WNY Women’s Foundation Hosts What She’s Made Of May 22


Evening will be highlighted by an interactive and thoughtful discussion featuring women in medicine 

Buffalo, N.Y. – The WNY Women’s Foundation will present What She’s Made Of 2023 on May 22 at Highmark Stadium, with 350 guests anticipated. What She’s Made Of will create an opportunity for people to come together in support of uplifting the women in our community, and provide a chance to learn from three inspiring women in medicine about the impact of health disparities in our region. What She’s Made Of is made possible by presenting sponsor, M&T Bank, event sponsors, the Buffalo Bills and Delaware North, and many corporate supporters.

“Your Health, Your Community, and YOU!” represents this year’s theme, as What She’s Made Of will highlight the many ways we can work together to promote a healthy community, address health disparities, and raise awareness to improve outcomes. 

 

“The WNY Women’s Foundation plays important roles in advancing women’s economic empowerment and women’s leadership through our advocacy work and raising our voice to effect change,” explains Sheri Scavone, CEO of the WNY Women’s Foundation. “Our annual, signature event will offer a space to network and discuss important topics related to community health and personal health, with attendees leaving inspired with a personal call to action.” 

 

Guest speakers include: 

 

  • Kenyani Davis, MD, MPH, Chief Medical Officer at the Community Health Center of Buffalo, Inc.

Dr. Davis researches and talks about how health inequity both contributes to and is amplified by racial and socioeconomic disparities in Buffalo. She often discusses Buffalo’s need for a coordinated plan with accountability, follow up, and resources in order to truly address these inequities.

  • Jennifer Roberts, DrPH, MPH, Associate Professor at Physical Cultural Studies Research Group; Founding Executive Director at Wekesa Earth Center; Director of Public Health Outcomes and Effects of the Build Environment Laboratory; and Department of Kinesiology in the School of Public Health at University of Maryland

A scholar, historian, and activist, Dr. Roberts draws on history to understand and dismantle the health disparities and social and environmental injustices that marginalized populations and communities of color endured generationally and endure presently. A native of Buffalo, Dr. Roberts graduated from Buffalo Seminary.

 

  • Myra Lynette Mathis, MD, Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatry, Addiction Psychiatry at the University of Rochester Medical Center

Dr. Mathis is currently the Medical Director for Strong Recovery, UR Medicine’s outpatient dual-diagnosis clinic, which houses an Opioid Treatment Program and provides a full range of addiction and psychiatric services. As a contributing author to several peer-reviewed articles and book chapters, Dr. Mathis’ academic interests include racial health equity and social justice in psychiatry and addiction, and medical education for students, residents, and fellows in the treatment of substance use disorders.

 

Allison Brashear, MD, MBA will introduce the panelists. Dr. Brashear is an internationally recognized neurologist, accomplished researcher and health science administrator. She was appointed vice president for health sciences at the University at Buffalo and dean of the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences in December 2021.

 

As a nod to the Highmark Stadium venue, attendees are encouraged to wear cocktail attire, paired with their favorite sneakers. 

 

“As the leading advocate in tackling issues women struggle with – such as child care, pay equity, professional advancement, and more – the WNY Women’s Foundation’s work is more urgent than ever,” says Scavone. “We’re incredibly grateful to our speakers, our sponsors and to our community for their support of this important event for our organization.”

General Admission Ticket: $150 per guest. Red Carpet Ticket: $500 per guest (includes networking & cocktails, speaker presentation, exclusive locker room tour & on-field experience, name listed in E-Program, and after party). To purchase tickets, sponsorships, and program ads, call 716-249-6522 or visit www.wnywomensfoundation.org.

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Trump’s blunders ‘raise the risk of global conflict’ as enemies ‘gang up’: analyst



After a series of diplomatic blunders, President Donald Trump and America's reputation loss could "raise the risk of global conflict" and come at a major cost, including "mischief or worse" from enemies.

In an opinion piece published Monday, Bloomberg columnist Andreas Kluth describes how a good reputation can be difficult to obtain or maintain, and Trump "has squandered whatever credibility America had left in foreign and security policy."

Following his rambling speech last week in front of the United Nations and his struggle to see the difference between "personal chemistry" with President Vladimir Putin and diplomatic action, Trump has effectively put both adversaries and allies on edge, wrote Kluth.

"Inklings of danger are everywhere," Kluth writes. "America’s partners are becoming more anxious and making alternative arrangements for their security: Saudi Arabia just signed a defensive pact with Pakistan after watching an Israeli strike against its Gulf neighbor Qatar, which is allied to, but got no help from, the United States. America’s adversaries keep testing the resolve of Trump and the West, as Putin is doing in eastern Europe. Or, like Xi Jinping in Beijing and Kim in Pyongyang, they’re recalculating bellicose scenarios in secret. Other countries, like India, are wary of committing to America and keeping all options open, even clutching hands with Moscow and Beijing."

And although Trump is not the first president to struggle with navigating U.S. reputation among foreign nations, it puts America at an unfortunate future disadvantage.

"Against this backdrop, anybody watching US policy for the past decade, from friendly Europe to adversarial China, already had reason to doubt US credibility. What Trump has done in his second term is to remove the doubts and confirm the loss. Allies now know they can’t trust America, while adversaries are ganging up and recalculating their plans for mischief or worse.

It's unclear what will happen in the future; a damaged reputation jeopardizes diplomacy.

"These responses to America’s loss of credibility will raise the risk of global conflict," Kluth writes. "The danger will go up even more if the US, under this or a future president, panics and decides to overcompensate in reestablishing its reputation, with a demonstratively hawkish turn that could tip into war. If America and the whole world are becoming less safe, it’s because Donald Trump’s foreign policy is, literally, in-credible."