President Joe Biden is expected to sign an executive order Monday aimed at advancing the study of women’s health in part by strengthening data collection and providing easier and better funding opportunities for biomedical research.
Quick Read
- President Joe Biden is set to sign an executive order to enhance women’s health research, focusing on better data collection and research funding.
- Despite women comprising half the population, their health issues are often underfunded and understudied, with historical research predominantly based on men.
- The initiative seeks to address the lack of adequate research on health conditions affecting women and improve diagnosis and treatment.
- The executive order is also politically significant, targeting female voters who are vital for Biden’s reelection, amidst ongoing debates on women’s health rights.
- The National Institutes of Health is launching a new effort focusing on menopause and its symptoms, aiming to identify and fill research gaps.
- Conditions that either manifest differently in women, are more prevalent among them, or are exclusive to women, such as heart disease, Alzheimer’s, and endometriosis, are highlighted for further study.
- Previous research has shown that women are often overmedicated due to dosage trials predominantly conducted on men, leading to adverse side effects.
- First Lady Jill Biden announced $100 million in funding for women’s health last month, emphasizing the government’s commitment to this cause.
The Associated Press has the story:
Biden to sign executive order aimed at advancing study of women’s health
Newslooks- WASHINGTON (AP) —
President Joe Biden is expected to sign an executive order Monday aimed at advancing the study of women’s health in part by strengthening data collection and providing easier and better funding opportunities for biomedical research.
Women make up half the population, but their health is underfunded and understudied. It wasn’t until the 1990s that the federal government mandated women be included in federally funded medical research; for most of medical history, though, scientific study was based almost entirely on men.
Today, research often fails to properly track differences between women and men, and does not represent women equally particularly for illnesses more common to them. Biden’s executive order is aiming to change that, aides said.
“We still know too little about how to effectively prevent, diagnose and treat a wide array of health conditions in women,” said Dr. Carolyn Mazure, the head of the White House initiative on women’s health.
Biden said he’s long been a believer in the “power of research” to help save lives and get high-quality health care to the people who need it. But the executive order also checks off a political box, too, during an election year when women will be crucial to his reelection efforts. First lady Jill Biden is leading both the effort to organize and mobilize female voters and the White House Initiative on Women’s Health Research.
And the announcement comes as the ripple effects spread from the Supreme Court’s decision that overturned federal abortion rights, touching on medical issues for women who never intended to end their pregnancies. In Alabama, for example, the future of IVF was thrown into question statewide after a judge’s ruling.
Women were a critical part of the coalition that elected Biden in 2020, giving him 55% of their vote, according to AP VoteCast. Black women and suburban women were pillars of Biden’s coalition while Trump had a modest advantage among white women and a much wider share of white women without college degrees, according to the AP survey of more than 110,000 voters in that year’s election.
The National Institutes of Health is also launching a new effort around menopause and the treatment of menopausal symptoms that will identify research gaps and work to close them, said White House adviser Jennifer Klein.
Biden and Jill Biden, the first lady, were expected to announce the measures at a Women’s History Month reception on Monday at the White House.
NIH funds a huge amount of biomedical research, imperative for the understanding of how medications affect the human body and for deciding eventually how to dose medicine.
Some conditions have different symptoms for women and men, such as heart disease. Others are more common in women, like Alzheimer’s disease, and some are unique to women — such as endometriosis, uterine cancers and fibroids found in the uterus. It’s all ripe for study, Mazure said.
And uneven research can have profound effects; a 2020 study by researchers at the University of Chicago and University of California, Berkeley found that women were being overmedicated and suffering side effects from common medications, because most of the dosage trials were done only on men.
The first lady announced $100 million in funding last month for women’s health.