German Female Doctors Demand Overhaul of Gender-Biased Medical Research
German Female Doctors Demand Overhaul of Gender-Biased Medical Research
Women Doctors' Network Calls for Gender-Specific Medical Research on International Women's Day - German Female Doctors Demand Overhaul of Gender-Biased Medical Research
Ahead of International Women's Day, a network of female doctors in Germany is pushing for major changes in medical research. The group, part of the country's largest physicians' association, demands that studies and treatments finally account for biological differences between women and men.
The call comes after decades of medical research focusing mainly on male bodies. Most drugs, anatomy textbooks, and clinical trials have historically relied on male participants. As a result, women now face a higher risk of adverse drug reactions.
The network argues that women's health cannot be limited to reproductive issues. Instead, research must examine how all organ systems differ between sexes. Biological factors, social conditions, and gender-specific risks should shape studies, treatment guidelines, and healthcare policies.
Women absorb, process, and react to medications differently than men. Dosages, effectiveness, and side effects vary—yet these differences have often been overlooked. While political awareness of women's health is growing, the network insists that concrete action is still lacking.
The doctors' network is urging researchers, policymakers, and healthcare providers to reform how studies are designed. Without systematic changes, they warn, women will continue to experience preventable harm from treatments not tailored to their bodies. The push for reform aims to close a long-standing gap in medical science.