Abstract

Current Opinion in Endocrinology and Diabetes was launched in 1994, with Obesity added to the title in 2007. It is one of a successful series of review journals whose unique format is designed to provide a systematic and critical assessment of the literature as presented in the many primary journals. The fields of endocrinology and diabetes are divided into 12 sections that are reviewed once a year. Each section is assigned a Section Editor, a leading authority in the area, who identifies the most important topics at that time. Here we are pleased to introduce the Journal's Section Editors for this issue. SECTION EDITORS Shruthi MahalingaiahShruthi MahalingaiahShruthi Mahalingaiah is an assistant professor of environmental, reproductive, and women's health at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. She serves clinically as a physician at the Massachusetts General Hospital in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, where she specializes in ovulation disorders, reproductive endocrinology, and infertility. Shruthi has a BA from Middlebury College. She attended Harvard Medical School and an OB/GYN residency and fellowship in reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Mass General Brigham. Her research seeks to understand the links between environmental and modifiable risk factors on human reproduction and gynecological diseases. Shruthi is the creator of the Ovulation and Menstruation Health (OM) Study and one of the principal investigators of the Apple Women's Health Study. Dominic SagoeDominic SagoeDominic Sagoe is a Professor of Psychology at the Department of Psychosocial Science, Faculty of Psychology, University of Bergen, Norway. He is a member of the World Anti-Doping Agency's Doping Prevalence Expert Group, and founder and leader of the Human Enhancement and Body Image Lab (HEBI Lab) at the University of Bergen. Dominic obtained a PhD in Psychology from the University of Bergen in 2015 with the thesis: “Nonmedical anabolic-androgenic steroid use: Prevalence, attitudes, and social perception”. His research specialization is epidemiological and psychosocial aspects of human enhancement drug (HED) use, particularly androgens, and body image. He has published numerous peer-reviewed articles in this specialty and other addictions, and has collaborated with many academics, researchers, policymakers, and health professionals around the world.

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