Dr Abrar Khan began his university studies in California when he was only 16, and founded a transplant centre in Abu Dhabi that is saving the lives of countless patients.
Dr Abrar Khan began his university studies in California when he was only 16, and founded a transplant centre in Abu Dhabi that is saving the lives of countless patients.

Transplant surgeon continues his father's healing work



ABU DHABI // It was always expected that Dr Abrar Khan would follow in his father's footsteps and become a doctor. His father, Mohammed, had moved from the family's native Pakistan when Abrar was just eight months old to work in Ghana, and later, in Zambia.

"My father wanted to work in a place where there was a need for doctors," he said. The younger Dr Khan wanted to make a difference in much the same way. However, it was his father's death that would ultimately - and more specifically - shape the son's future. The elder Khan died in 1988, at 60, after waiting in vain for a heart transplant. Abrar Khan was just 24 years old. "It was a combination of finances, which we didn't have, and in those days the indications for transplants were for younger people," Dr Khan said. "He was 60, which in this day and age is nothing, but in those days they [transplants] were for a lower age."

Abrar Khan, a precocious student, had been admitted to the University of California, Berkeley, when he was 16, to study neurobiology. Since his father had been sick for so many years, Dr Khan was forced to support himself while he was a student, and took any odd job he could find, from filing paperwork to cleaning tanks. He moved on to McGill University's school of medicine in Montreal, Canada, completed his surgical residency at the University of California, San Francisco, which was followed by a clinical transplantation fellowship at the University of Pittsburgh with Dr Thomas Starzl, one of the field's pioneers. Dr Khan went on to found the Sheikh Khalifa Medical City (SKMC) transplant unit; he was hired because of the success he had launching a similar programme at Fletcher Allen Health Care, a hospital affiliated with the University of Vermont, in 2002. SKMC doctors performed their first transplant on February 2, 2008, a little more than three months after Dr Khan arrived in the UAE.

"There was nothing here at all except me and an empty desk," he smiles. "So to go from there to doing a transplant in three months, was an accomplishment in itself." Dr Khan recently earned a master's degree in business administration at the London Business School's Dubai branch. Not one to shy away from a challenge, amid all his professional work, in 2003 the busy surgeon became a licensed pilot. "The rapid acceleration of the plane down the runway, with my own hand on the controls, and the plane slowly and majestically lifting off the ground, it is a feeling that is unparalleled," he said.

Dr Khan and his family in Pakistan are continuing their father's work at a clinic - named Sharifan, after Dr Khan's grandmother - for the underprivileged in Lahore. For 30 years, Sharifan has been offering free treatment and medicines, even clothing, to as many as 60 patients a day. He has been with his wife, Sarah, who also works at the hospital, since 1998, when they met at Yale University, where he was studying for his PhD in immunology. The couple married three months after they met. "Life is about making quick decisions," he said. "If you can't figure it out after three or four months, you're not going to." Sarah, who works as a nephrologist at SKMC, receives no special treatment from her husband. "I have to go through the same assessment processes, and he does not mince his words," she said. "He makes it very clear to everyone on the team that I get treated just as everyone else does."

One of Dr Khan's patients, Bilal Abdul-Alim, who has been in Sharjah since he left Texas in 1992, is a doctor himself. His wife was the donor for his kidney transplant last year. He said Dr Khan, in addition to being a "brilliant doctor", provides a personal touch. "I had some hiccups, which meant that my discharge was delayed," he said. "I remember Dr Khan coming in and saying to me 'I dreamt of you last night'. I asked him if he dreamt of all his patients, and he told me it was only the ones he worried about. That shows what type of commitment he has, he takes it to bed with him. Some people leave their work when they walk out of the hospital, but for Dr Khan, it's 24/7." mswan@thenational.ae

For more profiles, please go to www.thenational.ae/people

ESSENTIALS

The flights

Emirates flies from Dubai to Phnom Penh via Yangon from Dh2,700 return including taxes. Cambodia Bayon Airlines and Cambodia Angkor Air offer return flights from Phnom Penh to Siem Reap from Dh250 return including taxes. The flight takes about 45 minutes.

The hotels

Rooms at the Raffles Le Royal in Phnom Penh cost from $225 (Dh826) per night including taxes. Rooms at the Grand Hotel d'Angkor cost from $261 (Dh960) per night including taxes.

The tours

A cyclo architecture tour of Phnom Penh costs from $20 (Dh75) per person for about three hours, with Khmer Architecture Tours. Tailor-made tours of all of Cambodia, or sites like Angkor alone, can be arranged by About Asia Travel. Emirates Holidays also offers packages. 

WHAT ARE NFTs?

     

 

    

 

   

 

Non-fungible tokens (NFTs) are tokens that represent ownership of unique items. They allow the tokenisation of things such as art, collectibles and even real estate.

 

An NFT can have only one official owner at one time. And since they're minted and secured on the Ethereum blockchain, no one can modify the record of ownership, not even copy-paste it into a new one.

 

This means NFTs are not interchangeable and cannot be exchanged with other items. In contrast, fungible items, such as fiat currencies, can be exchanged because their value defines them rather than their unique properties.

 
COMPANY PROFILE
Name: HyperSpace
 
Started: 2020
 
Founders: Alexander Heller, Rama Allen and Desi Gonzalez
 
Based: Dubai, UAE
 
Sector: Entertainment 
 
Number of staff: 210 
 
Investment raised: $75 million from investors including Galaxy Interactive, Riyadh Season, Sega Ventures and Apis Venture Partners
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Company profile

Company: Rent Your Wardrobe 

Date started: May 2021 

Founder: Mamta Arora 

Based: Dubai 

Sector: Clothes rental subscription 

Stage: Bootstrapped, self-funded