyles, and drive innovation in dementia research and care, we can build a brighter future for all.

Stephen Tollman

Stephen Tollman

Director

University of the Witwatersrand

As Research Professor in the School of Public Health, Wits University, Steve Tollman directs the Medical Research Council / Wits University Rural Public Health and Health Transitions Research Unit. While trained in African and US / UK institutions, Steve’s professional life is based in South Africa with extensive efforts building advanced research capability in sub-Saharan African settings.

In the early 1990s, he led establishment of the Agincourt Field Research Centre based on long-term health and socio-demographic surveillance. This provides a longitudinal platform for the SAMRC’s only research group dedicated to rural health and development and the rapid transitions underway. Extensive observational work is complemented by intervention-evaluations addressing key periods along the life course. The empirically-derived mortality and cause-of-death series informs work on chronic conditions and is among the richest on the continent. This, and related surveillance data, offer fresh insight into the complex demographic, epidemiological and social transitions underway.

Steve’s work contributed to the founding of the INDEPTH Network which he served as Board Chair then Principal Scientist. He serves on African, US and UK review panels and is currently chairing 5-year reviews of SAMRC intramural research units. He is an author of some 250 peer-reviewed publications, and in 2018 was honoured by the National Science and Technology Forum.

Mie Rizig

Mie Rizig

Clinical Senior Research Fellow.

University College London

Mie Reizig is currently a Senior Clinical Research Fellow at the Institute of Neurology and a Specialist Registrar in Neurology at Imperial College London. Her research focuses on the clinical and genetic diversity of Parkinson’s disease (PD) and other neurodegenerative conditions among black populations in Sub-Saharan Africa and the African diaspora in the UK. In addition to her research, she collaborates with institutions across several African countries to enhance research standards, educate health professionals, and increase PD awareness among patients, relatives, and communities.

Prior to her current role, she completed a three-year postdoctoral clinical research fellowship under Prof. Nick Wood at the UCL Institute of Neurology, where she recruited and characterized a large cohort of PD patients with the rare LRRK2 gene mutation. During this fellowship, she recognized the significant lack of research involving patients of African descent, including Black Africans and Black Caribbean individuals, which inspired her to launch her current research project.

Dr. Reizig earned her medical degree from the University of Khartoum in Sudan, followed by general medical training at several hospitals in London. She holds a Master’s degree and a PhD in Molecular Genetics from University College London (UCL). Additionally, she obtained a Diploma in Clinical Neurology from the UCL Institute of Neurology.

Rufus Akinyemi

Rufus Akinyemi

Deputy Director of the Centre for Genomics and Precision Medicine, College of Medicine

University of Ibadan

Lingani Mbakile-Mahlanza

Lingani Mbakile-Mahlanza

Lecturer/Psychology Clinic Coordinator

University of Botswana

David Ndetei

David Ndetei

Professor of Psychiatry, University of Nairobi

Founding Director, Africa Institute of Mental and Brain Health

David M. Ndetei is Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Nairobi and the Founding Director of the Africa Institute of Mental and Brain Health formerly known as the Africa Mental Health Research and Training Foundation. He also serves as the Director of the World Psychiatric Association Collaborating Centre for Research and Training in Kenya. He was the Kenyan PI for an International collaborative project called “Strengthening responses to dementia in developing countries (STRiDE)” and the official mentor of a post-doc on the project in Kenya.  He was the Kenyan PI of Davos Alzheimer’s Collaborative (DAC) for the Integration and evaluation of a community-level dementia screening program in rural Kenya.  Under his leadership, Africa Institute of Mental and Brain Health has become a leading center in the region for mental and brain health research, collaborating with professionals and researchers, and mentorship of students from across the globe. 

His research interests are on community approaches to innovative interventions that are sociocultural and contextually appropriate.  He has been the PI or Co-I for most Kenyan published clinical and community epidemiological studies on mental health and substance abuse.  He is dedicated to advancing psychiatric education and training in Kenya. He has mentored numerous graduate and postgraduate students (Masters, PhDs, DScs, Post-docs).  He was instrumental in the development of various specialized programs at the Department of Psychiatry, University of Nairobi. 

João Monteiro

João Monteiro

Chief Editor

Nature Medicine

João received his medical training at the Federal University in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,  where he also earned a PhD degree, studying mechanisms of tolerance to self-antigens in autoimmune diseases. In 2009, he was named a Pew Latin American Fellow in the Biomedical Sciences, moving to the United States to pursue studies on T cell antigen recognition and in vivo dynamics of the immune responses with Ron Germain, at the National Institutes of Health. João was the senior editor for immunology and translational medicine at Cell from 2013-2017 and in December, 2017, he was appointed Chief Editor of Nature Medicine, where he leads a team of editors and journalists covering news, opinion and research across the entire landscape of translational and clinical research. He has given talks about medicine, science and publishing in many international conferences, and has championed efforts to raise ethical standards and transparency in the reporting of translational and clinical research. João cares about supporting young investigators, creating opportunities to make scientific publishing more inclusive, and harnessing the potential of scientific research to reduce health inequalities globally. Since 2021, he has served as a member of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE).
Mohamed Salama

Mohamed Salama

Doctor of Medicine

The American University in Cairo

Mohamed is a professor at the Institute of Global Health and Human Ecology at the American University in Cairo (AUC) and an Atlantic Senior fellow for Equity in brain health at the Global Brain Health Institute (GBHI). Currently, he is leading the Egyptian Survey of Healthy Aging (AL-SEHA).

Through a Bartlett Fund for Critical Challenges from the AUC, Mohamed started an exposome project to evaluate the totality of environmental exposure in Parkinson’s disease. Recently, through one of the EXAF projects, Mohamed and his team are piloting the Egyptian Dementia Registry. Additionally, he is a member of the steering committee of the International Parkinson’s Disease Genome Consortium (IPDGC)- Africa and the Scientific Committee of the Egyptian National Genome Project and the National committee of Toxicology."

Maëlenn Guerchet

Maëlenn Guerchet

Senior Researcher

French National Institute for Sustainable Development

Dr Maëlenn Guerchet is a senior researcher at the French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development (IRD), with a focus on ageing and dementia in sub-Saharan Africa. Her PhD focused on the assessment, prevalence and risk factors of dementia among older adults living in French speaking African countries (Benin, Central African Republic and Congo). Maëlenn extended her interests in brain health by comparing how the dementia epidemic affects African and other low- and middle-income countries in a world going through demographic, social and epidemiological transitions.

Dr Guerchet has lead several projects in West Africa (Benin, Ghana) and coordinated a multicenter population-based survey in Central Africa (EPIDEMCA/FU). She is a member of the Africa Dementia Consortium, the 10/66 Dementia Research Group, and an Atlantic Fellow for Equity in Brain Health (Global Brain Health Institute). She has also contributed to several reports published by Alzheimer’s Disease International and the World Health Organization.

She is currently posted at the University of Abomey-Calavi, in Benin.  

Mary Amoakoh-Coleman

Mary Amoakoh-Coleman

Senior Research Fellow

University of Ghana

Dr. Amoakoh-Coleman is a Public Health Physician and Clinical Epidemiologist and works as a Senior Research Fellow at the Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research (NMIMR), at the University of Ghana, Legon. She has over twenty years’ experience in clinical work, public health, and research with practical technical expertise in global health program implementation, working in malaria prevention and treatment, maternal health, and non-communicable diseases. She also works as a clinician on clinical trials at the Clinical Trials Unit, of the Department of Epidemiology at the NMIMR, and teaches at the University of Ghana Medical School and the Ghana College of Physicians and Surgeons, is involved in other capacity building programs for early career researchers.

Specifically for work on non-communicable diseases among the elderly, she worked with a team from the UK, Italy and India on intervention for the elderly with non-communicable diseases in sub-Saharan Africa, using the W.H.O. SAGE data, together with some reviews and qualitative work, focusing on hypertension and depression among populations in five (5) countries including Ghana. She also contributed to a technical report on Dementia in sub-Saharan Africa: challenges and opportunities, an Alzheimer’s Disease International (ADI) publication. She is currently a co-investigator on two NIHR funded projects on non-communicable diseases with other African institutional partners.