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Optimizing Care for Diverse Populations
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Optimizing Care for Diverse Populations

Yamnia I. Cortés and Makeba Williams
Obstetrics and gynecology clinics of North America
05/2026
DOI: 10.1016/j.ogc.2026.04.006

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Abstract

Equitable menopause care demands systemic, clinical, and research reforms. Guided by the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities framework and an intersectional lens, we emphasize how sociocultural factors, the physical/built environment, behaviors, biology, and health care systems jointly heighten menopause symptom burden—especially for marginalized groups. Priorities include addressing health literacy; developing multilingual, culturally responsive educational tools; integrating menopause curricula, bias training, and trauma-informed strategies—into clinical education; and expanding insurance coverage. Inclusive recruitment and retention strategies in menopause research, plus coordinated, interdisciplinary care, are essential to deliver personalized, culturally responsive interventions and improve midlife women’s outcomes.

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