Women's Health Hoax
by Carey Roberts
Twenty-some years ago the mavens of medical misfortune sounded their shrill
alarm.
Hillary Clinton lashed out at the "appalling degree to which women were
routinely excluded from major clinical trials of most illnesses." Marcia
Angell, then editor of the august New England Journal of Medicine,
pronounced this lament: "There is little doubt that women have been
systematically excluded as subjects for study." And Dr. Vivian Pinn of the
National Institutes of Health wrote, "The exclusion of some women from
clinical studies may sometimes be valid, but not all women all
the time."
Of course no one had ever bothered to actually compile the numbers, so they
were unable to refute the claim. But everyone knew the male-dominated
medical research establishment was interested only in prostates and
male-pattern baldness, so the ladies' claims rang true.
Now under the political gun, the NIH hastily created its Office for Women's
Health Research. In 1991 president George Bush (the first one) appointed
cardiologist Bernadine Healy as director of NIH and gave her a mandate to
break the patriarchy's stranglehold on medical research.
Feminists skillfully parlayed public outrage into research agendas and
budget allocations. Millions were pumped into breast cancer research, and by
1992, National Cancer Institute funding for breast cancer reached $145
million. No one mentioned that the prostate budget that year barely topped
$31 million. [www.nci.nih.gov/public/factbk97/varican.htm]
But skeptics began to doubt the common wisdom. An Institute of Medicine
panel looked into the matter and was forced to admit it "could not nail down
the truth of the perception that women have been under represented" in
medical research.
In 1993 Congress passed a law that required the NIH to track sex-specific
enrollments. Everyone knew the numbers would reveal an appalling
under-representation of members of the fairer sex.
So the following year, red-faced NIH officials had to admit things weren't
so grim after all. Participants in NIH-funded studies were 52% female, 45%
male, with the remainder being unknown.
But no one was going to let facts stand in the way of gender liberation, so
the crusade pressed forward. At latest count, male research participation
had fallen to 40%.
[http://orwh.od.nih.gov/inclusion/FinalAnnualReport2003-2004.pdf]
Two years ago Dr. S.M. Huang and colleagues at the Food and Drug
Administration published a review, "Evaluation of Drugs in Women: Regulatory
Perspective." Tallying up five separate analyses of sex-specific
participation, they concluded "women have been included in drug development
studies at least since the early 1980s in approximate proportion to the
prevalence of disease in them."
Of course the Sisters of Insincerity knew their ruse would eventually be
exposed, so they set out to consolidate their gains. Before long a federal
bureaucracy devoted to the cause of women's health had sprung into
existence. Those programs would boast a $5 billion budget, four times more
than the money allotted to men's health.
There's a certain irony to all this.
Every year the government publishes a compendium of health information that
takes the measure of Americans' health. [www.cdc.gov/nchs/hus.htm] Leaf
through its pages, and you'll see that men are lagging on practically every
measure: death rates, doctor visits, insurance coverage, and so forth.
At latest count, the lifespan of women was 80.1 years, with men trailing at
74.8 years. And Black men - their life expectancy is only 69 years. Whatever
happened to the vision of gender equality?
Today, the women's health movement has become a multi-billion dollar
interest group that tap-dances smoothly among feckless bureaucrats,
chivalrous congressmen looking to woo the female vote, groups like the
Society for Women's Health Research lining up to take their cut, and media
types desperate for yet another story to pander to their female readership.
Women's health has become elevated to a cult-like status, a religious
crusade worthy of Red Dress galas hosted by the First Lady, national events
touting a "Race for the Cure," and a recent front-cover tribute by US News
and World Report.
Being divinely-blessed is good, because then you can enjoy your Marie
Antoinette moments.
Carey Roberts is a Staff Writer for The New Media Alliance. Columns by this
author can be read regularly on TheRealityCheck.org.
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