It’s thrilling to be part of a historical moment when women are stepping into the political arena in record-breaking numbers. They’re tossing their hats into the ring — left, right and center — in national, statewide and local races. It’s an auspicious lead-in for next year’s 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment. On Tuesday, we celebrated National Voter Registration Day 2018. We have to be in it to win it.
I still remember my own first visits to the voting booth, brought by my parents to see American democracy in action. And I’m sentimental thinking about how not long after my own (now-grown) daughter could walk, she was “helping me” push the levers in the voting booth.
I didn’t have to fight for the right to vote; I’m indebted to those who did. Today, as we march forward for women’s equality we must include women’s health equity.
In the past few months, we’ve seen woman after woman speak out publicly to share deeply personal stories about health inequity. Some are women whose excruciating pain is dismissed and told it’s just in their imaginations. Others are women misdiagnosed because their symptoms didn’t meet the male model. There are women prescribed medications based on men’s bodies. These stories are nothing new — but now they’re being heard and read, and their voices are resonating. My hope is that we’ll see real change, in much the way that #MeToo brought women’s sexual harassment stories into the light, creating an unprecedented cultural shift — and palpable change.
This year’s candidates know that health care is a top issue for American voters. Our responsibility? To make sure they know we expect them to advance women’s health equity, that we want more than just a nod. We expect change.
Statistically speaking, women live longer than men. But women also live “sicker.” Many serious conditions and chronic illnesses afflict more women than men. Autoimmune diseases, which are three times more common in women, take roughly five years to be correctly diagnosed, and female-specific conditions like endometriosis often take a decade of doctor visits before they’re accurately diagnosed.
We’ve seen how our government can play a powerful role in change. It’s been only 30 years since the FDA lifted its ban on women in clinical trials. And while today, women average 46 percent of cardiology research subjects, according to a recent article in the May 2018 edition of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC), some studies have women’s participation as low as 22 percent. That’s a lot more than zero, but it’s far from enough when heart disease is the number one killer of American women, taking the lives of more women each year than all cancers combined.
Did you know that women are nearly three times more likely to die following a serious heart attack than men, according to another recent study in JACC? Did you know that women and men respond differently to many drugs, including blood pressure medicine, anesthesia, and aspirin, according to the National Institutes of Health?
Each of us must speak out to improve maternal health outcomes and preserve women’s access to free and low-cost
preventive services — like well-women visits, mammograms, diabetes screening, and nutrition counseling. And we must work together to elect leaders who will invest in research, ensure accountability throughout our health-care system, and champion access to quality, affordable, and equitable care.
Recently, I came across a small piece of women’s history that resonated deeply with me. Back in 1918, the organization “I Lead” urged President Woodrow Wilson to support suffrage — via telegram. After all, it said, women in Palestinian Jewish villages already had the right. Within a year, American women did, too.
Making our voices heard at the polls is essential, an honor and a hard-won right. Human decency demands we use our voices and votes to save lives, to push for national and local policies that will bring equity to research, prevention, treatment, and access to quality care.
Health — including women’s health equity — is not a partisan issue. We must make it clear that candidates who want our vote must commit to protecting women’s health and working toward a quality, affordable, and equitable health care system for all. And each of us must do all that we can to help get out the vote. If you’ve never been part of a voter registration drive — now’s the moment. Remember, you’re not just doing it for yourself, but for your daughters, your granddaughters, and future generations yet to come.
Ellen Hershkin is national president of Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America, Inc. The largest Jewish women’s organization in the United States, Hadassah founded the Coalition for Women’s Health Equality in 2016.