Cheshire
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Another article:
'Medical Symptoms That Medicine Can't Hear': A Conversation With Maya Dusenbery
https://psmag.com/social-justice/medical-symptoms-that-medicine-cant-hear
'Medical Symptoms That Medicine Can't Hear': A Conversation With Maya Dusenbery
One woman even said she was thankful for ultimately receiving a cancer diagnosis because she felt validated that her symptoms weren't made up, that she wasn't "crazy."
This is the real core problem. It has become entrenched in medicine. I write about the knowledge gap and the trust gap being mutually reinforcing, and this is an example of how that happens and how the one sees the other. If medicine has collectively decided that any symptoms in women can't be explained by an underlying physical disease or aren't yet understood in precise biological terms, then we attribute them to psychogenic causes and just don't do the scientific research that's needed to explain the symptoms. It's a surprising problem for medicine to have, given that medicine presents itself as a scientific endeavor. If it's medically unexplained, then we should be doing the research to explain it. That's the whole point. Instead of pouring all of the research money and effort into explaining [women's symptoms], the opposite has happened—they have been totally neglected.
https://psmag.com/social-justice/medical-symptoms-that-medicine-cant-hear