Why do more women than men have Alzheimer's disease?

Why do more women than men have Alzheimer's disease?

Why do more women than men have Alzheimer's disease?

By brainXchange

Date and time

Wednesday, September 23, 2020 · 9 - 10am PDT

Location

Online

About this event

More women than men have Alzheimer’s disease and the numbers are growing. Both sex (biological factors) and gender (social factors) most likely work together to contribute to this predominance. In order to prevent AD in women, we need to understand early in life the factors affecting women that lead to eventual dementia. In this webinar we discuss what is known about the underlying causes and suggest future directions for research.

Presenter:

Gillian Einstein, PhD, Professor of Psychology, University of Toronto; Wilfred and Joyce Posluns Chair in Women's Brain Health and Aging; Adjunct Scientist, Rotman Research Institute; Guest Professor of Gender & Health, Linköping University, Sweden; Program Lead, Women, Sex, Gender, & Dementia Program—Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration and Aging (CCNA)

Gillian Einstein is The Wilfred and Joyce Posluns Chair in Women’s Brain Health and Aging, Professor of Psychology at the University of Toronto and Guest Professor of Gender and Health at Linköping University in Linköping, Sweden. She is an Adjunct Scientist at Women’s College Research Institute and at the Rotman Research Institute in Toronto. She is a board member of the International Gender Medicine Society, Chair of the Canadian Institutes of Health’s Institute of Gender and Health Advisory Board, and Founder of the Canadian Organization of Gender and Sex (COGS) Research. She is Lead of the Women, Sex, Gender, and Dementia cross-cutting program of the Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration and Aging.

Dr. Einstein has served as a temporary advisor for the World Health Organization on Female Genital Circumcision/mutilation/cutting (FGC) and has numerous honours such as: Named one of 20 Canadian Brain Research Stars, Brain Canada; The May Cohen Lecture in Women’s Health; Invited Member, CIHR College of Reviewers; Lawrence & Nancy Golden Memorial Lectureship in Mind-Body Medicine. She has also been recognized and profiled as a Leader in Women’s Health in Ontario by the Ontario Women’s Health Network and as a feminist voice in Psychology; Profiled in Psychology’s Feminist Voices. Her research is funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Alzheimer’s Society Canada, and the Ontario Brain Institute. Her broader interests encompass memory, the long term effects of hormone treatment, and the bridge between our scientific understanding of the nervous system and larger concerns having to do with self, identity, feminism, and the nature of science. She has published on Alzheimer disease, vision, sex differences, Female Genital Cutting, and estrogens’ effects on aging, pain, sleep, memory and mood. Her current research is on the effects of ovarian removal on women’s memory and brains. She is also interested in cognition in trans-individuals and how different cultures shape the nervous system. The overarching question of this research is: How do both sex and gender mediate women’s brain health?

This integrated KTE webinar event is brought to you by brainXchange in partnership with the Alzheimer Society of Canada and the Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration in Aging (CCNA).

This event takes place at 12:00 pm EDT. To check your time zone, please click here.

Question? Email: Jillian McConnell: jillian@brainxchange.ca

Please note:

By registering for this event, you will be added to the brainXchange newsletter list, where you will be emailed bi-monthly newsletters and information on upcoming events. You may unsubscribe at any time.

This event will be recorded. By choosing to participate in the event, you consent to the recording. Recordings will be made available on the brainXchange website and on Vimeo.

Organized by

The brainXchange is a network of people dedicated to improving quality of life and supports for persons with or at risk of having brain-health needs related to dementia, mental health and neurological conditions related to aging or have experienced brain health changes earlier in life that are now more complex with aging.

 

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