The Mail on Sunday

The women who say: male doctors ignored us too

After we revealed male medics didn’t believe pain-racked endometrio­sis patients were ill...

- By Eve Simmons

STRANDED. Ashamed. Vulnerable. Like you’re going crazy. This is how it feels to hear your debilitati­ng symptoms dismissed as ‘attentions­eeking behaviour’, according to 41-year-old Alison O’Neil.

In spring 2014, the local government worker developed a numbness in her feet. ‘One day I was walking around the office without my left shoe on and I didn’t even realise it – I couldn’t feel anything,’ she says.

‘ I drove without shoes on for months so that I could feel the pedals. My GP, who’s female, told me i t could be a sign of something serious and to head to A&E immediatel­y.’

Yet, according to Alison, the two consultant­s she saw there, who happened to be men, concluded there was nothing physically the matter with her.

‘The way they spoke to me seemed to imply that patients often invent problems like this for attention,’ she says.

They sent her home, telling her they didn’t know what was wrong, but that the numbness would vanish within a couple of weeks.

But f o ur months l a t e r, s he received a letter from the hospital with the results of further tests. She was, in fact, suffering with multiple sclerosis. Alison, from Norwich, says: ‘ Nowadays, if I know I’m seeing a male doctor, it puts me off going altogether.’

Last weekend, The Mail on Sunday revealed the harrowing story of a Derbyshire woman’s 18-year battle for a diagnosis of agonising endometrio­sis – whereby womb tissue grows uncontroll­ably, attaching to other organs in the pelvis.

Fran Bell, 37, received a £500,000 payout from Nottingham University NHS Trust, whose ‘patronisin­g’ male doctors failed to spot the disease, ultimately resulting in her infertilit­y. Her lawyers said t he l andmark case could throw open the doors for hundreds more claims.

We asked Mail on Sunday readers who had had similar experience­s to write to us – and we were inundated with responses.

Dozens of women revealed how they had been fobbed off as ‘hysterical’ or ‘anxious’ – when they had serious illnesses.

In most cases, the doctors who made crucial mistakes were male.

Laura Stephenson-Davies, 40, a marketing manager and motherof-three from Manchester, who is married to accountant John, was told by her male GP that the excruciati­ng pelvic pain she endured for eight years ‘every five weeks, like clockwork’ was just a bad case of irritable bowel syndrome.

‘ The doctors said i t couldn’t possibly be anything to do with my hormones, because it didn’t happen during my period,’ she says.

‘ They made out that I was a hypochondr­iac, repeatedly sending me home with antibiotic­s or antisickne­ss tablets.’

She actually had endometrio­sis – discovered in 2012 by a private gynaecolog­ist, also male, recommende­d by Laura’s mother-in-law. She says: ‘By that time my ovaries were damaged and it had spread to my bowel and liver.

‘The doctor had to operate imme

ORDEAL: Our report last weekend on endometrio­sis sufferer Fran Bell diately to save my chances of having children.’

Another reader, who developed ‘fibroids the size of grapefruit­s’ and ‘life-threatenin­gly low anaemia’ as a result of undiagnose­d endometrio­sis, was told that her symptoms – bleeding for three weeks straight – were due to ‘severe stress’.

Perhaps most shocking of all is the tale of Barbara Robertson, from

Torquay, whose deadly ectopic pregnancy, in which the foetus grows outside the womb, was mistaken for diarrhoea.

Women make up more than twothirds of the NHS medical workforce but they are still in the minority in senior roles: just 39 per cent of consultant­s are female.

In some specialiti­es – oncology and psychiatry, for instance – women do outnumber men but just a quarter of surgeons are female and overall, 45 per cent of doctors are women.

Does it matter, for patients? Previous research shows that male

GPs are more likely than their female peers to overlook heartattac­k symptoms in women, mistaking them for anxiety.

A recent British analysis found that female GPs spend, on average, two minutes longer with their patients – so are more likely to investigat­e non-obvious problems. And women who see female GPs are more likely to attend smear tests and mammograms compared to those who visit male doctors, according to a study published in the New England Journal Of Medicine.

‘ Some doctors f i nd i t much easier to be empathetic with their own gender,’ says Dr Clare Gerada, former chair of the Royal College of GPs.

‘This is especially true when it comes to understand­ing issues around women-specific problems and the menstrual cycle.’

According to Stephanie de Giorgio, a Kent-based GP who trains fellow doctors, a gender bias often sets in at the first consultati­on. ‘When it comes to gynaecolog­ical problems, the key to a correct diagnosis often lies in taking a thorough personal history,’ she says.

‘Explaining exactly what a woman means by “heavy” periods is important – is it just going through a box of tampons, or do you have to put towels on the bed every night, and wear a sanitary towel?

‘ Female doctors may be more likely to ask this.’

Yet, as Dr de Giorgio highlights, it’s not only male doctors who are guilty of dismissing women’s health problems. ‘ The medical profession­al has always had a problem with listening to women – and this applies to doctors of both genders,’ she says.

‘Most of the informatio­n medical students learn about anatomy is based on the example of a 70-yearold white man. A man is usually presented as an example of a “typical” patient. So when women’s symptoms present slightly differentl­y from this male model, doctors may not have the answers – so dismiss it as “anxiety”.’

Indeed, a reader whose eight-year wait for an endometrio­sis diagnosis resulted in infertilit­y wrote: ‘I have had my fair share of bad experience­s from female doctors too. One

If I know I’m seeing a male doctor it puts me off going Women with female GPs are more likely to go for smear tests

told me, “We all have periods so learn to live with it, it’s called being a woman.” ’

A 2014 poll of more than 2,000 female patients revealed that nearly half had been told their pain was ‘all in their head’ – by both male and female doctors.

And the consequenc­es of this bias can be serious.

A 2016 study by The Brain Tumour Charity found t hat twice as many women as men waited more than a year to be diagnosed with brain cancer after first consulting a doctor about their symptoms.

This echoes the findings of a 2013 study, published in the British Medical Journal, showing that compared with male patients, twice the number of women had to visit the GP more than three times before they were referred to a cancer specialist.

So why aren’t doctors listening to women? The answer may lie, as Dr de Georgio suggests, in the history of medical research. Women are too often excluded from studies due to concerns about pregnancy or menopausal s ymptoms i nterfering with results of experiment­s.

Women-specific problems are rarely the subject of research, nor are t he different ways they display signs of illness.

Take heart attacks, which often present as light-headedness or indigestio­n in women, compared to the characteri­stic chest pain in men. Two- thirds of heartattac­k studies either don’t include women patients, or fail to analyse them separately, according to Canadian scientists.

And a study published last week found that women are more likely to suffer severe side effects of drugs – because they are largely tested on men.

However, doctors aren’t wholly t o blame. According t o Dr Gerada, women may be doing themselves a disservice by visiting the GP more frequently than men. ‘It’s assumed that if a man comes to the GP it must be something serious – because they rarely show up, unlike women,’ she says.

As far as Alison O’Neil is concerned, it’s no thanks to male medics that she has, so far, retained full use of her limbs.

‘ If it wasn’t for my female GP referring me for tests, I would be in a wheelchair by now,’ she says.

‘Imagine if those two male doctors were the only medics I saw – I’d have run away feeling ashamed, embarrasse­d and told myself to stop being silly.

‘I’ll always be grateful to my female doctor – the only person who actually listened.’

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 ??  ?? EIGHT YEARS OF PAIN: Laura Stephenson-Davies, with husband John and children, had endometrio­sis – not irritable bowel syndrome, as diagnosed
EIGHT YEARS OF PAIN: Laura Stephenson-Davies, with husband John and children, had endometrio­sis – not irritable bowel syndrome, as diagnosed
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