Revisão Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

A two way view of gender bias in medicine.

1997; BMJ; Volume: 51; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1136/jech.51.2.106

ISSN

1470-2738

Autores

María Teresa Ruiz, Lois M. Verbrugge,

Tópico(s)

Obesity and Health Practices

Resumo

It isn't true, couldn't be; there must be other variables not taken into account that confound the results." This was the remark of an incredulous psychiatrist colleague to the statement that there is reasoned evidence of inequalities in health care based on patient gender.His re- action aligns with that of health professionals' and researchers' longing for simplicity in out- comes and also with a contemporary style of data analysis.It is not unusual to hear state- ments like his when criticisms are voiced about health services for women compared to men.This editorial comment considers how health care contributes to the health inequalities as- sociated with gender, a question addressed by many since the WHO European Report in 1990.16There are two ways in which health service delivery and research can involve gender biasfirstly, by assuming that women's and men's health situations and risks are similar, when in fact they are not, and secondly, by assuming differences where there are actually similarities.Actions and research that follow either approach may influence women's health outcomes in negative ways.An increasing num- ber of scientific papers on gender bias in the past five years has intensified the debate be- cause results often confirm the hypothesised presence of inequity.Yet there remain some conceptual, methodological, and empirical lim- itations that keep the picture hazy.

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