3 Women & Infants' Doctors Awarded $25K Grants for Women's Health Innovation

GoLocalProv News Team

3 Women & Infants' Doctors Awarded $25K Grants for Women's Health Innovation

Women & Infants researchers Valery Danilack, MPH, PhD
Women & Infants Hospital has awarded three $25,000 grants from the Constance A. Howes Women’s Health Innovation Research Fund.

Awardees are Women & Infants researchers Valery Danilack, MPH, PhD, research associate in the Division of Research, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology; Paul DiSilvestro, MD, director of the Division of Gynecologic Oncology in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology; and Niharika Mehta, MD, obstetric internist in the Center for Obstetric and Consultative Medicine.

The Grant Recipients

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The team from Dr. Danilack’s proposal, “A Qualitative Study of Experiences and Preferences with Labor Induction,” will conduct qualitative interviews of patients and providers to elucidate their experiences and preferences in regard to the labor induction process.

Dr. DiSilvestro’s grant will allow him to continue his work, “miRNA Biomarkers for Early Detection of Ovarian Cancer.” MicroRNAs (miRNAs) represent a breakthrough in both early detection and targeted treatment in epithelial ovarian cancer, the leading cause of mortality among all gynecologic malignancies.

Dr. Mehta will work with co-primary investigator Isabelle Malhame, MD, obstetric medicine fellow.  Their project, “A Risk Assessment Tool for Cardiovascular Severe Maternal Morbidity,” aims to develop a risk assessment tool that will allow clinicians to identify those women at highest risk of developing cardiovascular severe maternal morbidity during pregnancy and after delivery.

Selecting the Grants

The three awardees, selected from a pool of applicants, presented their projects to a Donor Advisory Committee at Women & Infants. The proposals were scored based on the projects’ relevance to women’s health and gender-based research, the potential for advancing knowledge and care models related to women’s health, innovation and creativity, team strength and synergy, and plan and potential for research support from external sponsors.

The overall merit of the research projects was evaluated by a Scientific Advisory Committee and were peer-reviewed and scored. Finalists then made a presentation to the Donor Advisory Committee.

“The Committee had intended to award two projects, but was so impressed by the innovation and promise of all three projects that donors Anne and Michael Szostak stepped up with a significant gift to ensure that all three projects could be funded this year. Thank you to the Szostaks and to all of the donors to the Constance A. Howes Fund,” said Susan Mouradian, chief philanthropy officer at Care New England.


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