| Bradley Stoner’s work on psychosocial dimensions of chlamydia emphasizes the substantial burden of sexually transmitted diseases that are borne by women, and the differential impact of STDs by gender. | Lewis Wall is a board-certified obstetrician-gynecologist and professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Washington University's School of Medicine. He is interested in reproductive health issues in the developing world, particularly in Africa, and has worked on a number of clinical projects involving maternal birth trauma and obstetric fistulas in impoverished countries. | Shanti Parikh studies HIV in Uganda, a country regularly touted as the world’s success story. She studies how communities respond to the epidemic, and how the spread of the virus and access to care and support are shaped by gender, poverty/wealth, mobility, and other structural inequalities. Her current project examines the social impact of antiretroviral therapy in Uganda. She is also co-PI on the National HIV Behavioral Surveillance (NHBS) system for Saint Louis." | Priscilla Song has conducted research on assisted reproductive technologies in the context of population control and increasing health disparities in urban China. She has examined the fraught encounters between reproductive endocrinologists and families struggling with infertility. |