Dan Seitz

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In women, the connection is far clearer; so much so that patients themselves have noticed these fluctuations. For years, doctors assumed that a woman’s immunity couldn’t be changing during her menstrual cycle. If she did report a difference in pain levels, doctors might dismiss it as premenstrual syndrome or some vague psychological complaint. It was only when these links were increasingly backed up by hard research that scientific interest was sparked and more research began to flourish.
Inferior: How Science Got Women Wrong—and the New Research That's Rewriting the Story
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