What's Killing Women? Sex disparity and the shifting landscape of age-related disease

Population health researcher Professor Cassandra Szoeke outlines what ails women as they grow older, how men differ from women in age-related diseases.

Head of the Healthy Ageing Program in the Department of Medicine and Radiology, Professor Cassandra Szoeke, outlines what ails women as they grow older, how men differ from women in age-related diseases, and how public awareness and personal lifestyle change have been shown to have a positive impact on women’s quality of life in their later years.

“We’re finding that diseases are quite different in men and women,” says Professor Szoeke. “So, heart disease was thought to be a disease of men. Many men were dying of heart disease in the 50s, [but] in about the late 80s more women than men were dying of heart disease and that is the case even today. More women than men suffer heart disease.

“The chances of dying from breast cancer in your lifetime are half your chances of dying from dementia. So women don’t realise actually what the real diseases that will impact them in their ageing are.”

This article was first published on Pursuit. Read the original article. Subscribe to Up Close through iTunesSoundCloud or RSS.