“…Many women, when they start university studies, think that they will be able to achieve the same professional development as men and later realize that it is still difficult for them to do so ( Taparia and Lenka, 2022 ). On the other hand, in Spain, even today, despite the new trends of co-responsibility and newly defined masculinities, it is still women who work double and triple time between carrying full-time paid work and the main burden of family care, which continues to have a direct impact on their health ( Casado, 2021 ; García-de-Diego and García-Faroldi, 2022 ). At the university level, numerous studies show that it is women who suffer more stress (in all its dimensions), have a poorer capacity for adaptation and resilience, and have higher levels of self-demand, a fact that may also justify the presence of gender differences in the perception of health status in this age group ( DeSalvo et al, 2006 ; Morales-Rodríguez, 2021 ).…”