What kind of doctor is Xand van Tulleken?
He specialized in infectious disease and tropical medicine. He currently combines research into the molecular genetics of HIV with medical practice at the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in London.
Does Dr Xand have a child?
Julian Van Tulleken
Alexander van Tulleken/Children
Is Xand van Tulleken single?
Personal life. It was revealed in an episode of Operation Ouch! (Series 6, episode 9) that Chris van Tulleken has a wife and a daughter. In a 2016 episode of Horizon titled How To Find Love Online, presenter Xand stated that he was single and a user of online dating.
Is Dr Zander married?
Is Dr Xand van Tulleken married? No, the BBC presenter is not married.
What age is Dr Xand van Tulleken?
43 years (August 18, 1978)
Alexander van Tulleken/Age
What nationality is Xand van Tulleken?
British
Alexander van Tulleken/Nationality
Who is older Chris or XAND?
Xand is the older of the identical twins and is half an inch shorter than Chris – both were born on August 18, 1978. The Oxford-educated 40-year-old currently works as the Helen Hamlyn Senior Fellow at Fordham University’s Institute of International Humanitarian Affairs.
What age is Dr Xand?
What does Dr Chris van Tulleken do?
Chris is an infectious diseases doctor and MRC Clinical Research Fellow at University College London Hospital. Here he combines research into the molecular biology of HIV with seeing patients.
What does Dr Xand Specialise in?
Dr Xand’s main interests and expertise lie in Public Health, Medicine, Humanitarian Aid and Anthropology and is one of the BBC’s leading science presenters having worked on many flagship Health & Science programmes.
Are Chris and Xand twins?
Genetically, Xand and Chris van Tulleken are clones. Yet the 42-year-old twins do not look identical, because Xand is more than 30 pounds heavier than Chris.
Is Xand van Tulleken a twin?
Genetically, Xand and Chris van Tulleken are clones. Yet the 42-year-old twins do not look identical, because Xand is more than 30 pounds heavier than Chris. That is the biggest weight difference recorded in the long-running twin study at King’s College London.