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RESEARCH PRODUCT
A framework to analyse gender bias in epidemiological research
Lucía ArtazcozMaria Del Mar García CalventeMaría Teresa Ruiz-canteroElena RondaConsuelo Miqueo MiqueoR. OrtizCarme VallsCarmen Vives-casesIsabel RuizAna DelgadoIsabel Monterosubject
MaleTheory and MethodsEpidemiologyAndrocentrismmedia_common.quotation_subjectStatistics as TopicFrameworkInformation Storage and RetrievalPoison controlContext (language use)Affect (psychology)Sex Factors:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS ::Epidemiología [UNESCO]BiasHumansUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICAS ::EpidemiologíaMedicinemedia_commonbusiness.industryGender biasConfoundingPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthHuman factors and ergonomics:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]Social constructionismEpidemiological researchEpidemiologic Research DesignSpouse AbuseUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASMedicina Preventiva y Salud PúblicaWomen's HealthFemaleGender bias ; Epidemiological researchMen's HealthPrejudicebusinessSocial psychologyPrejudicedescription
The design and analysis of research may cause systematic gender dependent errors to be produced in results because of gender insensitivity or androcentrism. Gender bias in research could be defined as a systematically erroneous gender dependent approach related to social construct, which incorrectly regards women and men as similar/different. Most gender bias can be found in the context of discovery (development of hypotheses), but it has also been found in the context of justification (methodological process), which must be improved. In fact, one of the main effects of gender bias in research is partial or incorrect knowledge in the results, which are systematically different from the real values.This paper discusses some forms of conceptual and methodological bias that may affect women’s health. It proposes a framework to analyse gender bias in the design and analysis of research carried out on women’s and men’s health problems, and on specific women’s health issues.Using examples, the framework aims to show the different theoretical perspectives in a social or clinical research context where forms of selection, measurement and confounding bias are produced as a result of gender insensitivity. Finally, this paper underlines the importance of re-examining results so that they may be reinterpreted to produce new gender based knowledge. Spanish Research Network on Health and Gender (RISG)
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2007-01-01 | Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health |