Women spend 9 years of their lives in poor health, which is 25% more than men.1 For women, these years are not confined to the end of life, but centred earlier in life from menarche up to menopause.1 Over the past decade, substantial sex differences in disease presentation, progression, and treatment response have been recognised in conditions affecting both men and women, for example, in cardiovascular disease. In addition, there are disorders that occur exclusively in women and girls.2 These female-specific disorders are benign but burdensome conditions that affect the female reproductive organs or the hormonal systems regulating them.
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Archynetys Health Desk
The Archynetys Health Desk covers public health, medical research, healthcare systems, wellness trends, and science-backed developments that affect readers globally. This desk applies added care to sourcing, evidence, nuance, and plain-language explanation, especially on high-impact health topics.
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