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  4. Sex-dependent disparities in critical illness: methodological implications for critical care research
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Sex-dependent disparities in critical illness: methodological implications for critical care research

Journal
Nursing in Critical Care
Date Issued
February 21, 2015
Author(s)
Papathanassoglou, Elizabeth  
Middleton, Nicos  
Hegadoren, Kathleen  
DOI
10.1111/nicc.12166
Abstract
Despite persistent efforts by government and research funding agencies to include sex and gender in human health-related research (Institute of Medicine, 2001) and acknowledgement that sex and gender are major determinants of many health-related outcomes (Vlassof, 2007), exploration of these issues in critical illness remains sparse. Historically, sex differences referred to biological dissimilarities between males and females, whereas, gender differences suggested the effect of psychosocially conditioned factors and sociopolitical environments (Holdcroft, 2007). More recently, epigenetic studies have clearly demonstrated interactions between social determinants (like gender) and past experiences and cellular responses to stress (Miller et al., 2011; Stankiewicz et al., 2013; Babenko et al., 2014), suggesting a blurring of these independent definitions. We will use the more inclusive term gender in this review, unless summarizing what authors have stated are sex-specific physiological processes.Although the gender gap in life expectancy, favouring women by 5 years on average (Rochelle et al., 2014), is still unexplained, women exhibit specific health-related susceptibilities (e.g. autoimmune, mood and anxiety disorders) compared to men (Verma et al., 2011). Moreover, in such disease states as coronary artery disease, health-related outcomes are less favourable in women. While some differences are likely attributed to differences in treatments and insidious gender bias (Alspach, 2012), in some conditions women may still have worse outcomes, despite identical care (Anderson and Pepine, 2007).In spite of a long-held belief that women have a better chance to survive critical illness (Kristensen et al., 2014), a closer look at the evidence reveals a complex interactive picture. This editorial aims to briefly synthesize current evidence on the influence of sex and gender on adult critically ill patients' outcomes and to discuss specific methodological implications for critical care research.
Subjects

Critical care

Illness

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