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Paula Johnson

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Paula Johnson Paula Johnson We need a better understanding of the differences

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H. Kim BottomlyDiana Chapman WalshNannerl O. Keohane

Full Name
  
Paula Adina Johnson

Alma mater
  
Radcliffe College at Harvard UniversityHarvard Medical SchoolHarvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

Profession
  
Cardiologist, Professor

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New wellesley president paula johnson s appointment remarks


Paula Adina Johnson (born 1959) is the 14th president of Wellesley College and the first African American to serve in this role. President Johnson is an internationally recognized leader with a broad range of experience as a researcher, educator, and expert in women's health care, public health and health policy.

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Before coming to Wellesley, Johnson founded and served as the inaugural executive director of the Mary Horrigan Connors Center for Women's Health & Gender Biology, as well as Chief of the Division of Women's Health at Brigham and Women's Hospital.

Paula Johnson Changing the Face of Medicine Paula A Johnson

A cardiologist, Johnson was the Grace A. Young Family Professor Medicine in the field of women's health, an endowed professorship named in honor of her mother, at Harvard Medical School. She was also Professor of Epidemiology at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Johnson was elected to the National Academy of Medicine, formerly the Institute of Medicine (IOM) and has been featured as a national leader in medicine by the National Library of Medicine.

Paula Johnson Students Interview Wellesley39s New President Dr Paula Johnson YouTube

Her 2013 Ted talk, "His and Her Healthcare," was named one of the "Top 10 TED Talks by Women to be Viewed by Everyone". Johnson was one of the first researchers in her field to identify the need for consideration of sex differences in medical treatment, and has been a significant voice in raising awareness of the importance of sex differences in understanding women's health.

Childhood

Johnson was born and raised in New York. She spoke to WGBH about her childhood. "I was very fortunate growing up in Brooklyn. I have one sister, and from a very early age my mother focused on us not only being well-educated, but also thinking independently. I think that gave me the latitude to think differently about my college education. I went to Harvard Radcliffe, which allowed me to really have my first introduction to women's health." Separately, she said the best piece of advice her mom gave her was to "find your voice and not let failure knock you down." Johnson and her husband have a son and a daughter and two Havanese puppies. The family resides in Wellesley, MA.

Education

Johnson attended Harvard and Radcliffe Colleges, received her MD and MPH degrees from Harvard, and trained in internal medicine and cardiovascular medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital.

Career

After graduating, Johnson began her residency at Brigham and Women's Hospital and decided to specialize in cardiology. In 1990, she became the first woman and first African American ever to hold the position of chief medical resident at the hospital.

Johnson worked in the hospital's cardiac transplant unit and served as director of Quality Management Services. As chief of the Division of Women's Health, she focused on women's access to cardiology care and the quality of that care. Johnson has also focused much of her work on educating and empowering African-American women, who are 50 percent more likely to die of cardiovascular disease than white women.

Johnson has been an important voice in making the case that men and women differ at the cellular level. Because of cellular differences, a number of diseases manifest differently in men and women. This has important implications for research, treatment, and patient care. Johnson was the lead author on ”Sex-Specific Medical Research: Why Women’s Health Can’t Wait,” (2014) from the Mary Horrigan Connors Center for Women’s Health & Gender Biology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

"... men and women experience illness differently and this report looks closely at four diseases where this is especially true: cardiovascular disease, lung cancer, depression and Alzheimer’s disease. The past two decades have shown not only that sex differences exist, but have produced scientific advancements that enhance our ability to discover why they occur and how we might adapt prevention, detection and treatment strategies for the benefit of women and men alike. Therefore, to ignore these differences challenges the quality and integrity of science and medicine."

Traditionally, research studies and clinical trials of drugs and other treatments have tested men, not women. The lack of testing on women, combined with sex differences, has meant that women are much more likely to be negatively effected by side effects and differences in response to dosages when drugs are released to market. The National Institutes of Health Revitalization Act, passed in 1993, required that women and minorities must be represented in any research funded by the NIH. The resulting twenty years of research have supported the idea that significant sex differences occur in some diseases.

Johnson argues further that men and women should be tested in separate research trials. Combining data from men and women as if they were a single population may yield results that are applicable to neither sex. For example, research has resulted in recommendations that women take doses of the sleeping pill Ambien that are half the dosage recommended for men. As a result of the work of Johnson and others, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) issued new regulations in 2014, requiring that preclinical research address issues of sex and gender inclusion, to "ensure that the health of the United States is being served by supporting science that meets the highest standards of rigour."

References

Paula Johnson Wikipedia