A Human connection:
SERVING PATIENTS AT THEIR MOST VULNERABLE
S
aba Radhi, MD, knew she wanted to be a physician when she was still in high school. While her parents thought perhaps she should chose a career as a lawyer, Radhi considered ways that she could give back to the world and to her community, while also pursuing something that interested her. Medicine was a very clear choice. “The human body is the most fascinating thing to study,” she said. So combining her love of science and desire to serve, she attended the Sultan Qaboos University, College of Medicine & Health Sciences, in Oman. After graduating she moved to the United States and pursued a Masters of Science in Clinical and Biomedical Investigations at The University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine. She completed her residency in
Internal Medicine in Lubbock, Texas, at the Texas Tech University Health Science Center, where she also went on to complete a fellowship in Medical Oncology and in Geriatric Medicine. After moving to Arizona with her family, Radhi began working for Cancer Treatment Centers of America (CTCA) in Phoenix, Arizona, in 2017.
Daily Reward Radhi was fascinated by the incredible advancements in oncology, and felt it was uniquely situated to provide her with the ideal combination she had been looking for – the challenge of scientific research and application, combined with an incredibly close patient-physician relationship.