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Blame the Horomones… monitoring the irrational quirks of men and women

Over 90s and Dementia

July 03, 2008 By: Editor Category: Culture, Health 1 Comment →

(Reuters) 3 July 2008:

One of the archetypes of old age is the image of the mad old woman: not that we use that loaded description any more, using instead dementia. Recent studies show that, as with so many stereotypes, there is some truth in the matter.

Amongst those over 90 28 % of the men had dementia of one form or another and 45% of the women did.

Quite why this divide between the sexes is unknown: the researchers have two thoughts on the matter, but neither are proven. The first is that women live longer after a diagnosis of dementia, raising their relative numbers. The second is that so few men live beyond 90 that those who do have to be considered “hardy survivors” and simply less likely to get anything.

A question that clearly requires further research.

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Women and Insomnia

July 03, 2008 By: Editor Category: Health No Comments →

(Alternet) 3 July 2008:

Up to 67% of women frequently experience sleep problems but there’s not a great deal being done about it. For 75% of all the research upon sleep has been done upon male subjects.

When women are indeed studied directly the problems turn out to be much less psychological, the manner in which they are usually treated, and more physically or hormonally based. Certainly, the surges of estrogen during the monthly cycle make women more susceptible to the influences of cortisol, the main stress reaction hormone.

The real import of the story is that while we do indeed need to treat men and women equally, that means having to take account of, as in this medical sense, the occasions when they are in fact different.

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Equality After All

June 27, 2008 By: Editor Category: Sports 1 Comment →

(AFP) 27 June 2008:

The Bulgarian Olympic Weightlifting team might not be where one would go to find gender equality on a normal day. And it’s true that the men and women compete separately, lifting different weights. It’s also true that the women compete against women from other countries, men against men.

However, there is one area in which they do share complete gender equality, even if this might not be something to be all that proud of. All of the applicants to this summer’s Olympic Games have been rejected, for all of them, each and every man and woman, were found to be taking banned anabolic steroids.

Still equality is a good thing, right’

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Sex and Skin Cancer

June 26, 2008 By: Editor Category: Health 1 Comment →

(US News) 26 June 2008:

No, skin cancer isn’t one of those things you can get from sex: well, not unless you’re doing it outside a lot without sunscreren. However, there are major differences in the way that men and women suffer from the disease.

Men both get more cases of the various types of skin cancer and also are more likely to die of it if they get it. There is some evidence that male skin is simply more likely to become cancerous, but the major reasons seem to be twofold. The first is that men work outside more and thus gain more exposure, the second that they use much less sunscreen than women.

Another way of putting that last is that women simply pay more attention to the state of their skin overall: although might that change with the rise of metrosexuality?

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Lesbians Marry More Often Than Gays

June 22, 2008 By: Editor Category: Culture, Relationships No Comments →

(DETROIT FREE PRESS) 22 June 2008:

Well, that’s the headline, although that’s not quite what they mean: the ratio of marriage ceremonies to married couples is still pretty much one to one for both lesbians and gays. What they mean is that women in a committed relationship are more likely to marry than gay men in committed relationships.

Which shouldn’t come as all that much of a surprise: we see in heterosexual relationhips that women are more eager to marry than men.

It’s compounded here by the way that lesbian couples are much more likely to have and raise children than gays are (there’s the comparable ease and difficulty of the basic mechanics to consider along with desires), so much so that in states where there is a mechanism to register same sex partnerships (marriages, civil partnerships, whatever) the ration is usually 2:1, lesbian to gay.

An old English euphemism for “gay” was “not the marrying kind”: interesting how that seems still to be true, long past the time that the eupehimism is still in use.

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A Woman’s Work is Never Done…

June 19, 2008 By: Editor Category: Careers, Culture No Comments →

(INDEPENDENT) 19 June 2008:

…well, not quite. In Ireland these days there’s still a gender imbalance in how much of it is done by women and how much is done by men. Women are working on average nearly forty minutes more each day than men (this is including both paid work and work in the home).

Compare that to the cousins over the Irish Sea, the British, where total work is the same for each sex.

In both countries women do more of the houosehold work, men more of the paid outside the home. But in the total amount done the Irish are currently about where the Brits were thirty years ago, which sounds about right. While Ireland has advanced greatly economically in recent years, socially it’s still a conservative place. Divorce was only legalized a few years ago and abortion is still illegal. That there’s still no gender parity in working hours shouldn’t be all that much of a surprise.

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Gender and Judaism

June 18, 2008 By: Editor Category: Culture No Comments →

(JERUSALEM POST) 18 June 2008:

Brandeis University has released results that are concerninig Jewish leaders. Among the Non-Orthodox Jews, the men are becoming more distanced from the religion than their female contemporaries. The worry comes from the well known point that only those minorities closely identified with their religion are successful in passing that religion (and possibly sense of being a part of that minority) on to their children.

It has to be said though, there’s something a little odd about the concern. For the definition of a Jew in the next generation is one who is born to a female Jew of this generation: the status of the father, their religion, makes no difference in law or custom to the Jewishness of the child. So we’d rather expect the women to be more closely connected with both the religious and cultural aspects, wouldn’t we?

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Women and Childcare

June 15, 2008 By: Editor Category: Culture, Parenting No Comments →

(NEW YORK TIMES) 15 June 2008:

There’s a slightly surprising result from looking at the figures about who does all the work around the house. Yes, the number of hours that both men and women work to keep the home running have been falling as a result of technology. And yes, men have also been doing more than their previous share of what work remains.

However, the huge imbalance in child care hours still remains: women do more than men in a ratio of five to one, very much the same number of hours as their grandmothers.

It’s almost enough to make you think there might be something immutable, biological, about this, isn’t it?

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Gender and Body Piercings

June 13, 2008 By: Editor Category: Culture, Gender Roles No Comments →

(SCIENCE DAILY) 13 June 2008:

There are some remarkable figures from the UK on the number of people who have body piercings: Fully 10 percent of the adult population have one somewhere other than on their ears.

It isn’t that much of a surprise to find that there are more women than men with such piercings, nor that the most popular site is the belly button.

What will come as more of a surprise is that twice the number of men than women have piercings on their genitals. Something which, given that 25 percent of all piercings experience complications and 1 percent require hospital admission, is still a bit shocking.

Odd lot the British.

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Men Showing Off

June 11, 2008 By: Editor Category: Culture, Gender Roles No Comments →

(THE PROVINCE) 11 June 2008:

The group that runs high performance driving training courses says that, while many more men than women take their courses, they’re seeing more and more women applying.

As they do they’re also seeing that the two groups take the training very differently. The women are there to learn: to find out what is safe, what are their own limitations and those of the cars. The men, in contrast, seem to be much more interested in demonstrating to the trainers what they already know: to prove, as it were, that they don’t need any more training.

Men showing off, eh? Now there’s a surprise.

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