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Kaleidoscope - Volume 218 , Issue 5

Tracy, Derek K.; Joyce, Dan W.; Albertson, Dawn N.; Shergill, Sukhwinder S.

Authors

Derek K. Tracy

Dan W. Joyce

Dawn N. Albertson

Sukhwinder S. Shergill



Abstract

Women are not just small men. Last year, Caroline Criado Perez alerted the public to the very real dangers of male-centred bias in her bestselling book Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed for Men. She laid bare that the male-as-default trope has deadly consequences: women are more likely to die in a car crash because the safety systems were designed for men's larger bodies and longer legs, and in medicine women are more likely to be misdiagnosed and have more negative side-effects of treatment than men. In their Nature Neuroscience piece,Reference Shansky and Murphy1 Rebecca Shansky and Anne Murphy zoom into the way this plays out in the preclinical neuroscience community and propose a way forward for real change and better translational research. Although there has been some progress over the past decade, single-sex animals studies are the norm, so much so that they are rarely justified, though when they are it is often by citing misconceptions.Reference Woitowich, Beery and Woodruff2 Despite this neglect of female subjects, extraordinary examples of fundamental sex differences continue to mount across behavioural, cellular and systems neuroscience that make this continued practice indefensible. For example, in male rats, studies of chronic stress paradigms used to inform post-traumatic stress disorder and depression research found structural and synaptic plasticity responses within key areas of the brain that accord with clinical neuroimaging studies. In females, the results were diametrically opposite, questioning our assumptions about the ‘fundamental’ brain responses to stress, and leading to a sigh of relief that therapeutic developments did not lead to treatment that exacerbated symptoms in women.

Journal Article Type Editorial
Acceptance Date Apr 28, 2021
Online Publication Date Apr 28, 2021
Publication Date 2021-05
Deposit Date Jun 21, 2023
Journal The British Journal of Psychiatry
Print ISSN 0007-1250
Electronic ISSN 1472-1465
Publisher Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Peer Reviewed Not Peer Reviewed
Volume 218
Issue 5
Pages 293-294
DOI https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.2021.41
Keywords Psychiatry and Mental health
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/10881640
Publisher URL https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/the-british-journal-of-psychiatry/article/kaleidoscope/623BAE7A39793ECF9F75A7730EDBFA88
Additional Information Copyright: Copyright © The Authors 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Royal College of Psychiatrists