-
- Up one level
- Culture, Science and Public Policy
Gladys H. Reynolds. Statistics in Epidemiology Report -- Spring/Summer 1996 This article is a follow-up to the fall Newsletter article by Dr. Marlene Egger on the American College of Epidemiology (ACE) Statement regarding minority health [1,2]. This article is excerpted from a talk I presented at a conference on "Statistics, Science and Public Policy" in April, 1996, in England, focusing on the importance of cultural diversity in counteracting cultural bias.
- Gladys H. Reynolds, PhD, MS retirement notice in the CDC Watsonian Newsletter
- Gladys H. Reynolds CDC retirement biography
AMSTAT News, September 2007, 14-16 "Reynolds has always been especially concerned about the biases women and minorities face in professional and management positions and has served as a role model for statisticians and women in management positions and professional societies."
(Retrieved from archive.org, 4/9/2019; original location was https://ww2.amstat.org/about/statisticiansinhistory/bios/reynoldsgladys.pdf)
- Wikipedia entry
Gladys H. Reynolds is an American statistician who did pioneering research on modeling sexually transmitted diseases. She worked for many years at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), was the first female chief of a CDC statistics branch, and the first statistician to serve in that role.