Updated On: 16 July, 2024 03:31 PM IST | Mumbai | Ainie Rizvi
Autoimmune diseases develop when one’s immune system attacks the body tissues. Studies show that this condition affects approximately 8 percent of people worldwide, of which 78 percent are women. But why specifically women and what can they do to protect themselves against this condition?

A pre-monsoon shower lashes Fort on June 13. Pic/Sameer Markande
As monsoons intensify in the Indian subcontinent, medical experts warn that women are at a heightened risk of developing autoimmune diseases. The rise has been linked to increased humidity, moisture and a decrease in atmospheric pressure in the air that develops around this time of the year.
Shedding light on the various autoimmune diseases, Dr Pratima Thamke, a consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist working with Motherhood Hospital, Mumbai informs that, “Women are more likely to develop diseases like rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, scleroderma, psoriatic arthritis, lupus and thyroid disease during the monsoon season.”
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