Tanzia Ahmed Nijhum, MD is an Internal Medicine Physician at Kaiser Permanente Health Center in Milpitas, California. She previously worked as a clinical research assistant at Harvard Medical School.
Nijhum's research work on telehealth applications for community health workers in rural Bangladesh has been published in “BMC Medical informatics and Decision Making”, “Journal of Critical Care Medicine”, and “Journal for American College of Physician”. She has also worked as a clinical observer at the University of Illinois, University of Chicago, and Indiana University.
Nijhum worked as a physician for a project led by Johns Hopkins University to decrease maternal and infant mortality rates in a rural area. This experience motivated her to continue working for the underprivileged population. She volunteered to work for extra months in the Intensive Care Unit during the initial COVID-19 pandemic surge.
She has completed Internal Medicine Residency training at Mercy Catholic Medical Center, Pennsylvania, and received her medical degree from Mymensingh Medical College, University of Dhaka.
Outside of medicine, Nijhum founded the Taqwa Foundation to provide COVID-19 relief efforts for less fortunate people in Bangladesh. She collected donations and arranged to buy food and hand sanitizers for those with lower incomes in Dhaka. Nijhum is also an active member of ECHO-USA, a charitable organization where she volunteers to set up free health care facilities for low-income people in Bangladesh.
In her free time, Nijhum enjoys volunteering for the underprivileged population, traveling, and spending time with her children.
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