IPLACENTA
  • Home
  • About
  • Project
  • Team
    • Supervisors
    • Early Stage Researchers
    • Partners
  • Events
  • Blog
  • Dissemination
    • Publications
    • Presentations
    • Posters
    • Public engagement
    • Flyer
    • Newsletter
    • Video
  • Contact
  • Home
  • About
  • Project
  • Team
    • Supervisors
    • Early Stage Researchers
    • Partners
  • Events
  • Blog
  • Dissemination
    • Publications
    • Presentations
    • Posters
    • Public engagement
    • Flyer
    • Newsletter
    • Video
  • Contact

Professor Asma Khalil

Picture
Picture
78 Harley Street, London W1G 7HJ
 +44 20 7034 8945
 admin2@hscfw.co.uk

Research Interests
Fetal Medicine
High-Risk Obstetrics
Caesarean Section
Pregnancy Scanning
Twins and Multiple Pregnancy
Testing for Down’s Syndrome
Fetal Abnormalities

Asma Khalil (MBBCh, MD, MRCOG, MSc(Epi), DFSRH, Dip(GUM)) is a Consultant Obstetrician at St George’s Hospital and Honorary Senior Lecturer at St George’s Medical School, University of London. She is a subspecialist in Maternal and Fetal Medicine, specialising in scanning women and babies with complications in pregnancy. She is the lead for the Multiple Pregnancy service at St George’s Hospital, the referral unit for the South West London region, but also cares for women with low risk pregnancies.
Asma gained her MD at the University of London in 2009 following two years’ research into pre-eclampsia (high blood pressure in pregnancy). She also has a Masters degree in Epidemiology from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and an MRC scholarship. She has published more than 45 peer reviewed research papers in medical journals, and many review articles and book chapters. She has been awarded many research prizes, at both national and international meetings.
Her research interests include hypertensive disease in pregnancy, multiple pregnancy, and other complications of pregnancy.
Picture
​
​This project has received funding from the 
European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 765274