"We want women to be counted in research. Lets find answers to some of our toughest health questions."

Meet All of Us

99.9% of humans are 99.9% identical in their genetic makeup. The 0.1% difference in your health story could lead to health discoveries.

Women’s stories matter to the All of Us Research Program. The health information of a million people will form a vast pool of information. This may help researchers make discoveries about health.

Share your health data and help power medical research.

Testimonials

What current participants think about All of Us.

    A Glimpse at What Researchers In Arizona are Studying in the All of Us Researcher Workbench

    The All of Us Research Program, part of the National Institutes of Health, is building one of the largest biomedical data resources of its kind. The All of Us Research Hub stores health data from a diverse group of participants from across the United States. Approved researchers can access All of Us data and tools to conduct studies to help improve our understanding of human health. 

    Despite advances in breast cancer screening, prevention, and treatment, over 40,000 women still die of breast cancer each year in the United States. Growing interest in risk-based screening creates an urgent mandate to determine the effectiveness of a personalized, risk-based…

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    We aim to quantify predictors of endometriosis and investigate the association between race/ethnicity, urban/rural hospital status, hospital bed size, marital status, census region, infertility, and PCOS diagnosis with the diagnosis of endometriosis. Historically, Black and Hispanic women have lower rates…

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    Asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) are the two most common respiratory diseases. Therefore, understanding the characteristics and frequency of participants with either of these diseases in the US by analyzing the All of Us database has public health…

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    We are exploring how placental morphology can predict gestational diabetes. Currently, gestational diabetes is diagnosed late in gestation. Lifestyle interventions are recommended as treatment and delivering these interventions earlier than current diagnoses may reverse the complication.

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    We are hoping to use the All of Us dataset to understand how age at menopause influences a diverse array of age-related conditions and outcomes across women of different race/ethnicity.

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    We will examine predictors of COVID-19 reported stress and anxiety (perceived discrimination, perceived social support) at two points in time to examine predictors of mental health as pandemic persisted based on race/ethnicity, gender, and income status, in addition to the…

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    Why Should I Join?

    Today’s research may lead to tomorrow’s discoveries. Be included.

    In the past, medical research has left many people behind. The All of Us Research Program wants to change that by including everyone. Only when all communities are part of medical research can all of us benefit from future medical advances.

    You have the power to help researchers find answers to tough health questions.

    As researchers study our health data, they start to see patterns. These patterns can help us understand how different people react to different prevention and treatment plans. We hope that, in the future, our findings will help health care providers deliver treatments that are tailored to our differences.

    Get health information that matters to you, including DNA results at no cost.

    When you join, you can get information about yourself, like your weight and blood pressure. In the future, you can choose to receive your genetic results along with guidance on what it means. Your results may tell you about your risk for certain diseases or how your body responds to certain medications. Information about your DNA may help you and your health care providers make health decisions that are better informed and as unique as you are.

    How We're Different:

    Join now at JoinAllofUs.org and help power medical research. Answers are in all of us.

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