Caring for Women During COVID-19: Telehealth
NPWH's webinar will discuss different ways telehealth is being implemented, the benefits and challenges, and provide tips for must-watch situations in the rapidly changing policy landscape.
NPWH's webinar will discuss different ways telehealth is being implemented, the benefits and challenges, and provide tips for must-watch situations in the rapidly changing policy landscape.
The NIH's Understudied, Underrepresented, and Underreported (U3) Women’s Health Webinar will focus on improving chronic disease outcomes through approaches that address social determinants of health.
Virtual care and digital health tools are soaring in popularity amid the Covid-19 pandemic. What are the potential challenges — and what elements of the shift to virtual care will stick in a post-pandemic world?
The Office of Research on Women's Health hosts a Facebook Live Q&A that will explore the topic of leadership among women in STEMM careers.
The COVID-19 pandemic provided a stark reality check regarding inequities and disparities in health outcomes. NPWH's webinar will discuss the impact of this pandemic on health equity.
On Tuesday, September 1, 2020, at 1:00 p.m. ET, ORWH will host an hour-long webinar titled “Incorporating a Sex-and-Gender Lens from Bench to Bedside: Neurology,” featuring speaker Farida Sohrabji, Ph.D.
In this webinar from Johns Hopkins, attendees will hear about current clinical trials to alter the course of Alzheimer's Disease as well as early symptoms and the course of the disease.
This webinar from the HHS Office of Minority Health (OMH) will feature national, state, tribal and local experts leading COVID-19 relief efforts and is developed for public health leaders and community organizations.
As the pandemic rages on, society needs accurate information fast in order to generate a vaccine. But can researchers provide it? Join STAT for a discussion that seeks to answer this question.
Women's Health Research at Yale hosts a lively discussion of how science drives discovery, how studying the biology and social experience of women makes it better, and how better science leads to better lives.