Prof. Dr. Lulu Song is an associate professor and master’s supervisor at the School of Public Health, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology. He mainly studies the impact of exposure to adverse factors in early life on maternal and infant health, with a focus on the health of people with gestational diabetes and their offspring. He has published more than 90 SCI papers in international journals and more than 30 SCI papers as the first/corresponding author (including co-author), including Diabetes Care, Environmental Health Perspectives, Environment International, BMC Medicine, Hypertension, The Science of The Total Environment, Human Reproduction, Cardiovascular Diabetology, etc. He presided over the National Natural Science Foundation Youth Science Fund Project, the Hubei Natural Science Foundation General Project, the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation Special Funding Project, and the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation General Funding Project, and he participated in many National Natural Science Foundation General Projects and National Key R&D Programs. He serves as the youth editor of “China School Doctor”, director of Hubei Children’s Comprehensive Development Research Association, and member of the Children and Adolescent Health Committee of Hubei Preventive Medicine Association.
Prof. Dr. Youjie Wang is an associate professor and professor at the Institute of Environmental Medicine, School of Public Health, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, and the Department of Child and Adolescent Health and Maternal and Child Health. She received her Bachelor of Medicine and Master of Medicine degrees from Tongji Medical University and her Doctor of Medicine degree from Hamamatsu Medical University in Japan with a scholarship from the Japanese government. She was a visiting scholar at East Tennessee State University in the United States. Her main research interests are environmental exposure and maternal and child health, as well as injury epidemiology. She mainly teaches courses such as women’s health care and medical statistics. She has presided over a number of National Natural Science Foundation projects, Hubei Provincial Health Department research funds, and the school’s independent innovation fund. She has participated in the Ministry of Environmental Protection’s public welfare projects, 863, 973, and other scientific research projects. She is an editorial board member of the Chinese Journal of Maternal and Child Health, deputy director of the Women and Elderly Injury Research Specialty Committee of the Injury and Prevention and Control Branch of the Chinese Preventive Medicine Association, and president of the Hubei Province Children’s Comprehensive Development Research Association (provincial-level association).
Dr. Mingyang Wu is a lecturer and master’s supervisor at the Department of Child and Adolescent Health and Maternal and Child Health, Xiangya School of Public Health, Central South University. He holds a bachelor’s degree from the School of Public Health of Nanchang University and a doctorate degree in medicine from the School of Public Health of Huazhong University of Science and Technology. He mainly engages in research related to the effects of environmental exposure in early life on maternal and infant health, child and adolescent development and behavioral health, and early prevention of adult diseases. He has published more than 50 SCI papers in international journals, including 25 SCI papers as the first author or corresponding author (including co-author), including Eur Respir J, Environ Int, Am J Clin Nutr, Sci Total Environ, Chemosphere, Cardiovasc Diabetol, Clin Nutr and other journals. He has presided over projects such as the Natural Science Foundation of China, Hunan Provincial Natural Science Foundation, Changsha Natural Science Foundation, Central South University Talent Start-up Fund, and open topics of the Ministry of Education Key Laboratory, and he has participated in many National Natural Science Foundation general projects and national key research and development programs. He is a young editorial board member of Hygiene and Environmental Health Advances.