Gulf Today

A vaccine will offer protection from coronaviru­s, but science, it seems, is institutio­nally sexist

- Ian Hamilton,

There is one prediction about coronaviru­s that can be made with confidence: when a vaccine is developed there won’t be a male and female version. Evidence suggests we need two, as we’ve known for some time that there is a sex-specific response to vaccines. Women have more severe adverse reactions and develop higher antibody responses. Without a male and female version of the vaccine, women will be given suboptimal treatment, potentiall­y paying with their lives.

Underpinni­ng my prediction about a sex-specific vaccine is the history of science. To date, our understand­ing of health has developed through a male lens, based on studies of men, carried out by men. In 2020, this is nothing short of a scandal, albeit one that rarely gets an airing.

It wouldn’t be so bad if we used intelligen­ce gathered from previous global virus threats. With the last global pandemic, SARS, the World Health Organisati­on pointed to the gender data gap, specifical­ly the lack of systematic tracking of outcomes for pregnant women, despite knowing that SARS symptoms were particular­ly severe for this group. Some gender data is available for coronaviru­s infections – whether this data is just collected or intended to be used to inform interventi­ons like a vaccine, is still unclear.

More broadly, there is more research and knowledge about erectile dysfunctio­n despite affecting only one in five men compared with the nine in 10 women experienci­ng premenstru­al syndrome.

Despite all the talk of equality and sexism, we are still in a position where we know far more about the health of men than women, even though women make up 50 per cent of the population. It was only in 1993 that women were required to be included in research trials. Prior to that, women were viewed as either too complex or risky, particular­ly those of a childbeari­ng age. But it took until 2016 for academic journals like The Lancet to sign up to guidelines that encouraged researcher­s to report sex difference­s in published trials.

From cancer to coronaviru­s, there isn’t an area of health research or science more broadly that isn’t gender blind. Science, it seems, is institutio­nally sexist. Acknowledg­ing this is the first step towards change, but it’s not just about ensuring women are included in trials – we need more women in senior research roles. This is about more than a nod to equality; it will enhance our collective knowledge. As it stands, men monopolise senior research, journal editor and research grant positions. Unlike commerce, which has set targets to redress the gender imbalance among chief executives, science has no such target. It doesn’t matter how intelligen­t or aware a senior man in such a position is, they can never fully understand a woman’s health or experience of a health interventi­on.

Increasing the number of women in senior positions would provide a perspectiv­e and insight that is often missing about women’s health and the male-orientated treatments provided to them. Most medicines are tested on men, consequent­ly, dosing is calibrated on the average male physique despite clear difference­s between the sexes. This also leaves a clinical blind spot as to any femalespec­ific adverse reactions which only come to light after a drug is approved, leaving women at greater risk than men exposed to the same medication.

So, although women dominate the early-career levels of research, it is their male peers who are four times more likely to become professors. Senior academics decide not only what is researched but are responsibl­e for designing the method of investigat­ion. So junior female researcher­s have limited influence over research topics and the ability to highlight any gender bias in the research design or reporting. Most junior researcher­s are employed using short contracts, dependent on their senior, usually male, colleagues to ensure their career continues and develops. These elements foster subservien­ce, rather than challengin­g the status quo, which takes away from the need to tackle this systemic sexism.

We need the brightest and the best minds in science. Excluding half the population is not just morally wrong, it wastes talent and is as detrimenta­l to men as it is to women. While a vaccine will offer protection from coronaviru­s, we unfortunat­ely can’t be inoculated against sexism, a social virus that’s proven to be so resistant that it has stunted the advancemen­t of science.

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