[8][9] Alongside active service with the NHS and MSF, Abdelmoneim fronted a number of critically acclaimed science and wellbeing programmes for the BBC,[10] Channel 4, HBO and the Al Jazeera network.
[17] Abdelmoneim is also an advocate for humanitarianism through the right to health through his public speaking and writing engagements including the BBC News (2014),[4] The Independent (2014),[18] TEDx (2015),[19] The Hippocratic Post (2017),[20] and DNDi's 15th Anniversary Gala Dinner (2018).
[24] The next year, Abdelmoneim travelled to Haiti after the devastating 2010 earthquake where he spent six months working as an emergency room doctor, treating trauma patients and running the internal medicine and intensive care departments within the MSF hospital.
Travelling by helicopter or plane, depending on the weather, Abdelmoneim and his colleagues would arrive at a remote destination around noon and open at 8am the next day.
[27] In 2017, Abdelmoneim travelled to Raqqa, Syria where he spent a month working in a trauma clinic set-up by MSF in one of the few houses left standing in the city.
[28][29] Abdelmoneim fronted a number of critically acclaimed science and wellbeing programmes for the BBC, Channel 4, HBO and the Al Jazeera network.
[11] In 2016, the programme won the Foreign Press Association -Best Science Story of the Year Award for his episode Operation Gaza.
[16] In the same year, he also presented the BAFTA shortlisted[14] BBC Two documentary series No More Boys and Girls,[33] in which a primary school, under his guidance, experimented with gender-neutral language and activities.
The BBC Four Pandemic with co-host Hannah Fry which explored the possible impact of a flu pandemic;[34][35] BBC One's one-off special on Type 2 diabetes The Big Crash Diet Experiment[36][37] and featured as a special guest on The One Show with presenters Matt Baker and Alex Jones (episode dated 29 May 2018).