Mid-Day: World Haemophilia Day 2026: Why women with haemophilia are still being misdiagnosed
Every year on World Haemophilia Day, celebrated on April 17, experts highlight the disease, characterised as a man’s disease, but women suffer from haemophilia ...
World Haemophilia Day 2026: Why women with haemophilia are still being misdiagnosed
On World Haemophilia Day 2026, Dr Rahul Bhargava explains why haemophilia affects men more than women. And understanding how the disorder can occur in your body, here is what you need to know about ...
Haemophilia A affects about 1 in 5,000–10,000, while haemophilia B affects about 1 in 40,000 males at birth. [2][5] As haemophilia A and B are both X-linked recessive disorders, females are rarely severely affected. [8]
Tribune Online on MSN: Hidden bleeding disorder: Thousands of Nigerians undiagnosed with haemophilia — Dr Ogundeji
Dr. Peter Ogundeji, a Consultant Haematologist and Coordinator of the Haemophilia Treatment Centre at University College Hospital Ibadan, in this interview with Sade Oguntola highlights low ...
Hidden bleeding disorder: Thousands of Nigerians undiagnosed with haemophilia — Dr Ogundeji
EXPERTS warn more must be done to raise awareness of haemophilia — to stop thousands suffering in silence. There are over 4,000 people in Scotland that have been diagnosed, with thousands more ...
NDTV on MSN: World Haemophilia Day 2026: Why are men more likely to develop haemophilia?
World Haemophilia Day 2026: Why are men more likely to develop haemophilia?
Haemophilia is inherited, which means that it is passed on through a parent’s gene. It is located on the X chromosome, and since a male child inherits the Y chromosome from the father and an X ...