Saturday, July 27, 2024
ECONOMYfeatured storyHEALTH

Giving women access to innovative and improved healthcare can save $1 trillion worldwide, report.

The huge gap between how women and men’s health are treated costs $1 trillion a year worldwide, the report in World Economic Forum said on Wednesday.

Women spend a quarter more of their lives suffering from poor health than men, a disparity that includes an unequal focus on men across medical research, diagnosis and treatment, the report said. Closing this gap would boost the global economy by $1 trillion annually by 2040, a 1.7 percent increase in per capita GDP driven by women, it added.

The report was released as the WEF hosts its 54th annual conference in Davos, Switzerland. The Swiss firm Ferring Pharmaceuticals and McKinsey Health Institute also contributed to the 42-page report.

Every US dollar invested in women’s health would return three dollars in projected economic growth, the report said. A large part of this growth would come from sick women getting back into the workforce.

For example, addressing the inequities related to endometriosis and menopause, which only affect women and have long been considered under-studied, could contribute $130 billion to global GDP by 2040, it estimated.

Research suggests that fewer than half the women living with endometriosis have been properly diagnosed. The study also looked at how treatment and diagnosis has benefitted men more than women.

Asthma inhalers, for example, have been found to be significantly less effective for women than men. Women are diagnosed later than men for 700 different diseases, previous research has shown. It also takes women two and a half years longer to be diagnosed with cancer.

According to Shyam Bishen, WEF healthcare head, the analysis demonstrates that investing in women’s health must be a priority for every country.

“Beyond improving women’s quality of life, ensuring women have access to innovations in healthcare is one of the best investments that countries can make for their societies and their economies,” he said in a statement.

The WEF announced it was launching the Global Alliance for Women’s Health, with $55 million pledged for women’s health.

 

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