MUS: "Medicine has a sexism problem" by Maya Dusenbery

MsUnderstood

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Medicine Has A Sexism Problem, And It’s Making Sick Women Sicker

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entr...exism-research_us_5a9e01c4e4b0a0ba4ad72a3c?v7

This article published on HuffPost today provides an excellent overview of the MUS concept as applied to illnesses that are more common among women. Although the history regarding women being under-represented in medical research is US-based, the comments regarding medically unexplained symptoms are applicable worldwide. ME gets a mention.

Here are a few excerpts:

"Meanwhile, over the last couple of decades, an ever-growing body of research has revealed there are, in fact, important sex and gender differences ― in everything from how drugs are metabolized to how the same disease manifests itself to the prevalence rates for various conditions. But in a medical system in which it takes 15 to 20 years for any new scientific knowledge to go from “bench to bedside,” much of this emerging information has yet to be incorporated into medical education, let alone clinical practice.

The picture only gets worse when we look at diseases that primarily affect women. Those women’s health advocates who sounded the alarm in the early 1990s accused the medical establishment of neglecting those conditions entirely: As Congresswoman Pat Schroeder (D-Colo.) put it at the time, “You fund what you fear.” (ME, unfortunately, clearly hasn't been feared enough.)

And based on the minuscule amount of funding they were receiving, a male-dominated research community didn’t seem to fear many health problems common in women ― from autoimmune diseases to gynecological disorders to chronic pain conditions. In fact, the problem ran even deeper: It’s not just that medicine hasn’t considered many women’s diseases to be very urgent ― it’s that it hasn’t considered them to be “real” diseases at all.

Which brings us to the second gap hindering women’s medical care: the trust gap. Women’s reports of their symptoms are too often disbelieved ― a problem rooted in the history of hysteria. Perhaps most common in the medical literature these days is the term “medically unexplained symptoms” ― a phrase that needn’t necessarily imply a psychogenic origin but, in practice, often does.

As long as women’s “medically unexplained symptoms” are considered adequately explained by the “fact” ― accepted as a scientific truth for over a century now ― that women are prone to “somatizing” their emotional distress, they do not need to be medically explained by thorough scientific research. This Catch-22 has been especially clear when it comes to “medically unexplained” conditions that disproportionately affect women, including fibromyalgia, vulvodynia, interstitial cystitis, myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome and chemical intolerance. These conditions remain so poorly understood mostly because, assuming they must be psychogenic, medicine has put astoundingly little effort ― and few research dollars ― toward understanding them.

How many collective years of needless suffering have women with “medically unexplained” conditions endured while medicine has been stubbornly looking the other way?"
 
I've heard quite a few people challenge the claim that male pattern baldness gets more. I have never seen good evidence that it is true.
I've seen several CDC funding charts from the past, and they did indeed fund MPB more than "CFS". I dunno what the current numbers are ($0 I think now?) but there have been many years where this has been the case.
 
Speaking as a middle-aged male with terminal Male Pattern Baldness, I hereby donate in perpetuity all of my portion of any Male Pattern Baldness research funds to biomedical ME research.

But seriously, get over it, men. If you are going bald, do it gracefully. Learn to love a Number 4, and be grateful for reduced hair care bills.

Though I would like an explanation for why my nose and ear hair seems to be proliferating wildly as I get older. What is Mother Nature preparing me for that requires this? o_O
 
I think an important thing to note is that this treatment of women harms both genders. Women directly, and men indirectly through those illnesses not being taken seriously enough.

I think it's astute that these issues are coming through in the media now, when feminism has become more mainstream and fashionable in the last few years. Hopefully it's more likely to affect change.
 
I used to have an account with Pulse (the online magazine for doctors), from when it was possible to join the site as a non-doctor, and as a result I still get sent emails with information on online courses I could do if I was a doctor. One came today which is relevant to the subject of this thread. Note that the emphasis is as it was in the email.

Learn all about women's health: diagnosis, symptoms, causes and treatments

Nearly half of women visit their GPs 19 times before diagnoses with common gynaecological complaints

Women presenting with gender-specific health matters account for substantial proportion of your time as a GP. However, it is not always as easy for women to come forward and discuss these issues. According to women’s health magazine, 25% of women are embarrassed talking to their GP because they’re afraid of discussing their sexual history. It was also found that nearly half of women need to visit their GPs 19 times before being diagnosed with common gynaecological complaints.

Enabling a woman to better manage issues such as sexual health, heavy periods or menopausal symptoms can have a substantial impact on her overall quality of life. As a GP, you have a key leadership role in ensuring all women receive the right treatment options. Integral to this role is ensuring you are up to date with recent developments surrounding GP diagnoses, investigation and management of women’s health issues.

Our women’s health modules address the needs of general practitioners caring for millions of women in primary care in the UK. We promote best practice through supportive materials, educational quizzes and informative webinars. Our women’s health modules cover all relevant content for 2018, including the latest evidence and guidelines as well as simple ideas and techniques that GPs have found helpful in consultations, on a day to day basis.

I was shocked that so many women still need to see doctors 19 times to get diagnosed with common gynaecological complaints. I wonder how many times women have to see doctors to get diagnosed with uncommon gynaecological complaints.
 
I used to have an account with Pulse (the online magazine for doctors), from when it was possible to join the site as a non-doctor, and as a result I still get sent emails with information on online courses I could do if I was a doctor. One came today which is relevant to the subject of this thread. Note that the emphasis is as it was in the email.

Well if we're talking about sexism I hope someone's going to offer a course for doctors teaching them that if a man comes into your practice complaining of a 6-week headache, shoving your finger up his arse to check his prostate is not appropriate.

I never went back. Took me a whole host of other doctors and 15 months to finally get an ME diagnosis.
 
I've heard quite a few people challenge the claim that male pattern baldness gets more. I have never seen good evidence that it is true.

It was probably funding for research into Androgenetic alopecia and the genetics behind it. As there is a link between it and heart disease and prostate cancer, it seems a decent thing to study. Androgenetic alopecia also includes women despite it commonly being called 'male' pattern baldness.

 
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