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Menopause Int 2008;14:18-20
doi:10.1258/mi.2007.007035
© 2008 British Menopause Society

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Review

Heart disease and gender in mass print media

Juanne Clarke

Department of Sociology, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

Correspondence: Juanne Clarke, Department of Sociology, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. Email: jclarke{at}wlu.ca
Heart disease is a major cause of death, disease and disability in the developed world for both men and women. Nevertheless, the evidence suggests that women are under-diagnosed both because they fail to visit the doctor with relevant symptoms and because doctors tend to dismiss the seriousness of women's symptoms of heart disease. This study examines the way that popular mass print media present the possible links between gender and heart disease. The findings suggest that the ‘usual candidates’ for heart disease are considered to be high achieving and active men for whom the ‘heart attack’ is sometimes seen as a ‘badge of honour’ and a symbol of their success. In contrast, women are less often seen as likely to succumb, but they are portrayed as if they are and ought to be worried about their husbands. Women's own bodies are described as so problematic as to be perhaps useless to diagnose, because they are so difficult to understand and treat.

Key Words: Cardiovascular disease • gender • heart disease • media portrayal • women


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