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His and hers … healthcare

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    Some of my most wonderful memories of childhood
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    are of spending time with my grandmother, Mamar,
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    in our four family home in Brooklyn, New York.
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    Her apartment was an oasis.
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    It was a place where I could sneak a cup of coffee,
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    which was really warm milk
    with just a touch of caffeine.
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    She loved life.
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    And although she worked in a factory,
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    she saved her pennies and she traveled to Europe.
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    And I remember pouring over those pictures with her
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    and then dancing with her to her favorite music.
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    And then, when I was eight and she was sixty,
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    something changed.
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    She no longer worked or traveled.
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    She no longer danced.
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    There were no more coffee times.
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    My mother missed work and took her to doctors
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    who couldn't make a diagnosis.
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    And my father, who worked at night,
    would spend every afternoon with her --
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    just to make sure she ate.
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    Her care became all consuming for our family.
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    And by the time the diagnosis was made,
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    she was in a deep spiral.
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    Now many of you will recognize her symptoms.
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    My grandmother had depression.
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    A deep, life-altering depression,
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    from which she never recovered.
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    And back then, so little was known about depression.
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    But even today, 50 years later,
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    theres still so much more to learn.
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    Today, we know women are 70 percent more likely
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    to experience depression over their lifetimes
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    compared with men.
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    And even with this high prevalence,
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    women are misdiagnosed between
    30 and 50 percent of the time.
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    Now, we know that women are more likely
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    to experience the symptoms
    of fatigue, sleep disturbance,
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    pain and anxiety compared with men.
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    And these symptoms are often overlooked
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    as symptoms of depression.
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    And it isn't only depression in which
    these sex differences occur,
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    but they occur across so many diseases.
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    So it's my grandmother's struggles
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    that have really led me on a lifelong quest.
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    And today, I lead a center in which the mission
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    is to discover why these sex differences occur
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    and to use that knowledge
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    to improve the health of women.
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    Today, we know that every cell has a sex.
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    Now, that's a term coined by the Institute of Medicine.
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    And what it means is that
    men and women are different
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    down to the cellular and molecular levels.
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    It means that we're different
    across all of our organs.
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    From our brains to our hearts, our lungs, our joints.
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    Now, it was only 20 years ago that we
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    hardly had any data on women's health
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    beyond our reproductive functions.
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    But then in 1993,
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    the NIH revitalization act was signed into law.
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    And what this law did was it mandated
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    that women and minorities be included in clinical trials
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    that were funded by the national institutes of health.
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    And in many ways, the law has worked.
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    Women are now routinely included in clinical studies.
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    And we've learned that there are major differences
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    in the ways that women and men
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    experience disease.
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    But remarkably,
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    what we have learned about these
    differences is often overlooked.
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    So, we have to ask ourselves the question:
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    Why leave women's health to chance?
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    And we're leaving it to chance in two ways.
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    The first is that there is so much more to learn
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    and we're not making the investment
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    in fully understanding the extent
    of these sex differences.
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    And the second is that we aren't
    taking what we have learned,
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    and routinely applying it in clinical care.
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    We are just not doing enough.
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    So, I'm going to share with you 3 examples
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    of where sex differences have
    impacted the health of women,
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    and where we need to do more.
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    Let's start with heart disease.
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    It's the number one killer of women
    in the United States today.
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    This is the face of heart disease.
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    Linda is a middle-aged women,
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    who had a stent placed in one of the arteries
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    going to her heart.
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    When she had recurring symptoms
    she went back to her doctor.
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    Her doctor did the goal-standard test --
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    a cardiac cathorization? .
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    It showed no blockages.
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    Lynda's symptoms continued.
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    She had to stop working
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    And that's when she found us.
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    When Lynda came to us we did
    another cardiac cathorization
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    and this time, we found clues.
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    But we needed another test
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    to make the diagnosis.
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    So we did a test called an intracolinary ultrasound,
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    where you use soundwaves to look at the arteries
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    from the inside out.
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    And what we found
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    was that Lynda's disease didn't look like
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    the typical male disease.
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    The typical male disease looks like this.
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    There's a discreet blockage or stenosis.
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    Linda's disease, like the disease of so many women,
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    looks like this.
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    The plaque is laid down more even, more diffusely
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    along the artery and it's harder to see.
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    So for Lynda, and for so many women,
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    the gold standard test wasn't gold.
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    Now, Lynda received the right treatment.
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    She went back to her life and fortunately, today
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    she is doing well.
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    But Lynda was lucky.
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    She found us, we found her disease.
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    But for too many women, that's not the case.
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    We have the tools.
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    We have the technology to make the diagnosis.
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    But it's all too often that these sex diffferences
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    are overlooked.
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    So, what about treatment?
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    A landmark study that was published two years ago
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    asked the very important question:
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    What are the most effective treatments
    for heart disease in women?
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    The authors looked at papers
    written over a 10 year period,
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    and hundreds had to be thrown out.
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    And they found out was that
    of those that were tossed out,
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    65 percent were excluded
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    because even though women
    were included in the studies,
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    the analysis didn't differentiate
    between women and men.
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    What a lost opportunity.
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    The money had been spent
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    and we didn't learn how women faired --
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    and these studies could not contribute one [unclear]
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    to the very important question:
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    What are the most effective treatments
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    for heart disease in women?
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    I want to introduce you to
    [Hortence?], my godmother,
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    Huway?, a relative of a colleague,
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    and somebody you may recognize --
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    Dana, Christopher Reeve's wife.
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    All three women have something
    very important in common.
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    All three were diagnosed with lung cancer,
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    the number one cancer killer of women
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    in the United States today.
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    All three were non-smokers.
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    Sadly, Dana and Hungway died of their disease.
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    Today, what we know is that women who are
    non-smokers are three times more likely
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    to be diagnosed with lung cancer than are men,
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    who are non-smokers.
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    Now interestingly, when women are
    diagnosed with lung cancer,
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    their survival tends to be better than that of men.
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    Now here are some clues.
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    Our investigators have found that there are
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    certain genes in the lung tumor
    cells of both women and men.
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    And these genes are activated
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    mainly by estrogen.
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    And when these genes are over expressed,
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    its associated with improved survival
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    only in young women.
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    Now this is a very early finding
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    and we don't yet know whether it has relevance
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    to clinical care.
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    But it's findings like this that may provide hope
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    and may provide an opportunity to save lives
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    of both women and men.
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    Now let me share with you an example
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    of when we do consider sex differences,
    it can drive the science.
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    Several years ago a new lung cancer drug
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    was being evaluated,
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    and when the authors looked at whose tumors shrank,
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    they found that 82 percent were women.
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    This led them to ask the questions: Well why?
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    And what they found
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    was that the genetic mutations that drug targeted
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    were far more common in women.
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    And what this has led to
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    is a more personalized approach
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    to the treatment of lung cancer
    that also includes sex.
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    This is what we can accomplish
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    when we don't leave women's health to chance.
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    We know that when you invest in research,
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    you get results.
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    Take a look at the death rate from breast cancer over time.
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    And now take a look at the death rates
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    from lung cancer in women over time.
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    Now looks at the dollars invested in breast cancer --
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    these are the dollars invested per death,
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    and the dollars invested in lung cancer.
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    Now, it's clear that our investment in breast cancer
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    has produced results.
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    They may not be fast enough,
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    but it has produced results.
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    We can do the same
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    for lung cancer and for every other disease.
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    So let's go back to depression.
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    Depression is the number one cause
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    of disability in women in the world today.
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    Our investigators have found
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    that there are differences in the brains
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    of women and men
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    in the areas that are connected with mood.
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    And when you put men and women
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    in a functional MRI scanner --
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    that's the kind of scanner that show show the brain is functioning when it's activated --
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    so you put them in the scanner
    and you expose them to stress.
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    You can actually see the difference.
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    And it's findings like this
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    that we believe holds some of the clues
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    for why we see these very significant sex differences
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    in depression.
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    But even though we know
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    that these differences occur,
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    66 percent
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    of the brain research that begins in animals
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    is done in either male animals
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    or animals in whom the sex is not identified.
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    So, I think we have to as again the question:
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    Why leave women's health to chance?
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    And this is a question that haunts those of us
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    in science and medicine
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    who believe that we are on the verge
    of being able to dramatically improve
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    the health of women.
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    We know that every cell has a sex.
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    We know that these differences are often overlooked.
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    And therefore we know, that women
    are not getting the full benefit
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    of modern science and medicine today.
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    We have the tools
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    but we lack the collective will and momentum.
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    Women's health is an equal rights issue
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    as important as equal pay.
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    And it's an issue of the quality
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    and the integrity of science and medicine.
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    So, imagine the momentum we could achieve
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    in advancing the health of women
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    if we considered whether these
    sex differences were present
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    at the very beginning of designing research.
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    Or if we analyzed our data by sex.
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    So, people often ask me:
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    What can I do?
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    And here's what I suggest:
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    First, I suggest that you think about women's health
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    in the same way
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    that you think and care about other
    causes that are important to you.
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    And second, and equally as important,
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    that as a woman,
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    you have to ask your doctor
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    and the doctors who are caring
    for those who you love:
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    Is this disease or treatment different in women?
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    Now this is a profound question
    because the answer is likely yes --
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    but your doctor may not know
    the answer, at least not yet.
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    If you ask the question, your doctor will very likely
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    go looking for the answer.
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    And this is so important --
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    not only for ourselves,
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    but for all of those whom we love.
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    Whether it be a mother, a daughter, a sister,
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    a friend or a grandmother.
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    It was my grandmother's suffering
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    that inspired my work
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    to improve the health of women.
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    That's her legacy.
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    Our legacy can be to improve the health of women
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    for this generation
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    and for generations to come.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
His and hers … healthcare
Speaker:
Paula Johnson
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
14:42

English subtitles

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