Minding the women's health gap
Minding the women's health gap
Women’s health is underserved, underfunded, and under-researched. Warwick wants to change this.
From building pipelines of talented researchers to transforming lab breakthroughs into clinical applications that help women today. Closing the health gap wouldn’t just improve the lives of women. It’s estimated it would boost the global economy by $1 trillion annually.
Find out why the health gap matters to us all, and how Warwick will make a difference in our webinar below.
Video
Audio version
You can read more about the Women’s Health Mission, Centre for Early Life, and the For HER (For Health Equity Restitution) project. If you're interested, you can also take a look at our recent reportLink opens in a new window on Women’s Reproductive Health in the West Midlands that was mentioned in the webinar. Stay connected to Warwick and keep an eye out for more webinars where we hope to discuss certain issues in more depth.
Host
Rachel Sandby-Thomas CB
Registrar, University of Warwick
Rachel is responsible for the professional services of the University under the direction of the Vice-Chancellor. She has a wealth of experience from her roles as shadow CEO of the UK Government’s Institute for Apprenticeships, and Director General in the Department of Business, Innovation and Skills. In 2012, she was made a Companion of the Order of the Bath and named in The Times 100 “Most Influential Lawyers”. In 2016, she was named one of the FTSE 100 “Women to Watch”.
Speakers
Eku (Georgina) Edewor Thorley
Actress, television presenter, model, and film producer; BA English & Theatre Studies, 2008
Eku is a Nigerian-British actress, award-winning film producer, presenter, and model. Her feature Breath of Life, produced for Prime Video, ranked among the platforms top ten films across Africa, the UK, and the US, and it won Best Film at AMVCA 2024. Her onscreen journey began with Britain’s Next Top Model, and she has since become one of Africa’s most recognisable faces, renowned for Africa Magic’s flagship programme 53 Extra, EbonyLife’s Castle & Castle, and numerous other projects. Beyond the screen, Eku is passionate about women’s health globally, health inequalities in Africa specifically, and will share her recent health challenges in the webinar.
Professor Erin Greaves
Professor at Warwick Medical School, Director of the Centre for Early Life and Co-Lead for the Institute of Translational Medicine Women’s Health Mission
Erin is a scientist focused on understanding the role of the immune system in endometriosis. Her goal is to discover how the disease develops and persists, in order to identify new, non-invasive ways to diagnose endometriosis and develop non-hormonal treatments. She leads research that bridges discovery and translational science, aiming to improve the lives of those affected by endometriosis.
Professor Andrew McAinsh
Deputy Dean and Pro Dean (Research) of Warwick Medical School, and Academic Lead for the Warwick Institute for Translational Medicine
Andrew’s research is focused on understanding the intracellular machinery that ensures chromosomes are segregated correctly during cell divisions. Andrew is currently exploring how this process goes wrong in human eggs and embryos – events that can lead to infertility and pregnancy loss.