All four of the Lollini daughters (Olga, Clara, Livia, and Clelia) pursued higher education and professional careers.
[1] During World War I she enlisted and worked as a surgeon[2] at a military hospital in Venice.
[3] In 1919 she attended the YWCA's International Conference of Women Physicians in New York,[4][5] where she gave a lecture on "Prostitution and Prophylaxis of Venereal Disease in Italy",[6] and described her efforts to add social hygiene to Italian public school curricula.
[1] Her own experience of tuberculosis, including a two-year stay in a sanatorium, led to her focus on the care of tubercular patients.
[1] Silvia Mori wrote a novel, Polveri di Luna (2014), based on Lollini's time at the anti-tubercular consortium in Massa.