Women in Geriatrics
A special issue of Geriatrics (ISSN 2308-3417).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 March 2023) | Viewed by 13808
Special Issue Editors
Interests: aging; geriatrics; nutrition; senescence; telomeres; telomerase; dementia; cognition; diabetes; metabolism
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Supporting gender equity for women working in geriatrics is important for the growth of such an important discipline. Women working in the geriatrics field experience implicit and explicit discriminatory practices that mirror the available data on the entire workforce. Currently, for example, women represent 46% of medical doctors in Italy, but they often do not have highly qualified roles.
Gender dimorphism in the demographic profile has been also shown: “geriatrics is about women”. Women have a longer lifespan than men, although they spend many of those years, and more, with an unhealthy status. Older women are more likely than men to have chronic health conditions. They are often frail and more likely to have memory or other “cognitive” disorders. Recent studies have demonstrated a differing pattern of multimorbidity by gender, with greater functional impairment among women and more comorbidity among men, although without any differences in the prognosis.
The role of women in geriatrics, however, is far more complex, especially considering that caregivers, who play a consistent role in the assistance provided to older patients, are predominantly women, including daughters and/or wives. Thus, women dedicate more time and effort to helping the elderly, which can substantially affect their personal working and social life, especially as carers themselves grow older.
The aim of this Special Issue is to identify the main topics related to women in geriatrics as workers, patients, and caregivers. The objective is to underline the differences and to investigate gender inequity, focusing on concrete and practical solutions to improve geriatric practice.
Dr. Virginia Boccardi
Dr. Liliana Mazza
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Women
- Gender
- Caregivers
- Gender discrepancies
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