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Women in Medicine

WOMEN IN MEDICINE SECTION

The number of women in medicine is steadily rising and in 2019, more women than men enrolled in medical school. MSDC's Women in Medicine Section is physician-led and is dedicated to addressing the needs of women in medicine. The Section is open to all members.
Purpose: to increase the number and influence of women physicians in leadership roles both within the greater District of Columbia medical community and MSDC; provide a networking and mentoring forum for women physicians; and discuss issues important to women physicians, i.e. women’s health.

Programs and Activities: Since its inception, the Women in Medicine Section has hosted a wide range of in-person and virtual events to further its cause. Highlights of the section's innovative programming include but are not limited to a workshop on work-life boundaries, imposter syndrome and the impact of COVID-19 on women in academic medicine, and a tour of a woman-owned distillery. 

If you would like to get involved in the Women in Medicine Section, sign up here.   

 

Member's Only WIM Content

If you cannot see the below videos and you are an MSDC member, please log-in. Not an MSDC member? Learn how to join!

 

MSDC WIM collage

Women in Medicine Events

 

Smoke-Air-Pollution-Air-Sun-Smog-Sunset-Pollution

Climate Change & Sustainability: Your Health and the Healthcare Industry

Hosted by the Women In Medicine Section

This event is over. View the VIDEO RECORDING and DR TUMMALA'S PRESENTATION

As smoke from California wildfires is blanketing the United States and pollution levels near pre-pandemic levels worldwide, we see the impact of climate change.  Climate change and sustainability are a public health crisis with a powerful impact on patient health - and physicians' ability to help their patients cope with the public health consequences.

A physician can prescribe an inhaler to treat disease stemming from environmental damage, but there is no prescription for clean air or water.  

Air pollution is a public health crisis - it is responsible for seven million premature deathsAir-pollution-INFOGRAPHICS-English-1-250px worldwide, according to the World Health Organization. The impact on children is also dire. In 2015, reducing environmental risks could have prevented more than a quarter of the 5.9 million deaths of children under 5 years.

Learn how climate change has affected allergies and the extent to which air pollution affects our health. This webinar will also dig into the broader impact that climate and sustainability play on the healthcare industry. 


  
PRESENTERS 

NeeluTummala

NEELU TUMMALA, MD, MA 
Dr. Neelu Tummala is a board-certified physician who joined the Division of Otolaryngology of The GW Medical Faculty Associates in October 2018. She was raised in Atlanta, GA and attended Case Western Reserve University, where she earned her B.A. in Nutritional Biochemistry with a minor in Spanish, and a M.S. in Nutrition.

Dr. Tummala earned her MD from Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. She completed her residency training in Otolaryngology- Head and Neck Surgery at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston Salem, NC. She is a Clinical Assistant Professor of Surgery at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences. Her area of clinical expertise is general otolaryngology (ENT) including sinus and nasal disorders, ear disease, and voice and swallowing concerns.

Dr. Tummala has a special interest in the effects of climate change on population health and has been actively involved with research, writing, and medical education on this issue. She is on the Steering Committee for Virginia Clinicians for Climate Action and is a trained Climate Reality Leader. She has worked with the American Lung Association, Union of Concerned Scientists, The Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health, and Environment Virginia as a volunteer activist and educator.


Malik-AnjaliANJALI MALIK, MD
Dr. Anjali Malik is a breast imaging and intervention radiologist at Washington Radiology, where she sees patients across 7 locations in the DMV region. She interprets multiple modalities of radiologic imaging, detects and diagnoses breast and thyroid cancer, and works closely with physicians across multiple specialties to offer the best care for her patients. She actively advocates for women’s and public health both on Capitol Hill and within the community. She serves of the Medical Advisory Committee for Bright Pink, a national non-profit through which Dr. Malik educates young women and their providers on breast and ovarian cancer risk identification, stratification, reduction and management. Her work with the Society of Breast Imaging spreads the message regarding the importance of annual screening mammography.

As a writer and speaker, she discusses a range of topics from women's health to the utilization of social media for advocacy, radiology’s role in healthcare to technological advances in imaging. She has been featured on numerous television, digital and podcast media outlets. You can find her on Instagram @AnjaliMalikMD and Twitter @AnjaliMalikMD.



Co-Chairs
Ida Bergstrom, MD
Marwah Tareen, MD

Resident Co-Chair:
Monika Masanam, MD

 

MSDC's Current Women Physician Leaders
Dr. Susanne Bathgate (Immediate Past President)
Dr. Kirstiaan Nevin (At-Large Board Member)  
Dr. J. Desiree Pineda (Board Chair)
Dr. Ida Bergstrom (At-Large Board Member)