The State of Women’s Health in America: We’ve Come a Long Way, We Have Longer To Go

by DR. SARA GOTTFRIED

When it comes to women’s health, we have good news and bad news—and an urgent need to provide more gender-specific, one-stop, comprehensive medical care for women.

When I completed my residency in Obstetrics and Gynecology back in 1998, I was taught to perform “bikini medicine;” that is, an impeccable breast and pelvic exam, including a pap, then send a woman for a mammogram if she was 40 or older. Now we know that approach is totally inadequate for the primary care of women.

Here’s why, but good news first.

Next, the bad news. Many of the biggest killers of women—heart disease, stroke, breast cancer, and Alzheimer’s disease—continue to be diagnosed and sometimes kill women at unprecedented rates. The gap often continues to widen. Consider these statistics.

What are the implications—for women, for the men who care about women, and for researchers and clinicians? We’ve made progress in women’s health, but massive gaps persist in awareness and outcomes among both women and their practitioners. New sex and gender gaps continue to emerge, particularly related to heart health. Women require an integrated, multifaceted approach that gives voice to women and women’s health practitioners. We need more clinical trials and n-of-1 experiments, which are arguably better for pleiotropic therapeutic lifestyle interventions. We need to see far more entreaties like the one published from the President of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (a man) who joined forces with the President of the American Heart Association (also a man) and implored primary care providers to break down the silos and work together to perform more comprehensive risk factor assessment starting in women aged 20. Yes, please.

But we need to go further. Women deserve it and will die at disproportionate rates with it. We need to be more disruptive and exponential with our efforts in order to close the gender gap.

In summary, there are flashes of hope, but we must address the massive gender gap in both research and clinical care. I urge all of us, men and women alike, to put our heads together and endeavor to close these gaps with a fresh approach. I agree, but that’s just one step that doesn’t go far enough to address the massive inequities that persist for women. Go Red for Women is now in 50 countries, yet adverse cardiovascular trends continue to emerge. What are your ideas? We all need to dive in and work together to solve this urgent crisis for women.

This essay was featured in the March 1st edition of The Sunday Paper. The Sunday Paper inspires hearts and minds to rise above the noise. To get The Sunday Paper delivered to your inbox each Sunday morning for free, click here to subscribe.

 

 

 

DR. SARA GOTTFRIED

Sara Gottfried, M.D. is an integrative physician and author of the New York Times bestselling "The Hormone Cure" and "The Hormone Reset Diet."

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