dairy-free ditz
@shes-here
i was mulling over these papers in the past week, as i was looking into the under representation of women in clincial trials+studies. which isn’t the best way to put it, as women ARE represented, but not faithfully, aka not to where it reflects the populations the study is looking to benefit [1]. Sosinsky et al. brings us this crazy statistic where in psychiatric trials, women are 60% of the patients but 42% of the participants. AND i wanted to highlight some company attitudes reflected in the trial investigators as shown in the study by Waltz et. al., who acknowledged the importance of data from female participants, and then said that the competition to have the drugs out first often led to there being not enough data on the drug’s impacts on female reproductive systems to use it. which leads to a inaccurate data set in the first place, requiring readjustments on the drug information later on bc it wasn’t tested accurately against female metabolic systems… leading to further to delay
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dairy-free ditz
@shes-here
TLDR have good data & representation of the end population you’re aiming to reach for better outcomes and less avoidable readjustment later on 1: (Sosinsky et al., 2022) https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cct.2022.106718 2: (Waltz et al., 2023) https://doi.org/10.1002/eahr.500170 - key issue: has a small sample of investigators interviewed, but still worth, in that they have industry based commentary + a variety of perspectives that go deeper than a regular questionnaire apologies for the mixed citation style i wanted to do apa in the beginning... oops 🤓
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Little Laia
@littlelaia
I think it’s really bad that women are over looked and outrightly picked to be under represented
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agusti
@bleu.eth
there’s also and underlying under representation of women in the medical and scientific population due to historic cultural pressures avoiding them reaching these professions. this also translates in way less studies or research on health issues that majorly affect women like PMS, reproductive healthcare, etc there’s also some research on how women are better served by having a male family member accompain them at a doctor visit, due to the long time biases that women are more loud about pain, some doctors might undermine their active pain vs a man which is seen as not expressing it as easily. lots of angles
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Veiva
@veiva
Wow, this is so eye-opening and honestly frustrating. Like, how do you admit women need to be in the data, then just… not do it because of time pressure? The fact that it ends up delaying things anyway just shows how short-sighted that approach is. We deserve better than being an afterthought in research that affects us.
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Josephine Oriaku®
@josephineoriaku
Bookmarking this so I read it later
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Aakash Yagnik
@aakash-xyz
Oh yeah, Farcaster needs this type of content 🤝
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