The Truth About How Bad Medicine and Lazy Science Leave Women Dismissed, Misdiagnosed, and Sick
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Average rating3.5
"In this shocking, hard-hitting expose in the tradition of Naomi Klein and Barbara Ehrenreich, the editorial director of Feministing.com, reveals how gender bias infects every level of medicine and healthcare today--leading to inadequate, inappropriate, and even dangerous treatment that threatens women's lives and well-being. Modern medicine is failing women. Half of all American women suffer from at least one chronic health condition--from autoimmune disorders and asthma to depression and Alzheimer's disease--and the numbers are increasing. A wealth of research has revealed that women often exhibit different symptoms than their male counterparts, suffer disproportionately from many debilitating conditions, and may react differently to prescription drugs and other therapies. Yet more than twenty years after the law decreed that women be included in all health-related research and drug development, doctors are still operating with a lingering knowledge gap when it comes to women's health. And they're not immune to unconscious biases and stereotypes that can undermine the doctor-patient relationship. The consequences can be catastrophic: too often, women are misdiagnosed, poorly treated, and find their complaints dismissed as 'just stress' or 'all in your head.' Meanwhile, they're getting sicker. Maya Dusenbery brings together scientific and sociological research, interviews with experts within and outside the medical establishment, and personal stories from regular women to provide the first comprehensive, accessible look at how sexism in medicine harms women today. In addition to offering a clear-eyed explanation of the root causes of this insidious and entrenched bias and laying out its effects, she suggests concrete steps we can take to cure it. Eye-opening and long-overdue, Doing Harm is an empowering call to action for health care providers and all women"--
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Fascinating read. I had mysterious chest pains earlier this year (2020 man), so I waited a day, called the telenurse, made an appt at a walk-in, got sent to emerg, waited 9 hrs doing tests only to emerge around 1am after finding out nothing - but I probably wasn't dying of something they knew about! Glad I didn't get the run-around some of these women did. But does it ever entrench the mistrust of the medical system that only seems to want to know which drugs will make you go away. (Which is better than “go away you only want drugs!” But still not helpful)
Dusenbery runs through a number of illness and conditions that get misdiagnosed or ignored if women complain about having them and the general lack of sex analysed research to help define how certain illnesses and drugs reacted to female bodies and hormones. Some of this information I knew, but was explored in more depth and some I had no idea.