Delivers peri-operative assessment, anesthesia, pain management, and critical care while also supporting operational efficiency, supply chain coordination, and staff development.
MD • MBA • Clinical Operations
Critical care leadership shaped by high-stakes medicine.
Joseph Niyitegeka is an anesthesiologist and healthcare manager with experience across conflict zones, remote settings, academic medicine, and global health systems.
Current focus
Peri-operative care, medical governance, emergency response- 10+ years
- Emergency, anesthesia, and critical care leadership
- 4 countries
- Service in complex and resource-limited environments
- Harvard
- Master of Clinical Service Operations in progress
Profile
Clinical judgment, systems thinking, and frontline execution.
With more than a decade of medical practice spanning anesthesia, emergency medicine, and healthcare operations, Joseph has built a career at the intersection of patient safety, crisis response, and institutional improvement.
His work includes peri-operative care, critical care delivery, curriculum development, clinical governance, AI model training, and multidisciplinary research in both humanitarian and academic settings.
Leadership areas
- Emergency and critical care coordination
- Clinical quality improvement and patient safety
- Peri-operative planning and anesthesia services
- Medical education and staff development
- Research support and peer-reviewed publication
- Healthcare delivery in austere settings
“Experienced anesthesiologist and healthcare manager with over a decade of experience in emergency medicine and critical care, particularly in conflict zones, remote settings, and resource-limited environments.”
Experience
A career built across humanitarian medicine, academia, and research.
Trains AI models across a range of formats, extending medical and analytical expertise into applied AI workflows.
Supports environmentally sustainable lithium recovery research through literature review, sample preparation, experimentation, and data analysis within a multidisciplinary team.
Led emergency response coordination for the AMET/FST team, providing urgent medical support to United Nations staff and managing severe critical care and emergency anesthesia cases, including COVID-19.
Managed clinical care operations in a high-acuity COVID-19 isolation unit, developed treatment pathways, and coordinated emergency care for moderate to critically ill patients.
Delivered emergency and trauma care, trained national staff, and helped establish dedicated triage and critical care workflows to improve patient outcomes.
Mentored medical students, helped develop clinical education curricula, and contributed to peer-reviewed work in emergency, anesthesia, and critical care medicine.
Provided acute and life-saving care, coordinated emergency services, contributed to national guideline development, and supported imaging and ultrasound-based diagnosis.
Education
Advanced training across medicine, business, and service operations.
- Master of Clinical Service Operations, Harvard University, ongoing
- Master in Business Administration, University of the People, 2023
- Master of Medicine in Anesthesiology, University of Rwanda, 2019
- Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery, National University of Rwanda, 2013
Recognition
- Innovation in Leadership, University of Rwanda, 2019
- Travel Award Grant, Africa Oxford Initiative, University of Oxford, 2018
Community and service
- Treasurer, Implementation Science Student Working Group, Johns Hopkins University
- Ambassador, Admission Office, Johns Hopkins University
- Advisor, Global Surgery Anesthesia Surgery Obstetric Collaboration, UK
- Springer Nature peer reviewer across 10 manuscripts
Languages
Multilingual communication in clinical and academic environments.
- English — Fluent
- French — Fluent
Professional strengths
- Emergency anesthesia and peri-operative safety
- COVID-19 high-acuity care coordination
- Clinical operations and governance
- Training, mentorship, and curriculum development
- Humanitarian and global health delivery
- Research collaboration and scientific writing
Publications
Selected academic and clinical contributions.
Jean de Dieu, H. T., Niyitegeka, J., Olufolabi, A. J., Powers, S., Naik, B. I., Tsang, S., Durieux, M. E., & Twagirumugabe, T. (2023). Investigating the association between a risk-directed prophylaxis protocol and postoperative nausea and vomiting: Validation in a low-income setting. Anesthesia & Analgesia.
Ravi, K., Nkuliza, D., Patel, R., Niyitegeka, J., Davidson, S., & Aruparayil, N. (2022). Fostering bidirectional trainee-led partnerships through a technology-assisted journal club. Tropical Doctor.
Niyitegeka, J., & Patel, R. (2020). Should implementation of new health technology in low- and middle-income countries follow the same guidelines as multinational drug trials? Bulletin of the Royal College of Surgeons of England.
McKay, W., Lee, D., Masu, A., Thakore, S., Tuyishime, E., Niyitegeka, J., Ruhato, P., Twagirumugabe, T., & O’Brien, J. (2019). Surveys of post-operative pain management in a teaching hospital in Rwanda. Canadian Journal of Pain.
Niyitegeka, J. (2019). Satisfaction of trauma patients in their pain management in Rwandan teaching hospitals: A cross-sectional study.
Niyitegeka, J., Nshimirimana, G., Silverstein, A., Odhiambo, J., Lin, Y., Nkurunziza, T., Riviello, R., Rulisa, S., Banguti, P., & Magge, H. (2017). Longer travel time to district hospital worsens neonatal outcomes in emergency cesarean section in Rwanda. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth.