This January, SWHR hosted a roundtable meeting to better understand the impact of menopause on women’s health in the workplace and discuss how health care providers, employers, and coworkers can better support women who are working throughout their menopause transition.
SWHR issued the following statement in response to the release of the Executive Order regarding the administration’s Workforce Optimization Initiative and the mass layoffs of employees across the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services on February 14, 2025.
SWHR will recognize Kim Love and Teresa Woodruff, PhD for their commitments to improving women’s health at this year’s event.
SWHR is proud to celebrate 35 years since its incorporation and the Society’s remarkable 35-year history of groundbreaking advocacy and advancement in women’s health.
Understanding the critical intersection between Alzheimer’s disease and women’s health, SWHR convened a roundtable of interdisciplinary experts. This discussion expanded on SWHR’s decades-long work in brain health.
Ever since my late teens, I had irregular and painful periods. I didn't know this was unusual.
SWHR is pleased to introduce its first Women’s Health Research Agenda, published in the Journal of Women’s Health this January.
SWHR has recapped here key federal policy changes since the beginning of the year that may impact women’s health research.
Women’s Health Research Day is celebrated on January 25 each year to mark the anniversary of the implementation of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Policy on Sex as a Biological Variable (SABV) in 2016.
SWHR is pleased to welcome Kim Love and Tamara Day Shriver to its Board of Directors in 2025. These two women will bring unique personal and professional insights to SWHR’s current Board.