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Making women's health a priority


Women and girls make up more than half of our population. And yet, their health is somehow seen as a 'niche issue'.

For millions of women across the country, the unfair reality of getting sick is that they face a long journey just to get a diagnosis – let alone treatment – because they are not always taken seriously or listened to by doctors or other health professionals. After centuries of modern medicine and incredible advancements in medical research, we still understand less about how many health issues affect women compared to men – and too often women’s symptoms are ignored, or their health issues are minimised or disregarded entirely.

Women are more likely to die of cardiovascular disease than men. Why? Because the treatment protocols for cardiovascular disease are based on men. Three quarters of people diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in Australia are women. Women are three times more likely to develop rheumatoid arthritis than men and four times more likely to develop osteoporosis. Two thirds of people affected by Alzheimers’ disease are women.

For too long, the taboo around talking about women’s health has meant women have suffered silently with pain and medical conditions for which they should have received support and treatment.

Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews said: “For too long, women have had to fight too hard to have their pain recognised and acknowledged and to be believed about their own experiences – it’s fundamentally wrong. Labor is doing what matters ensuring Victorian women and their health are given the focus, funding and respect they deserve.”

The government has already opened Victoria’s first clinic focused on women’s heart health and we’re boosting research capabilities at the multi-billion expansion to the Royal Women’s Hospital.

"We’ve announced we’ll create 20 women’s health clinics across the state and an Aboriginal-led clinic, but we know there is always more to do to provide women with the best health information, advice and treatment," a Labor spokesman said.

"A re-elected Andrews Labor Government will invest $5 million to support the creation of a Women’s Health Research Institute, to help us find new ways to identify and treat diseases such as endometriosis. The new institute will help address the gender gap in medical research, where conditions unique to women don’t get enough funding and women aren’t meaningfully included in clinical trials.

"Modelled on the highly successful Victorian Comprehensive Cancer Centre, it will bring together education, research and treatment. Our investment will support planning to find a location for the institute, how it will be run and how it will partner with universities – and we’ll work with the Commonwealth and research bodies to deliver the project in full."

The spokesman said Labor would also invest $64.8 million to double the number of surgeries for endometriosis and associated conditions – that’s around 10,800 extra laparoscopies over the next four years. Delays in diagnosis, treatment and surgery can lead to fertility complications and can lengthen women’s pain and the harmful effects on their health.

The additional laparoscopies will be for public patients and allow for more referrals from the Women's Health Clinics to be treated.

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