What is it about?
I, Dr. Saumya Pandey, feel overwhelmed and at the same time highly enthusiastic in explaining the key points/highlights of my publication in the leading international journal in women's health research. I have been deeply connected with women of varying genetic landscapes and socioeconomic strata in my comprehensive medical research experience spanning both USA and my homecountry India; addressing miscarriage and reproductive disorders/malignancies including HPV-mediated cervical cancer, infertility and abortions , is limited by various ethical and social constraints, and in this context I strongly believe that adhering to core tenets of good practice research in women-centric research including the miscarriage research in pregnant women, is highly important. I have provided research insights in interpreting complex patient-centric data sets in a hospital based setting in UK. The strong public health impact of my successful publication warrants future research in the miscarriage field with a pooled large multicentric study approach so as to have an eventual cost-effective health policy and research management model in the obstetrics-gynecology/female urology field. Clinically validated predictive biomarkers for stratifying susceptible women is indeed essential and my future research goals include gene-epidemiology-based pharmacogenetic research in reproductive immunology so as to effectively reduce the increasing burden of reproductive malignancies and/or disorders in diverse populations including North American and Asian Indian females of child-bearing age!
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Why is it important?
The success and public health essence of my publication can be gauged by the fact that miscarriage has recently emerged as a leading cause of pyschosocial distress amongst women worldwide; therefore, as an established global researcher in reproductive immunology, women's health research and urogynacology/oncology, I personally as well as professionally would coax and urge the general public as well as the scientific community to initiate quality patient-friendly research on similar lines so as to comprehensively decipher the intricacies involved in women-centric research.
Perspectives
My personal perspective regarding my published article: being a female of Asian Indian North Indian Brahmin ethnicity (surname: Pandey) with an enviable global medical research exposure in States of New York, Texas and Nebraska in USA and Lucknow/Udaipur, India, I feel that my successful research contribution strongly adds to the ever-expanding knowledge-pool of reproductive medicine and urologic/obstetric-gynecology research in contemporary times. There is an urgent need to organize one to one patient-friendly counseling sessions at each stage of pregnancy to increase awareness about lifestyle-related risk factors including tobacco usage, HPV/Chlamydia infection positivity etc. amongst women of ethnically disparate genetic profiles so as to diminish any perceived social stigma and/or pyschosocil distress associated with miscarriage. DR. SAUMYA PANDEY PH.D. DRSAUMYAPANDEY11@GMAIL.COM Lucknow, India December 27, 2018.
DR. SAUMYA PANDEY
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Re: Caesarean scar pregnancy in the UK: a national cohort study, BJOG An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, July 2018, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1111/1471-0528.15324.
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