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Let us know what you think of the episode by pressing this link - Thank you for your comments
In this episode, Lendo and Langston sit down with sociologist and Yale professor Dr. Rene Almeling, author of Guynecology and researcher specializing in men's reproductive health, to explore why men have largely been absent from public health conversations surrounding fertility, reproduction, and family planning.
Dr. Almeling explains how scientific knowledge develops over time, how cultural assumptions influence research priorities, and how generations of researchers can focus on certain areas while overlooking others. The result is not necessarily bad science. Sometimes it is incomplete science.
This conversation explores how institutions decide which questions are worth asking, which questions receive funding and research, and which questions never enter the conversation at all.
Listen, learn, and join the conversation.
Support the show
By Lendo Mutambala & Ryan BallLet us know what you think of the episode by pressing this link - Thank you for your comments
In this episode, Lendo and Langston sit down with sociologist and Yale professor Dr. Rene Almeling, author of Guynecology and researcher specializing in men's reproductive health, to explore why men have largely been absent from public health conversations surrounding fertility, reproduction, and family planning.
Dr. Almeling explains how scientific knowledge develops over time, how cultural assumptions influence research priorities, and how generations of researchers can focus on certain areas while overlooking others. The result is not necessarily bad science. Sometimes it is incomplete science.
This conversation explores how institutions decide which questions are worth asking, which questions receive funding and research, and which questions never enter the conversation at all.
Listen, learn, and join the conversation.
Support the show