Health Dame With Robin Strongin

In Conversation with Dr. Chloe Bird: Improving Women’s Health by Closing the Evidence Gap

35 min · I går
episode In Conversation with Dr. Chloe Bird: Improving Women’s Health by Closing the Evidence Gap cover

Description

In this episode of Health Dame, Robin Strongin speaks with Dr. Chloe Bird [https://www.linkedin.com/in/chloebird/], professor of medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine and program director of the Center for Research on Women’s Health, Sex Differences and Population Health at Tufts Medical Center. Dr. Bird explains why women’s health research still lags behind,  how male bodies are still often treated as the default in medicine and why clinical trials must do more than simply include women. They discuss the need to study how diseases present in women, how women respond to treatment and how gaps in the evidence base affect diagnosis, care, policy, and precision medicine. The conversation also looks at what it would take to make these gaps visible, measurable and harder to ignore. For Dr. Bird, better science on women’s health is not just about women. It is about improving healthcare for everyone.

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24 episodes

episode In Conversation with Dr. Chloe Bird: Improving Women’s Health by Closing the Evidence Gap artwork

In Conversation with Dr. Chloe Bird: Improving Women’s Health by Closing the Evidence Gap

In this episode of Health Dame, Robin Strongin speaks with Dr. Chloe Bird [https://www.linkedin.com/in/chloebird/], professor of medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine and program director of the Center for Research on Women’s Health, Sex Differences and Population Health at Tufts Medical Center. Dr. Bird explains why women’s health research still lags behind,  how male bodies are still often treated as the default in medicine and why clinical trials must do more than simply include women. They discuss the need to study how diseases present in women, how women respond to treatment and how gaps in the evidence base affect diagnosis, care, policy, and precision medicine. The conversation also looks at what it would take to make these gaps visible, measurable and harder to ignore. For Dr. Bird, better science on women’s health is not just about women. It is about improving healthcare for everyone.

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