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LEADER: Giudice founded her dream
program.
Linda Cicero
|
on any given day, Linda
Giudice has more tasks on her desk than titles on her business
card.
The professor of gynecology and obstetrics at the School
of Medicine and chief of the reproductive endocrinology
and
infertility division could be working on a presentation
to first-year medical students about a new concentration
in women’s
health. She has deadlines to meet across Campus Drive
for a women’s health seminar series in the human
biology program. There are adolescent health conferences
and an infertility
lab to run. And in her spare time, Giudice, MD ’82,
directs the Center for Research on Women’s Health and
Reproductive Medicine.
Two years ago, Giudice also became
founding director,
with executive director Ellen Lovelace, of Women’s
Health @ Stanford (WH@S), an umbrella program in the
ob/gyn department. “It’s
always been in the back of my head, or perhaps I should
say at the bottom of my heart and soul, how important
it is to
be able to put everything about women’s health issues
under one roof,” she says. “I really wanted
a program that would encompass research, education,
health care and advocacy.”
WH@S aims to provide comprehensive
health services for women. Many of the 2,000 women
who have taken part
in
the education arm of the program, by attending talks
about hormone-replacement
therapy or going to a Saturday morning conference on
transforming stress into wellness, are patients of
Stanford physicians.
Other community members have donated funds to send
gynecological surgeons to the East African nation of
Eritrea to assist
women injured in childbirth.
Undergraduates, graduate
students, postdocs, residents and fellows benefit from
the many research opportunities
WH@S offers. Medical students who decide to concentrate
in women’s
health issues, for example, will explore the relatively
new field of sex-based biology and medicine that
emerged from a
2001 report by the Institute of Medicine of the National
Academy of Sciences. It found that the genetic sex
of a cell—i.e.,
whether it is XX or XY—influences disease susceptibility
and should be considered in determining appropriate
treatment for women and men.
The clinical arm of
the program is still evolving, and Giudice anticipates
that the Women’s Health Center—where
physicians will provide specialty care for women—will
be funded and built in “the near future.” But
the WH@S umbrella is already providing quite a lot
of shelter.
On the third Wednesday of every month, Giudice and
dozens of Stanford trainees, faculty and staff in
the program’s
health-journal club gather in the GYN conference
room to talk about recently published articles on
such topics as mammography,
HIV infection, imaging techniques and health issues
of female veterans. “We’re looking for another
place to meet,” Giudice
adds. “There are far more attendees than we can
squeeze into one room.”
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