

Dr Oseme Etomi
Dr Oseme Etomi is an obstetric physician in London, UK, and works across three National Health System (NHS) trusts including Guy’s and St Thomas’, King’s and the Queen Elizabeth NHS hospital trusts.
Her background is in rheumatology and general medicine and her main field of interest is in obstetric rheumatology, looking after women with inflammatory rheumatic diseases (IRDs) in pregnancy.
Dr Etomi was trained in some of London’s most prestigious rheumatology centres, including the Royal Free Hospital (National Centre for Scleroderma and Other Connective Tissue Disorders) and Barts Health NHS Trust and the Royal London Hospital (National Centre of Inflammatory Arthritis and Systemic Lupus Erythematosus).
In 2017, Dr Etomi undertook a clinical fellowship at St Thomas’ Hospital, and she now runs a weekly Rheumatic Disease in Pregnancy clinic, seeing patients with the whole spectrum of IRDs.
Dr Etomi has published numerous abstracts and papers on IRDs and pregnancy. In 2018, she was awarded the best oral presentation at the International Society of Obstetric Medicine (ISOM) for her work in this field.
Dr Etomi was instrumental in setting up the British Society of Rheumatology (BSR) Special Interest Group in Pregnancy in 2019. She sits on the advisory board for the Biologics in Rheumatoid Arthritis in Pregnancy (BiRAP) group and is currently one of the organisers of the 12th Rheumapreg Symposium in September 2023 in London.
From practical tips to strategies that help support your patients' emotional well-being, find out how you can help your patients make positive changes
As HS is unique to every patient, their conversation should be too. Prompt your patients to download/print out this guide to take to future appointments
Many people with HS encounter a variety of medical experts from different specialties. Introduce your patients to the people they may meet along the way
Help your patients separate fact from fiction with this myth-busting guide to what HS really is and isn't
Intended for general practitioners who are referring patients with HS to dermatologists when mild-to-moderate HS has not responded to first-line treatment
This template is intended for general practitioners looking to refer patients with suspected or severe HS to dermatologists in secondary care