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Sex and gender terminology: a glossary for gender-inclusive epidemiology

Charlie Rioux, Ash Paré, Kira London-Nadeau, Robert‐Paul Juster, Scott Weedon, Sydney Levasseur-Puhach, Makayla Freeman, Leslie E. Roos, Lianne Tomfohr‐Madsen

2022Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health70 citationsDOI

Abstract

There is increased interest in inclusion, diversity and representativeness in epidemiological and community health research. Despite this progress, misunderstanding and conflation of sex and gender have precluded both the accurate description of sex and gender as sample demographics and their inclusion in scientific enquiry aiming to distinguish health disparities due to biological systems, gendered experiences or their social and environmental interactions. The present glossary aims to define and improve understanding of current sex-related and gender-related terminology as an important step to gender-inclusive epidemiological research. Effectively, a proper understanding of sex, gender and their subtleties as well as acknowledgement and inclusion of diverse gender identities and modalities can make epidemiology not only more equitable, but also more scientifically accurate and representative. In turn, this can improve public health efforts aimed at promoting the well-being of all communities and reducing health inequities.

Topics & Concepts

TerminologyInclusion (mineral)GlossaryRepresentativeness heuristicDiversity (politics)AcknowledgementEpidemiologyGender diversityPublic healthSociologyPsychologyGender studiesMedicineSocial psychologyComputer scienceAnthropologyEconomicsPhilosophyLinguisticsNursingCorporate governanceComputer securityInternal medicineFinanceSex and Gender in HealthcareObesity and Health PracticesGender Roles and Identity Studies
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