Biden says healthy women help US prosperity as he highlights White House
initiative on their health
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[December 12, 2024]
By DARLENE SUPERVILLE
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden said Wednesday that he is “so
proud” that a women's health research initiative he launched last year
at his wife's urging has already invested nearly $1 billion because a
healthy female population improves U.S. prosperity.
“That's a fact,” he said in closing remarks at the first White House
Conference on Women's Health Research. “We haven't gotten that through
to the other team yet," Biden said, referencing President-elect Donald
Trump and his incoming administration.
Trump's three conservative nominees to the Supreme Court from his first
term as president voted to overturn a woman's constitutional right to an
abortion. Democrats campaigned on reproductive rights and women's health
issues in this year's elections.
Karoline Leavitt, a spokesperson for Trump's transition team, said the
president-elect will keep his promise to improve health in the U.S.
“President Trump campaigned on making America healthy again for ALL
Americans including men, women, and children, and he will deliver on
that promise," Leavitt said in an email.
Women make up half of the U.S. population, about 168 million people, but
medical research into their unique health circumstances has largely been
underfunded and understudied, officials have said.
Jill Biden has said she brought the idea for the White House Initiative
on Women's Health Research to the president after Maria Shriver, herself
a women's health advocate and member of the influential Kennedy
political family, brought it to her.
The first lady told the researchers, advocates, and business and
philanthropic leaders attending the conference that she will keep
pressing the issue after she leaves her role.
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President Joe Biden speaks at the White House Conference on Women's
Health Research from the East Room of the White House in Washington,
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
“My work doesn't stop in January
when Joe and I leave this house,” she said. “I will keep building
alliances, like the ones that brought us here today, and I will keep
pushing for funding for innovative research.”
The first lady said the U.S. economy loses about $1.8 billion in
working time every year because of how menopause affects women. And
she is interested in learning more about extreme morning sickness
during pregnancy.
“I heard this a couple weeks ago and I was particularly interested
because my own granddaughter was going through the same thing,
'cause we're going to be great-grandparents,” Jill Biden said.
Granddaughter Naomi Biden Neal and her husband, Peter Neal, are
expecting their first child.
Since its launch, the women's health research initiative has
attracted nearly $1 billion in federal funding, including from the
Defense Department and National Institutes of Health.
“In one year, everybody in this room kicked butt,” Shriver said at
the conference. “Not until the Bidens did anyone ever think to make
women's health and research a priority for the federal government,
so let that sink in.”
President Biden closed the conference with a nod to the influence of
his wife, who, after her remarks, sat in the front row beside their
daughter Ashley Biden, who runs a women's shelter in Philadelphia.
‘You stepped up kid," Biden told the first lady. Then he told the
audience, “In case you wonder, when she speaks, I listen.”
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