Improving health care outcomes through sex and gender policies in health and medical research

Start Date

Date published:

Project location

Sex and Gender Difference

Background

  • There is a long-standing assumption that medicine, and the research underpinning medical interventions, is sex and gender neutral, however there is a growing body of evidence describing sex and gender differences in disease prevention, diagnosis, treatment and health outcomes.
  • Despite this, much research continues to be done without taking sex and gender into account, leading to gaps in the evidence base informing our health care policy and practice

Aims

  • To address gaps in the collection, analysis and reporting of sex and gender in health and medical research in Australia.
  • To build capacity among researchers, scientists and clinicians, and drive change in this area

Method

The project involves three phases:

  1. Surveys, interviews, web-based searches;
  2. Development and evaluation of policy frameworks and training materials; and
  3. Health economic analysis.

Potential Impact

  • Each stakeholder within the health and medical research sector in Australia encourages and supports the collection, analysis and reporting of sex and gender.
  • Improving the safety and quality of research will result in greater equality in health care outcomes for all

Fast Facts

  • In a 2019 review of sex and gender policies of funding agencies and medical journals in Australia, only two funders and six medical journals had such policies.
  • Policies on inclusion of sex and gender in health and medical research enables the inclusion of sex and gender-related phenomena in analysis, thereby promoting better targeted treatments and improved health outcomes.

Leads

Mental health Women's health Injury

Professor Robyn Norton AO

Founding Director, The George Institute for Global Health
Women's health Brain health Food policy

Professor Mark Woodward

Senior Professorial Fellow, Professorial Unit
Dr Cheryl Carcel, Head, Brain Health Program, The George Institute
Brain health

Dr Cheryl Carcel

Head, Brain Health Program
Critical care Women's health

Dr Kelly Thompson

Senior Research Fellow

Related Person

Bronwyn Graham

Director, Centre for Sex and Gender Equity in Health and Medicine, Australia

Partners

The George Institute for Global Health, Australia

The Australian Human Rights Institute, UNSW Sydney

Funders

The George Institute for Global Health

The Australian Human Rights Institute, UNSW Sydney

Podcast and Video

Women's health

International Women’s Day: Addressing gender bias in health and medical research

Published date

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