Does gender make a difference?

Social IssuesSexuality

  • Author Thomas Strickland
  • Published April 1, 2011
  • Word count 513

We have to start with two simple definitions. "Sex" is the basic biology. Chromosomes are usually clear on your male or femaleness even though, on occasion, the physical body is ambiguous. Gender is sometime we construct through our culture. These are the roles we give people depending on the way they present themselves to the world. Hence, an individual may have a clear biological sex but, because of gender reassignment surgery, present to the world as a member of the opposite sex. It's this type of confusion we address through the laws on equality and discrimination. With the repeal of the "don't ask, don't tell" rule in our military, the level of social acceptance for difference is steadily improving. Whether it will include the acceptance of the right to marry is hard to predict.

This leaves us with the rather politically incorrect question of whether there are real differences between the sexes in the way they react to pain. In fact, we are not supposed to ask whether one sex is less equal than the other in any way. Nevertheless, there has been an increasing amount of research into this question of pain. The reason is "big government" which makes it even more contentious. This is the big brother the GOP wants to starve into submission. Yet it's spending our taxpayers' dollars on this research. The reason is that the statistics do not lie. If you look at any of the measures, women are prescribed more painkillers than men. Putting together all the evidence from primary care physicians and the insurance companies, women are far more likely to consult and describe pain symptoms. If you review the treatments authorized by hospitals and clinics, the majority are for the relief of pain in women.

It takes years to build hospitals and train all the doctors and nurses to staff them. This means we have to start the planning process now because, as time moves on, there will be more women than men in our society. Thanks to the quality of the medical treatment they receive, they are outliving men. So looking ten, twenty and more years into the future, we will need a lot more resources devoted to the treatments relevant to women. The research suggests that there are two reasons for this gender imbalance. First, at a physical level, women seem more susceptible to pain. Second, psychologically, even if the first is wrong, women are able to admit to pain whereas men are expected to bear it with a smile. The result is a tide of women demanding treatment and an increasing shortage of healthcare resources.

Fortunately, there's absolutely no doubt that Ultram works equally well no matter what the sex or gender of the person. When you look at the peripheral nervous system, it works in exactly the same way in both sexes. Similarly, the chemistry of the brain is the same. So Ultram sits in the brain, ignoring sex, and stops the pain messages from the body reaching the brain. At last, perfect equality across all versions and varieties of humanity.

Thomas Strickland is always ready to share his professional point of view on a topic. To see what Thomas Strickland has written about other things visit [http://www.polymeds.net/question-of-gender.html](http://www.polymeds.net/question-of-gender.html).

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