This document summarizes a presentation on healthy living for women in Canada. It discusses how current healthy living discourse focuses too much on individual responsibility and fails to consider social and systemic factors. It also finds limited evidence about the impacts of gender on health behaviors and outcomes. The presentation calls for more gender-responsive approaches to healthy living policies and programs that employ sex- and gender-based analysis. It provides an overview of Canadian data on various healthy living topics for women and examples of promising gender-sensitive interventions. The conclusion advocates for incorporating a gender lens on healthy living to better address the needs and inequities faced by women.