Yes, I would, just to tell you that Louise Pilote is a Canadian researcher who is funded through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and she just came up with an analysis that is groundbreaking, world-shaking, amazing. Canada is really a leader.
She was able to give a gender questionnaire to people with early heart attacks. She looked at the Bem Sex Role Inventory, which asks: are you more nurturing or are you more aggressive, so it's kind of feminine versus masculine. She also took into account hours spent on caregiving activities and household chores and those kinds of things. She created a gender index.
In her analysis she was able to consider both sex—are you biologically male or female?—and gender and see which one predicted poorer outcomes after heart disease. It turns out that gender, independent of sex—which is what we've always believed about women—is the predictor.
If you have a certain gender identity or gender role, then that's going to make you access help either more quickly or more slowly, or follow the recommendations. I don't know if you've seen the American Medical Association's blurb on the woman who is having chest symptoms. She calls 911, and they say, “We're going to be there immediately” and she says, “Give me 10 minutes; the kitchen is a mess”. That's gender.