Information and web suggestions contact : Florence Haseltine, PhD, MD
Women' Reproductive Health Research Centers and the Building Interdisciplinary Research Centers in Women's Health that are based in OB/GYN Departments
Seattle, WA 98195-6460
WA
WA
Full Prof
eschen@u.washington.edu
Susan Reed, M.D., M.P.H.
Associate Professor
Division of Women’s Health, Harborview Medical Center
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
University of Washington School of Medicine
Box 359865
Seattle, Washington 98195
Tel: 206-731-3319, ext 2
Fax: 206-731-5249
E-mail: reeds@u.washington.edu
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Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Nancy J Brown, MD
Professor
23rd Ave S @ Pierce Ave, 550 RRB
Nashville, TN 37232-6602
(615) 343-8701
(615) 343-8701
Full Prof
nancy.j.brown@vanderbilt.edu
Dr. Katherine E. Hartmann MD,PhD
Deputy Director, Institute for Medicine and Public Health
Vice Chair for Research, Obstetrics & Gynecology
Director, Women's Health Research at Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
1215 Twenty-First Avenue South
Suite 6000 Medical Center East, North Tower
Nashville , TN 37232-8300
615-936-1010
khartman@med.unc.edu
Michael Diamond, M.D. (PD)
Associate Chair
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Wayne State University
3750 Woodward Avenue
Suite 200-D
Detroit, Michigan 48201
Tel: (313) 993-4523
Fax: (313) 993-4534
E-mail: mdiamond@med.wayne.edu
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Yale University School of Medicine
Charles J. Lockwood, MD
Professor and Chair
Department of OB GYN
333 Cedar Street
P.O. Box 208063
New Haven, CT 06520-8063
CT
CT
Maternal Fetal Full Prof
chairobgyn@yale.edu
Richard Hochberg Ph.D. (PD)
Professor & Associate Chairman of Research Affairs
Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, & Reproductive Sciences
Yale University School of Medicine
333 Cedar Street
New Haven, Connecticut 06520
Tel: 203-785-4001
Fax: 203-785-7819
E-mail: richard.hochberg@yale.edu
I am frequently asked to give the names of bright individuals for academic positions in Obstetrics and Gynecologic Departments. I am pleased to be asked, but I often do not have updated CV's, emails, or everything the requesters desires.Therefore, I have created a Web Page that helps to address a few of these problems. I will start with people who receive NIH grants and have been identified as being in Obstetrics and Gynecology. The list has both men and women and is searchable by gender. I am culling the names from NIH, names I have been given and other resources at Academic Sites including a list that was given to me by Gerson Weiss that was compiled for ACOG.
This page is only meant to be a guide and it has no intention of being complete. I will appreciate changes and corrections to it and they can be emailed to me. The CV's that can be downloaded from this site were provided by the individual researchers themselves. The information that is on the page is either found in the public domain or provided by the user. To determine the board certification and eligibility of each of these individuals you will need to look at their CV or contact them. I will not be vetting any of these people but would appreciate any comments you may have.
PURPOSE OF THE REPRODUCTIVE SCIENTIST DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
The immediate objectives of the Reproductive Scientist Development Program are:
1. to increase the awareness and attractiveness of a career in investigative obstetrics and gynecology;
2. to facilitate the research career development of obstetricians-gynecologists in approaches and techniques of contemporary biology; and
3. to foster the productivity of scholars by guaranteeing their placement as faculty members in medical school departments.
These objectives lead to the overall goals:
1. to strengthen the field of obstetrics and gynecology for all those professionals involved, whether their own emphasis is on patient care or research
2. to improve health knowledge and care for all women
Abstract:
This is a competitive renewal application for continued support of a postdoctoral research career development program for obstetrician-gynecologists. It is sponsored jointly by the NIH/NICHD, four professional organizations, and three pharmaceutical corporations. The objective of this program is to educate obstetrician-gynecologists in basic science research and to help prepare them for careers in academic medicine. This goal is to help ensure that academic obstetrics and gynecology fulfills its mission to increase research and understanding in the reproductive sciences. Ph.D. and M.D. scientists with broad-based research experience will serve as the core faculty.
This Program is administered by an ad hoc Executive Committee consisting of academic faculty and appointees from the following organizations: the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American Fertility Society, the American Gynecological and Obstetrical Society, the Association of Professors of Gynecology and Obstetrics, the Society for Gynecologic Investigation, Berlex Foundation, Ethicon, Inc., and GynoPharma, Inc., in conjunction with the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
A unique feature of this Program is that outstanding individuals, upon completion of their residency, and usually two years of clinical sub specialty fellowship, spend two years in basic research training in cell and/or molecular biology (Phase I), and an additional three-year period establishing their research program in a Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology (Phase II). The laboratory, identified as providing an outstanding environment for basic research training,is selected by the candidate with advice and approval of the Executive Committee. During Phase I of the Program, the awardees devote themselves to full time research. Following this two years of basic science research, the awardee spends three years as a junior faculty member in a Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology with at least 75% time free for research under an identified preceptor. This Phase II period is funded by the sponsoring department. Upon the completion of this program, the candidate is expected to enter a productive investigative career, and to continue to devote a majority of his/her time to research. In such a position one should be competitive for starter research grants. This Program may serve as a model to educate increased numbers of reproductive scientists for academic medicine and Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
The Center for Population Research (CPR) of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), announces the availability of educational loan repayment under the NICHD Contraception and Infertility Research Loan Repayment Program ("CIR-LRP" or the "Program"). The CIR-LRP, which is authorized by Section 487B of the Public Health Service (PHS) Act (42 U.S.C. 288-2) as added by the NIH Revitalization Act of 1993 (Pub. L. 103-43), provides for the repayment of the educational loan debt of qualified health professionals (including graduate students) who agree to commit to a period of obligated service of not less than two years conducting research with respect to contraception and/or Infertility.
The CIR-LRP will pay up to $35,000 of the principal and interest of such individual's educational loans for each year of obligated service. In addition to the loan repayments, the CIR-LRP will pay participants an amount equal to 39 percent of the total amount of the loan repayments made for the taxable year in order to provide reimbursement for tax liability caused by the Program's loan repayments. The purpose of the CIR-LRP is the recruitment and retention of highly qualified health professionals conducting contraception and/or infertility research.
Center for Population Research
Office:301-496-1101, Fax: 301-496-0962
email: FHaseltine@NIH.GOV