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If you weren’t aware of it before, it’s impossible not to recognise it now. I am, of course...
If you weren’t aware of it before, it’s impossible not
to recognise it now. I am, of course, talking about the Gender Health Gap.
So, a bit of background… The Gender Health Gap is a
term that was coined together to describe the disparity in health outcomes and
treatment between men and women. Historically, men have been treated as the
default patient in clinical practice and medical research. As a result, women’s
health and healthcare needs have been marginalised.
I’m sure you’ll agree that the concept seems wildly
archaic, but even now, in 2022, women continue to receive inferior healthcare
and experience poorer health outcomes than their male peers. A fact that has
only been emphasised by the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.
The Supreme Court’s ruling to effectively end the
constitutional right to safe and legal abortions has sent shockwaves around the
globe, leaving women everywhere wondering if autonomy over their own bodies
will land the same fate as their American counterparts. As a woman-led company
focused on Life Sciences, with a 55% female workforce, like many of you, it’s
taken us a while to digest this devastating news.
Expectedly, in light of the Supreme Court’s
decision, there has been a huge surge in demand for contraceptives,
particularly emergency contraception. In fact, online reproductive and sexual
health provider, Wisp,
has reported a huge 3000% increase in sales of emergency contraceptive pills
following the Supreme Court’s ruling last week. Fortunately, they have so far
been able to keep up with the rise in demand.
Elsewhere in the U.S., pharmacies have begun taking
precautionary measures to avoid a shortage of emergency contraceptives, with
both CVS
and Rite Aid restricting customers to three boxes per
transaction.
For online retailers, the surge in demand has been
trickier to keep up with due to limited supply. Amazon has instilled a system whereby customers are
restricted to purchasing the emergency contraceptive pill, Plan B, three times
per week maximum. Even then, expected delivery times are currently a 10-day
wait, even though the pill must be ingested within 72 hours of unprotected sex.
Ever since the pill became widely available in the
60s, development in the female contraceptives market has been painfully slow.
In fact, The Gates
Foundation found that only 2% of drug companies' profits are
returned to research and development, despite an estimated 900% ROI on birth
control.
What’s more, up until recently, very little was known
about how hormonal contraception affects the non-reproductive systems of the
female body because, shockingly, research on these systems has been done
exclusively on male subjects!
So, as women continue to learn more about the
effects of the hormonal pill on their bodies, more and more are opting out of
the pill as a form of contraception. In 2018, 26% of millennial women reported
that they had either considered giving up the pill or had stopped taking it
because they were worried about consuming synthetic hormones.
With more in-depth research on the pill continuously
becoming more accessible, along with the Supreme Court removing the
constitutional right to a safe abortion, there’s never been a more urgent or
necessary time for medical professionals to look toward other birth control
options.
Enter the male contraceptive pill.
Although research on female contraceptives is
dragging, just back in April this year, it was reported that a 99% effective
male contraceptive pill with no observable side effects might become
available following a successful trial on mice at the University of Minnesota.
It was initially reported that the non-hormonal male
pill could begin human trials as soon as later this year, offering additional
options for birth control and reproductive autonomy for men. Taking the recent
fall of Roe v. Wade into consideration, this could help speed up the
development of the male pill by providing a more probing incentive for research
funding agencies, investors, and pharmaceutical companies to supply more money
in helping drive forward the time it will take to bring the male pill to
market.
I know what you're thinking: Why has the elimination
of side effects been prioritised in men when those very side effects are still
yet to be addressed for women?
To put it simply, a woman's makeup is much more
complex to study due to their unpredictable physiology. Throughout a woman's
menstrual cycle, her levels of progesterone and oestrogen fluctuate, which has
often meant that studies are conducted in the early follicular stage and
therefore do not provide a true or reliable outcome of the pill’s side effects
at different stages of a woman's cycle.
Needless to say, women without a doubt need more
representation in clinical trials in order to shrink the Gender Health Gap. We
only hope that the results of the male contraceptive pill will encourage more
pharmaceutical companies to look at developing less invasive, non-hormonal
birth control options for women too.
Following the Supreme Court’s verdict, many have
expressed their frustration and rage, protesting that we’re revisiting a time
gone by. But, as many of you will agree, this is not quite the case for the
pharmaceutical industry. The ruling marks a new era for healthcare and the
beginning of a very different landscape for Life Sciences.
While it’s too early to fully grasp what ripple effects the Supreme Court’s decision will have on emergency contraception, birth control, and reproductive rights, we shouldn’t let ourselves get too comfortable with the increased demand for emergency contraceptives.
Since some lawmakers believe life begins at the
moment of fertilisation, this could be just the tip of the iceberg, and so we
should continue in our quest of closing the Gender Health Gap and providing
viable birth control solutions for all.