Man flu is real, but women get more autoimmune diseases and allergies

Prof Gabrielle Belz

writer

Prof Gabrielle Belz

Professor, Molecular Immunology, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute

Dr Cyril Seillet

writer

Dr Cyril Seillet

Senior research scientist, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute

Men and women respond differently to diseases and treatments for biological, social and psychological reasons. In this series on Gender Medicine, experts explore these differences and the importance of approaching treatment and diagnosis through a gender lens.


We know that sex hormones drive characteristic male and female traits such as breast enlargement and hip widening in women, or increased muscle mass and growth of facial hair in men. But now we also recognise they have a major impact on the immune system – our body’s inbuilt mechanism that helps fight and protect us against disease.

Research suggests this has an evolutionary basis: survival of the species may mean men are harder hit by viruses, but a woman’s reactive immune system leaves her more susceptible to autoimmune diseases and allergies.

PASSWORD RESET

Forgot your password or password not working? Please enter your email address. You will receive an email with the link to set a new password.

Icon 2

NEXT LIVE Webcast

:
Days
:
Hours
:
Minutes
Seconds
A/Prof Debbie Rigby

A/Prof Debbie Rigby

Why Inhaler Device Design and Technique Matters

Dr Philip Tong

Dr Philip Tong

Facial Rashes Case Studies – Practical Guide to Assessment and Management

Dr Rupert Hinds

Dr Rupert Hinds

Abdominal Pain in Children – Practical Approach in GP

Prof Roger Chen

Prof Roger Chen

Practical Guide to Improving Control of T2D

Join us for the next free webcast for GPs and healthcare professionals

High quality lectures delivered by leading independent experts

Share this

Share this

Prof Gabrielle Belz

writer

Prof Gabrielle Belz

Professor, Molecular Immunology, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute

Dr Cyril Seillet

writer

Dr Cyril Seillet

Senior research scientist, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute

Test your knowledge

Recent articles

Latest GP poll

In the last twelve months, how many adverse outcomes have you encountered arising from pharmacy prescribing?

None

0%

1-2

0%

Three or more

0%

Find your area of interest

Once you confirm you’ve read this article you can complete a Patient Case Review to earn 0.5 hours CPD in the Reviewing Performance (RP) category.

Select ‘Confirm & learn‘ when you have read this article in its entirety and you will be taken to begin your Patient Case Review.

Upcoming Healthed Webcast

Tune in for "Facial rashes case studies - Practical guide to assessment and management" lecture

Tuesday 9th June, 7pm - 9pm AEST

Speaker

Dr Philip Tong

Consultant Dermatologist; Founder, DermScreen, Dermatology Junction; Visiting Medical Officer, St Vincent’s Hospital Sydney

What does it mean when a facial red rash does not respond to topical steroids and gets worse with the treatment? Dermatologist Dr Philip Tong presents a series of cases with this scenario.