Top Links

  • Login
  • Register
  • Sign Up for Newsletter
  • Subscribe to Magazine
  • Advertise
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Home

Primary links

  • Home
  • News
    • Black American
    • Africa and Caribbean
    • Business
    • Buzz
    • Headlines
  • Entrepreneurs
    • Business Advice
    • Entrepreneur News
  • Personal Finance
    • Taxes
    • Investment
    • Home Owner
    • Retirement
  • Technology
    • Business Technology
    • Personal Technology
  • Careers
    • On The Move
    • Career Advice
    • Jobs
  • Lifestyle
    • Auto
    • Health & Fitness
    • Travel
    • Arts & Entertainment
  • Magazine
    • Archives
    • Current Issue
    • Digital
    • Subscribe
  • Calendar
  • TNJ Events
    • 25 Influential Black Women
    • 40 Under Forty
    • TNJ Africa 40 Under Forty
  • Videos
  • Photos
25 Influential Black Women Class of 2005
  • Katherine Giscombe
  • Linda Zango-Haley
  • Janine Fondon
  • Gwendolyn Y. Taylor
  • Deborah Elam
  • Millicent Sutton
  • Verna Eggleston
  • Marjorie A. Staten
  • Elaine Edmonds
  • Marva Smalls
  • Michelle Ebanks
  • Debra A. Sandler
  • Thelma Dye-Holmes
  • Rita J. Sallis
  • Lynda D. Curtis
  • Ijeoma Nduka-Nwosu
  • Tammie Boone Cottom
  • Michele Moore
  • Kerry D. Chandler
  • Marilyn D. Johnson
  • Marsha E. Butler
  • Marsha Haygood
  • Della Britton Baeza
  • Carla Ann Harris
  • Penda Aiken
  • Ijeoma Nduka-Nwosu

    M.D. President & CEO, Comprehensive Primary Services Brooklyn, Mt. Vernon, New Rochelle, N.Y.

    Ijeoma Nduka-Nwosu’s vision of a more comprehensive approach to health care led her to study and practice medicine in some of the most prestigious institutions. Her vision has been realized in the form of a thriving private medical practice in the New York area.

    Similarly, her belief that “beauty, brain and business are not mutually exclusive” inspired her to open the Ejaye’s fashion stores in Nigeria, her homeland, and in the United States.

    Nduka-Nwosu, M.D., has been a determined high achiever since high school. She completed her secondary studies with distinction after the Nigeria civil war in 1971 and graduated with honors from the University of Nigeria Nsukka, earning degrees in medicine and surgery. She seized an opportunity to practice in London with Geoffery Chamberlain, renowned professor and consultant to Queen Charlotte’s Hospital for Women. From there she went to the Harvard University School of Public Health, where she received master’s degrees in maternal and child health and in science and epidemiology. Her next move was to New York, where she set up Comprehensive Primary Care Services with clinics in New Rochelle, Mt. Vernon and Brooklyn.

    Dr. Nduka-Nwosu says her parents and a college professor who opened doors “when the education of women was not a social priority” inspired her most. She maintains her ties to Nigeria with Ejaye’s Charities, a non-profit organization she established to strengthen the quality of health care in rural communities, particularly in Africa. She has joined the global campaign against AIDS, bringing to light the socio-economic constraints in combating the epidemic. Because of her charitable work in Nigeria, her late father, His Royal Highness EZE F.B. Nduka, bestowed on her the traditional chieftaincy title of “Nneoha,” which means “everybody’s mother.”

    With all her accomplishments, Dr. Nduka-Nwosu is most proud of her husband Godwin and their five children. “I’m devoted to them,” she says.

    • Print
    • share

    25 Influential Black Women

    • Overview
    • Current Class
    • Alumni
      • 2010
      • 2009
      • 2008
      • 2007
      • 2006
      • 2005
      • 2004
      • 2003
    • Awards Luncheon Information
    • Luncheon Tickets
    • Sponsors
    • Contact Us
    Sign up for the FREE TNJ Newsletter
    • Home
    • News
    • Entrepreneurs
    • Personal Finance
    • Technology
    • Careers
    • Lifestyle
    • Magazine
    • Calendar
    • TNJ Events
    • Videos
    • Photos
    © 1995-2011 The Network Journal. All Rights Reserved. Privacy