
Vital Facts About Sex Differences in Health Care
- Heart Disease Heart disease kills 500,000 American women each year over 50,000 more women than men and strikes
women, on average, 10 years later than men. Women are more likely than men to have a second heart attack within a year of
the first one.
- Depression Women are two-to-three times more likely than men to suffer from depression in part because womens brains
make less of the hormone serotonin.
- Osteoporosis Women comprise 80 percent of the population suffering from osteoporosis, which is attributable to a
higher rate of lost bone mass.
- Smoking Smoking has a more negative effect on cardiovascular health in women than men. Women are also less successful
quitting smoking and have more severe withdrawal symptoms.
- STDs Women are two times more likely than men to contract a sexually transmitted disease, and more likely to
experience significant drops in body weight, which can lead to wasting syndrome.
- Anesthesia Women tend to wake up from anesthesia more quickly than men an average of seven minutes for women and
11 minutes for men.
- Drug reactions Even common drugs like antihistamines and antibiotic drugs can cause different reactions and side
effects in women and men.
- Autoimmune Disease Three out of four people suffering from autoimmune diseases, such as multiple sclerosis,
rheumatoid arthritis, and lupus, are women.
- Alcohol Women produce less of the gastric enzyme that breaks down ethanol in the stomach. Therefore, after consuming
the same amount of alcohol, women have higher blood alcohol content than men, even allowing for size differences.
- Pain Some pain medications (known as kappa-opiates) are far more effective in relieving pain in women than in men.