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COVID-19 puts spotlight on disparities in research on women's health


Ovidiu Dugulan/iStock
(NEW YORK) When Katharine Lee, a postdoctoral research fellow at Washington University in St. Louis, and Kathryn Clancy, an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, each say they experienced unexpected menstrual cycles after receiving the COVID-19 vaccine, they did what researchers do and began to collect data.
Clancy conferred with Lee, who said several colleagues had also reported differing menstrual symptoms, and issued a single tweet in late February explaining her own symptoms and asking if anyone else had experienced anything similar.
Three months later, Lee and Clancy say more than 80,000 people have documented their experiences in an online survey they collaborated on examining short-term vaccine side effects related to the menstrual cycle. ....

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COVID-19 puts spotlight on disparities in research on women's health


COVID-19 puts spotlight on disparities in research on women s health
• 19 min read
What to know about infertility and COVID-19 vaccines
Dr. Jennifer Ashton discusses how vaccines have not been proven to impact fertility and why women who are currently pregnant may want to get vaccinated.Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images
When Katharine Lee, a postdoctoral research fellow at Washington University in St. Louis, and Kathryn Clancy, an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, each say they experienced unexpected menstrual cycles after receiving the COVID-19 vaccine, they did what researchers do and began to collect data. ....

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Health Experts Explain Why Women Report More Side Effects from COVID-19 Vaccine


Health experts explained why women report more side effects after receiving the COVID-19 vaccine than men.
(Photo : Milos Bicanski/Getty Images)
A woman receives a dose of the Moderna vaccine against the coronavirus disease.
Women Reports More Side Effects
From December 14 to January 13, almost 7,000 cases were processed through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention s Vaccine Adverse Effect Reporting System, with more than 79 percent of them coming from women. Headache, nausea, and dizziness were the most often recorded side effects.
Women are much more likely than men to suffer some of the vaccine s more unusual side effects, such as an itchy red rash at the injection site known as the COVID arm or Moderna arm, since the Moderna vaccine accounts for about 95 percent of the reactions. Women account for 77 percent of the confirmed side effects of the Moderna vaccine, according to a published article in The USA Today. ....

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