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  5. Gender-related variables for health research

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Article
en
2021

Gender-related variables for health research

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en
2021
Vol 12 (1)
Vol. 12
DOI: 10.1186/s13293-021-00366-3

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John P A Ioannidis
John P A Ioannidis

Stanford University

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Mathias Wullum Nielsen
Marcia L. Stefanick
Diana E. Peragine
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Abstract

Abstract Background In this paper, we argue for Gender as a Sociocultural Variable (GASV) as a complement to Sex as a Biological Variable (SABV). Sex (biology) and gender (sociocultural behaviors and attitudes) interact to influence health and disease processes across the lifespan—which is currently playing out in the COVID-19 pandemic. This study develops a gender assessment tool—the Stanford Gender-Related Variables for Health Research—for use in clinical and population research, including large-scale health surveys involving diverse Western populations. While analyzing sex as a biological variable is widely mandated, gender as a sociocultural variable is not, largely because the field lacks quantitative tools for analyzing the influence of gender on health outcomes. Methods We conducted a comprehensive review of English-language measures of gender from 1975 to 2015 to identify variables across three domains: gender norms, gender-related traits, and gender relations. This yielded 11 variables tested with 44 items in three US cross-sectional survey populations: two internet-based ( N = 2051; N = 2135) and a patient-research registry ( N = 489), conducted between May 2017 and January 2018. Results Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses reduced 11 constructs to 7 gender-related variables: caregiver strain, work strain, independence, risk-taking, emotional intelligence, social support, and discrimination. Regression analyses, adjusted for age, ethnicity, income, education, sex assigned at birth, and self-reported gender identity, identified associations between these gender-related variables and self-rated general health, physical and mental health, and health-risk behaviors. Conclusion Our new instrument represents an important step toward developing more comprehensive and precise survey-based measures of gender in relation to health. Our questionnaire is designed to shed light on how specific gender-related behaviors and attitudes contribute to health and disease processes, irrespective of—or in addition to—biological sex and self-reported gender identity. Use of these gender-related variables in experimental studies, such as clinical trials, may also help us understand if gender factors play an important role as treatment-effect modifiers and would thus need to be further considered in treatment decision-making.

How to cite this publication

Mathias Wullum Nielsen, Marcia L. Stefanick, Diana E. Peragine, Torsten B. Neilands, John P A Ioannidis, Louise Pilote, Judith J. Prochaska, Mark R. Cullen, Gillian Einstein, Ineke Klinge, Hannah Leblanc, Hee Young Paik, Londa Schiebinger (2021). Gender-related variables for health research. , 12(1), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13293-021-00366-3.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2021

Authors

13

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0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1186/s13293-021-00366-3

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