Amanda Henry

About Professor Amanda Henry

Program Head, Women’s Health, Australia

  • Professor, Discipline of Women’s Health, School of Clinical Medicine, UNSW Medicine and Health
  • Obstetrician, St George Public Hospital, Sydney
  • PhD,
  • MPH,
  • FRANZCOG,
  • B.Med.(Hons),
  • B.Med.Sci(Hons),
  • DDU (Obstetrics and Gynaecology)

Amanda Henry is Program Head, Women’s Health at The George Institute for Global Health and Professor of Obstetrics in the Discipline of Women’s Health, School of Clinical Medicine, UNSW Medicine and Health. Her professional background is as a Clinical Academic and Obstetrician, with a clinical practice focussed on high-risk pregnancy at St George Hospital, Sydney.

Her research focus, including her current NSW Health Early-Mid Career Cardiovascular Fellowship, is on how pregnancy complications, particularly hypertensive disorders of pregnancy and gestational diabetes, can affect women’s lifelong health.  She leads a program of work on early intervention and improving systems of care to advance long-term cardiovascular health outcomes for women after a hypertensive pregnancy. Amanda is also an active researcher and research supervisor in the areas of high-risk pregnancy and pregnancy/postpartum clinical trials, and teaches pregnancy care to both undergraduate and postgraduate students. Amanda has a strong emphasis on collaborative research projects to drive improvements in Women’s Health, and in addition to her role with the George Institute, researches collaboratively with medical, midwifery and Allied Health colleagues, as well as consumer and community partners, both locally and nationally. She also promotes Women’s Health research translation into guidelines, policy and practice through her professional society roles, including as Councillor for the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and the Society of Obstetric Medicine of Australia and New Zealand. 

 

Adverse cardiometabolic profile of women 6 months and 2 years after gestational hypertension

Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism Date published:

Cumulative live birth rates in women with endometriosis undergoing ART treatment

Human Reproduction Date published:

Sex-Related Differences in CKD Monitoring and Cardiovascular Risk Management in Australian Primary Care: A Retrospective Cohort Study

Journal of the American Society of Nephrology Date published:

Risk factors for maternal pyrexia, infection and sepsis in four hospitals providing maternity care in New South Wales, Australia: a cohort study

Frontiers in Global Women's Health Date published:

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