Jessica Quistorff has long felt drawn to improving the health of women.
Her mother, a former Emergency Department nurse at St. Barnabas Hospital in Livingston, N.J., and health manager of the Head Start program at a public school district in Connecticut, demonstrated the value of taking care of others.
“She instilled that in us,” Quistorff said of herself and her two siblings. “I knew I wanted to help the community in some way.”
As Women’s Health Research at Yale’s new Senior Program Manager, Quistorff embraces the opportunity to help change medical research and care to better address the needs of women and explore sex-and-gender differences between and among women and men.
“With so much uncertainty around the world and so many elevated risks in particular concerning the health of women, I am tremendously excited to be here,” she said. “I’m eager to contribute my skills and knowledge to the improvement of health and well-being of others.”
Quistorff comes to WHRY from Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C., where she most recently managed the Developing Brain Institute Clinical Research Program. At the outset of the pandemic, she led efforts to enable staff to work from home and launch Project RESCUE, a study that deploys brain imaging to identify how maternal stress from COVID-19 could affect how a baby’s brain develops during pregnancy and after birth.
The women who volunteered for the study inspired Quistorff.
“Women are tough,” she said. “They enthusiastically left their homes to participate because they understood the value of this research to show us how we can improve mental health resiliency and give children the best possible foundation for health and happiness.”