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Female Health Across the Tree of Life: Insights at the Intersection of Women's Health, One Health and Planetary Health
Author(s) -
Barbara Natterson-Horowitz,
Amy M. Boddy,
Dawn Zimmerman
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
pnas nexus
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2752-6542
DOI - 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac044
Subject(s) - reproductive health , environmental health , one health , human health , public health , medicine , population , pathology
Across the tree of life, female animals share biological characteristics that place them at risk for similar diseases and disorders. Greater awareness of these shared vulnerabilities can accelerate insight and innovation in women's health. We present a broadly comparative approach to female health that can inform issues ranging from mammary, ovarian and endometrial cancer to preeclampsia, osteoporosis and infertility. Our focus on female health highlights the interdependence of human, animal and environmental health. As the boundaries between human and animal environments become blurred, female animals across species are exposed to increasingly similar environmental hazards. As such, the health of female animals has unprecedented relevance to the field of woman's health. Expanding surveillance of animal populations beyond zoonoses to include non-communicable diseases can strengthen women's health prevention efforts as environmental factors are increasingly implicated in human mortality. The physiology of nonhuman females can also spark innovation in women's health. There is growing interest in those species of which the females appear to have a level of resistance to pathologies that claim millions of human lives every year. These physiologic adaptations highlight the importance of biodiversity to human health. Insights at the intersection of women's health and planetary health can be a rich source of innovations benefitting the health of all animals across the tree of life.

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