PAMA Webinar

Join us for this webinar on April 20, 2026 at 8:00 pm Eastern Time, April 21 8:00 am Singapore

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About this webinar

Singing “athletes” and other performing artists may encounter changing physical conditions compounded by other menopausal symptoms, all the while sustaining an active performance career. This webinar combines an overview of the menopause transition, associated symptoms that may impact singers and other performers, current recommendations and medical management, and observations from the voice pedagogy field. Lived experiences of performers who have worked through their menopause transition will be provided. Performing arts clinicians will increase their sensitivity to the holistic challenges that artists may encounter and learn how to effectively support them during and beyond the arc of the menopause transition.

Dr June Sheren is a primary care physician from Singapore specializing in Women’s Health and Performing Arts Medicine. With over 25 years of clinical experience, she is known for her holistic and personalized care for women at all stages of their lives. As a Performing Arts Medicine (PAM) physician, she serves as medical advisor and physician to the Singapore Symphony Orchestra as well as the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory of Music, National University of Singapore. She integrates her dual interests in PAM and Women’s Health through her clinical practice, research collaborations, and teaching. She is a guest lecturer at University College London, UK, where she teaches about menopause and performance. She led a panel presentation on Menopause and the Performing Artist at the 43rd Annual PAMA Symposium in Washington DC, introducing this important topic for the first time to the global PAM community. Collaborating with Professor Robert Sataloff, she co‑authored an article on menopause and the singing voice, published in the Journal of Singing, providing updated guidance on menopause care. She serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Performing Arts Medicine. She runs a busy practice at Tucker Medical and, in her spare time, enjoys playing the piano and cello.

Joanne Bozeman, graduate of the University of Arizona, has taught singing for over 50 years. She is co-author of the ground-breaking Singing Through Change: Women’s Voices in Midlife, Menopause, and Beyond, framed on interviews with 56 singers and supporting research. She is retired from Lawrence University’s Conservatory of Music in Appleton, Wisconsin, where she taught studio voice and voice-related courses. Her students have gone on to excellent graduate and young artist programs, and have pursued careers as performers, teachers, conductors and voice care professionals. For many years, she was an actively performing soprano. Joanne is dedicated to educating singers, teachers, coaches and conductors about the relationship of “reproductive” hormones and voice in the contexts that women experience. She is co-author of “Characteristics of the Female Voice Across the Reproductive Lifespan: Educational and Healthcare Implications” in the forthcoming Oxford Handbook of Vocal Pedagogy. With collaborator Karen Brunssen, she researches and writes about pedagogy for the older singer. Along with research partner Marita Stryker, she educates vocalists and their teachers about singing with hypermobile conditions and POTS. A member of NATS and PAVA, Joanne is a frequent presenter at universities, international voice-related organizations including NATS, PAVA, ICVT, BVA, EVTA, PEVOC, and many singing teacher education groups.

Register today!

You will need to log in to your account, or create an account to register. You do not need to be a member.