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Why medicine often has dangerous side effects for women

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    We all go to doctors.
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    And we do so with trust and blind faith
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    that the test they are ordering
    and the medications they're prescribing
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    are based upon evidence --
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    evidence that's designed to help us.
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    However, the reality is that that hasn't
    always been the case for everyone.
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    What if I told you
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    that the medical science discovered
    over the past century
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    has been based on only
    half the population?
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    I'm an emergency medicine doctor.
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    I was trained to be prepared
    in a medical emergency.
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    It's about saving lives. How cool is that?
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    OK, there's a lot of runny noses
    and stubbed toes,
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    but no matter who walks
    through the door to the ER,
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    we order the same tests,
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    we prescribe the same medication,
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    without ever thinking about the sex
    or gender of our patients.
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    Why would we?
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    We were never taught that there were
    any differences between men and women.
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    A recent Government Accountability study
    revealed that 80 percent of the drugs
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    withdrawn from the market
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    are due to side effects on women.
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    So let's think about that for a minute.
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    Why are we discovering
    side effects on women
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    only after a drug has been
    released to the market?
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    Do you know that it takes years
    for a drug to go from an idea
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    to being tested on cells in a laboratory,
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    to animal studies,
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    to then clinical trials on humans,
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    finally to go through
    a regulatory approval process,
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    to be available for your doctor
    to prescribe to you?
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    Not to mention the millions and billions
    of dollars of funding
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    it takes to go through that process.
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    So why are we discovering
    unacceptable side effects
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    on half the population
    after that has gone through?
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    What's happening?
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    Well, it turns out that those cells
    used in that laboratory,
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    they're male cells,
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    and the animals used
    in the animal studies were male animals,
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    and the clinical trials have been
    performed almost exclusively on men.
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    How is it that the male model became
    our framework for medical research?
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    Let's look at an example that has been
    popularized in the media,
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    and it has to do
    with the sleep aid Ambien.
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    Ambien was released on the market
    over 20 years ago,
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    and since then, hundreds of millions
    of prescriptions have been written,
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    primarily to women, because women
    suffer more sleep disorders than men.
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    But just this past year,
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    the Food and Drug Administration
    recommended cutting the dose in half
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    for women only,
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    because they just realized
    that women metabolize the drug
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    at a slower rate than men,
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    causing them to wake up in the morning
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    with more of the active drug
    in their system
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    and then they're drowsy and they're
    getting behind the wheel of the car,
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    and they're at risk
    for motor vehicle accidents.
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    And I can't help but think,
    as an emergency physician,
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    how many of my patients
    that I've cared for over the years
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    were involved in a motor vehicle accident
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    that possibly could have been prevented
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    if this type of analysis was performed
    and acted upon 20 years ago
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    when this drug was first released.
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    How many other things need
    to be analyzed by gender?
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    What else are we missing?
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    World War II changed a lot of things,
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    and one of them was this need
    to protect people
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    from becoming victims of medical research
    without informed consent.
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    So some much-needed guidelines
    or rules were set into place,
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    and part of that was this desire
    to protect women of childbearing age
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    from entering into any
    medical research studies.
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    There was fear: what if something
    happened to the fetus during the study?
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    Who would be responsible?
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    And so the scientists
    at this time actually thought
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    this was a blessing in disguise,
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    because let's face it -- men's bodies
    are pretty homogeneous.
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    They don't have the constantly
    fluctuating levels of hormones
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    that could disrupt clean data
    they could get if they had only men.
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    It was easier. It was cheaper.
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    Not to mention, at this time,
    there was a general assumption
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    that men and women
    were alike in every way,
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    apart from their reproductive organs
    and sex hormones.
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    So it was decided:
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    medical research was performed on men,
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    and the results were later
    applied to women.
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    What did this do to the notion
    of women's health?
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    Women's health became synonymous
    with reproduction:
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    breasts, ovaries, uterus, pregnancy.
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    It's this term we now refer
    to as "bikini medicine."
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    And this stayed this way
    until about the 1980s,
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    when this concept was challenged
    by the medical community
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    and by the public health policymakers
    when they realized that,
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    by excluding women
    from all medical research studies,
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    we actually did them a disservice,
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    in that, apart from reproductive issues,
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    virtually nothing was known
    about the unique needs
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    of the female patient.
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    Since that time, an overwhelming amount
    of evidence has come to light
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    that shows us just how different
    men and women are in every way.
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    You know, we have this saying in medicine:
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    children are not just little adults.
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    And we say that to remind ourselves
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    that children actually have
    a different physiology than normal adults.
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    And it's because of this that the medical
    specialty of pediatrics came to light.
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    And we now conduct research on children
    in order to improve their lives.
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    And I know the same thing
    can be said about women.
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    Women are not just men
    with boobs and tubes.
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    But they have their own
    anatomy and physiology
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    that deserves to be studied
    with the same intensity.
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    Let's take the cardiovascular
    system, for example.
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    This area in medicine has done the most
    to try to figure out
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    why it seems men and women have
    completely different heart attacks.
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    Heart disease is the number one killer
    for both men and women,
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    but more women die within the first year
    of having a heart attack than men.
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    Men will complain
    of crushing chest pain --
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    an elephant is sitting on their chest.
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    And we call this typical.
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    Women have chest pain, too,
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    but more women than men
    will complain of just not feeling right,
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    can't seem to get enough air in,
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    just so tired lately.
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    And for some reason we call this atypical,
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    even though, as I mentioned,
    women do make up half the population.
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    And so what is some of the evidence
    to help explain some of these differences?
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    If we look at the anatomy,
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    the blood vessels that surround the heart
    are smaller in women compared to men,
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    and the way that those blood vessels
    develop disease is different
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    in women compared to men.
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    And the test that we use to determine
    if someone is at risk for a heart attack,
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    well, they were initially designed
    and tested and perfected in men,
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    and so aren't as good
    at determining that in women.
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    And then if we think
    about the medications --
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    common medications
    that we use, like aspirin.
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    We give aspirin to healthy men to help
    prevent them from having a heart attack,
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    but do you know that if you
    give aspirin to a healthy woman,
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    it's actually harmful?
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    What this is doing is merely telling us
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    that we are scratching the surface.
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    Emergency medicine
    is a fast-paced business.
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    In how many life-saving areas of medicine,
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    like cancer and stroke,
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    are there important differences between
    men and women that we could be utilizing?
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    Or even, why is it that some people
    get those runny noses
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    more than others,
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    or why the pain medication that we give
    to those stubbed toes
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    work in some and not in others?
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    The Institute of Medicine has said
    every cell has a sex.
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    What does this mean?
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    Sex is DNA.
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    Gender is how someone
    presents themselves in society.
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    And these two many not always match up,
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    as we can see with our
    transgendered population.
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    But it's important to realize
    that from the moment of conception,
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    every cell in our bodies --
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    skin, hair, heart, and lungs --
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    contains our own unique DNA,
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    and that DNA contains
    the chromosomes that determine
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    whether we become
    male or female, man or woman.
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    It used to be thought
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    that those sex-determining
    chromosomes pictured here --
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    XY if you're male, XX if you're female --
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    merely determined whether you
    would be born with ovaries or testes,
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    and it was the sex hormones
    that those organs produced
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    that were responsible for the differences
    we see in the opposite sex.
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    But we now know that
    that theory was wrong --
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    or it's at least a little incomplete.
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    And thankfully, scientists like Dr. Page
    from the Whitehead Institute,
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    who works on the Y chromosome,
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    and Doctor Yang from UCLA,
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    they have found evidence that tells us
    that those sex-determining chromosomes
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    that are in every cell in our bodies
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    continue to remain active
    for our entire lives,
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    and could be what's responsible
    for the differences we see
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    in the dosing of drugs,
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    or why there are differences
    between men and women
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    in the susceptibility
    and severity of diseases.
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    This new knowledge is the game-changer,
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    and it's up to those scientists
    that continue to find that evidence,
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    but it's up to the clinicians
    to start translating this data
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    at the bedside, today.
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    Right now.
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    And to help do this, I'm a co-founder
    of a national organization
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    called Sex and Gender
    Women's Health Collaborative,
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    and we collect all of this data
    so that it's available for teaching
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    and for patient care.
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    And we're working to bring together
    the medical educators to the table.
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    That's a big job.
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    It's changing the way medical training
    has been done since its inception.
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    But I believe in them.
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    I know they're going to see the value
    of incorporating the gender lens
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    into the current curriculum.
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    It's about training the future
    health care providers correctly.
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    And regionally,
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    I'm a co-creator of a division within
    the Department of Emergency Medicine
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    here at Brown University,
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    called Sex and Gender
    in Emergency Medicine,
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    and we conduct the research to determine
    the differences between men and women
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    in emergent conditions,
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    like heart disease and stroke
    and sepsis and substance abuse,
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    but we also believe
    that education is paramount.
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    We've created a 360-degree
    model of education.
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    We have programs for the doctors,
    for the nurses, for the students,
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    and for the patients.
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    Because this cannot just be left up
    to the health care leaders.
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    We all have a role in making a difference.
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    But I must warn you, this is not easy.
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    In fact, it's hard.
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    It's essentially changing the way
    we think about medicine
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    and health and research.
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    It's changing our relationship
    to the health care system.
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    But there's no going back.
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    We now know just enough
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    to know that we weren't doing it right.
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    Martin Luther King, Jr. has said,
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    "Change does not roll in
    on the wheels of inevitability,
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    but comes through continuous struggle."
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    And the first step
    towards change is awareness.
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    This is not just about improving
    medical care for women.
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    This is about personalized,
    individualized health care for everyone.
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    This awareness has the power to transform
    medical care for men and women.
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    And from now on, I want you
    to ask your doctors
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    whether the treatments you are receiving
    are specific to your sex and gender.
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    They may not know the answer --
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    yet.
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    But the conversation has begun,
    and together we can all learn.
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    Remember, for me
    and my colleagues in this field,
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    your sex and gender matter.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Why medicine often has dangerous side effects for women
Speaker:
Alyson McGregor
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:29

English subtitles

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