

She has studied sexual and reproductive help with the focus on health equity and racial,Īfter graduate school, she was called to global health work. Violence and family violence against children while working with a state-wide steeringĬommittee to prevent sexual and domestic violence in North Carolina. Her master’sĭegree focused on gender-based violence prevention, intimate partner violence, sexual Her Master of Public Health at the University of North Carolina in 2008. Mosley started studying sexual and reproductive health inequities when she began pursuing Mosley spoke to Michigan Public Health about the repercussions this landmark decision (RISE) at Emory University Rollins School of Public Health.

She also is an affiliate faculty member with Emory University in AtlantaĪs well as a researcher at the Center for Reproductive Health Research in the Southeast Studies, is an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh School

Health in Health Behavior and Health Education, specializing in Gender and Population The decision turned back the clock on women’s reproductive rightsĮlizabeth Mosley, who earned a PhD from the University of Michigan School of Public Wade on June 24, eliminating the constitutional
