Biden Signs Executive Order to Boost Women's Health Research
Last edited Mon Mar 18, 2024, 05:33 PM - Edit history (1)
Source: Bloomberg
March 18, 2024 at 5:00 AM EDT
Updated on March 18, 2024 at 1:12 PM EDT
President Joe Biden signed an executive order to strengthen womens health research standards across federal agencies and prioritize its funding, part of a broader effort to close the gap on long-standing disparities.
Biden called it the most comprehensive executive actions ever taken to improve womens health at a White House event on Monday, and said it highlighted the administrations efforts to bolster economic gains for women.
Our administration has turned around the economy because we focused on women, Biden said. If you want to have the strongest economy in the world, you cant leave half the workforce behind.
Under the order, the National Science Foundation and Department of Health and Human Services are instructed to research ways to use artificial intelligence to advance womens health research. It also directs the HHS to expand data collection on womens midlife health and launch an agenda that can guide investments toward menopause-related research.
Read more: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-03-18/white-house-unveils-executive-order-to-boost-women-s-health
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Link to White House FACT SHEET - FACT SHEET: President Biden Issues Executive Order and Announces New Actions to Advance Womens Health Research and Innovation
Article updated.
Original article/headline -
March 18, 2024 at 5:00 AM EDT
The Biden administration is rolling out an executive order to strengthen womens health research standards across federal agencies and prioritize its funding in an effort to close the gap on long-standing disparities.
As part of the order, the National Science Foundation and Department of Health and Human Services are instructed to research ways to use artificial intelligence toward advancing womens health research. It also directs the HHS to expand data collection on womens midlife health and launch an agenda that can guide investments toward menopause-related research.
Womens health research has faced disparities for decades, from funding to trials. Women are historically underrepresented in clinical and research trials. A 2021 study in the Journal of Womens Health concluded that the National Institutes of Healths funding pattern favors males in nearly three-quarters of the cases where a disease primarily afflicts one gender.
While weve made tremendous progress in the last few decades, from revolutionary discoveries in certain disorders affecting women, to increasing the number of women enrolled in clinical trials, we still know too little about how to effectively prevent, diagnose, and treat a wide array of health conditions, said Carolyn Mazure, chair of the White House Initiative on Womens Health Research.
Freethinker65
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(118 posts)BlueSky3
(514 posts)news. So often women have different reactions to illness than men, as in heart disease.
CousinIT
(9,245 posts)....to vote for Joe Biden.