ABSTRACT This administrative supplement application proposes to add a fourth scholar to the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) and Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC) Department of Research's Building Interdisciplinary Research Careers in Women's Health (BIRCWH) Program. The program objectives are to: 1. Recruit a superb and diverse group of early-career women's health researchers; 2. Provide tailored training and mentoring on sex and gender influences in health and disease; 3. Build upon our existing program by targeting topics in women's health of public health importance; 4. Strengthen and integrate models of interdisciplinary research to develop researchers who foster linkages across disciplines and institutions and excel in building team science; and to 5. Promote the prominence of women's health and the retention of investigators underrepresented in clinical research by mentoring BIRCWH scholars and alumni in academic advancement and leadership. The rationale of our program is that scholars' successful careers in women's health will transform biomedical research and ultimately advance women's health in the US through sustained focus on the study of sex and gender influences in health and disease. The program brings together mentors and advisors from 16 UCSF departments and centers and from KPNC. The program design emphasizes interdisciplinary approaches to a wide range of women's health issues. We will continue the program's initiatives in path-breaking research in women's cancers; environmental health; mental health, addiction, and cognition; infectious diseases; metabolism and bone health; and reproductive health across the lifespan, including Black maternal health, an NIH priority. A multidisciplinary UCSF/KPNC Advisory Committee oversees the program in partnership with leadership, including for the selection of new scholars. Our program is strengthened by mentoring teams that cross disciplines and research methodologies. Diverse scholars and faculty—in terms of fields of interest, background, training, race/ethnicity, and gender— are a priority. We will strengthen our focus on supporting underrepresented scholars for this proposal, and directly connect the fourth scholar to a network of our BIRWCH scholars and alumnae underrepresented in medicine for ongoing peer and mentor support. We will also ensure additional resources, such as mentoring from underrepresented faculty and UCSF and KPNC leaders on our Advisory Board. Our BIRCWH scholars are supported for at least two years, receive tailored mentoring, and participate in training courses, program seminars, progress assessments, and leadership development activities, often including alumnae. An array of career development and training opportunities at the UCSF Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI) support our BIRCWH program. The career development path for each scholar is tailored to the specific experience and mentoring that will most effectively su...