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Wednesday, Mar 20 2024

Full Issue

Viewpoints: We Need To Rethink What 'Women's Health' Is; Crash-Test Biases Put Women At Risk

Editorial writers tackle women's health matters, female crash test dummies, nurse sabbaticals, and more.

We鈥檙e now well into the 21st century but, incredibly, medical research, care and investment still default to the male body. People typically think of women鈥檚 health as sexual and reproductive health, but the majority of the global women鈥檚 health burden is caused by conditions that affect women differently or disproportionately. These are just some of the findings in a new analysis by the World Economic Forum in collaboration with the McKinsey Health Institute.聽(Megan Greenfield and Lucy Perez, 3/19) 聽

We鈥檝e all seen the videos, in commercials or online, of crash testing. In a testing facility, a car hurtles towards a barrier with crash test dummies inside as engineers test for the impact of a crash. But there is a problem that we likely would not notice at first glance: these dummies and tests are based on men鈥檚 bodies, and men鈥檚 bodies only. It might seem unusual to think of an inanimate dummy as male, but it鈥檚 a basic physical representation of the way men鈥檚 bodies are shaped, the way weight and muscle are distributed, their average height. All this is fine for testing how men might fare in a car crash. But it鈥檚 extremely dangerous to women. (Susan Molinari and Beth Brooke, 3/19)

A聽new study聽suggests that the nursing shortage is easing, but that doesn鈥檛 mean the health care system can stop worrying about retaining new and experienced clinicians. One potential solution: paid sabbaticals for nurses and other health care workers. If professors get sabbaticals to refresh and rejuvenate to sustain their academic productivity, why not frontline health care workers? (Diana J. Mason, 3/20)

The manufacturing tax credits could be the boost that formula brands need to buy or build their own manufacturing facilities rather than relying on contract manufacturers such as Perrigo, which also makes private-label formulas for chain stores. Those credits might also encourage companies with existing factories to build excess production capacity so they could scale manufacturing up quickly in the event of a shortage. (Alyssa Rosenberg, 3/20)

There is a war brewing between insurers and providers over who can get these drugs, and not even Oprah Winfrey will be able to broker a resolution. True to her brand, she did not try. What Oprah did try to do is finally write the ending to a story about bodies that she has been writing for almost 40 years. 鈥淭he Oprah Winfrey Show鈥 went into national syndication in 1986. I was 10 years old. That means I have been in a psychosocial relationship with Oprah鈥檚 weight-loss struggles for longer than I have been an adult. (Tressie McMillan Cottom, 3/20)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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