Brief Description
Women and men may face unique issues when it comes to substance use, as a result of both sex and gender. Sex differences result from biology, or being genetically female or male, while gender differences are based on culturally defined roles for men and women, as well as those who feel uncomfortable identifying with either category; such roles influence how people perceive themselves and how they interact with others. Sex and gender can also interact with each other to create even more complex differences between men and women. Learn more
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- I-Science: #CPDD What's Hot - Opioid Deaths in Women (July 2015)
Related Resources
- Infographic: Substance Use in Women and Men
- Tobacco Exposure Linked to Infertility, Earlier Menopause - Medscape
- Consideration of Sex Differences in Medicine to Improve Health Care and Patient Outcomes (Journal of the American Medical Association, October 2016)
- womenshealth.gov - HHS Office on Woman's Health
- NIH Office of Research on Women's Health (ORWH)