The Denver Post

Women are calling out “medical gaslightin­g”

- By Melinda Wenner Moyer

Jenneh Rishe could easily run 6 miles in under 45 minutes — until suddenly she couldn’t. In the spring of 2019, Rishe, now

35, began finding her daily jogs a struggle.

Years earlier, she had been diagnosed with two congenital heart conditions that, she said, doctors told her would not affect her daily functionin­g. Yet she was getting worse: Intense chest pains woke her up at night, and she started using a wheelchair after passing out too many times.

Rishe, who lives in Los Angeles, found a highly recommende­d cardiologi­st in the Midwest and flew there to see him. He immediatel­y dismissed her symptoms, she said. “People who have these heart conditions aren’t this sick,” she remembers him saying. He prescribed a new heart medication, told her to exercise and sent her home.

Unsatisfie­d with her care, Rishe saw yet another doctor, who ordered extensive tests that found her arteries were spasming from a lack of oxygen. “I was basically having miniheart attacks whenever I was having chest pain,” she said. Two months later, she had open- heart surgery to correct the problem, which she later learned may have saved her life.

“I constantly still think about how any run I went on quite literally could’ve been my last,” Rishe said.

Research suggests that diagnostic errors occur in up to one out of every seven encounters between a doctor and patient, and that most of these mistakes are driven by the physician’s lack of knowledge. Women are more likely to be misdiagnos­ed than men in a variety of situations.

Patients who have felt that their symptoms were inappropri­ately dismissed as minor or primarily psychologi­cal by doctors are using the term “medical gaslightin­g” to describe their experience­s and sharing their stories on sites like Instagram. The term derives from a play called “Gaslight” about a husband’s attempt to drive his wife insane. And many patients, particular­ly women and people of color, describe the search for accurate diagnosis and treatment as maddening.

“We know that women, and especially women of color, are often diagnosed and treated differentl­y by doctors than men are, even when they have the same health conditions,” said Karen Lutfey Spencer, a researcher who studies medical decision- making at the University of Colorado, Denver.

Studies have shown that compared with men, women face longer waits to be diagnosed with cancer and heart disease, are treated less aggressive­ly for traumatic brain injury, and are less likely to be offered pain medication­s. People of color often receive poorer quality care, too, and doctors are more likely to describe Black patients as uncooperat­ive or noncomplia­nt, which research suggests can affect treatment quality.

“I recall playing it over and over again in my head trying to figure out what I may have done to cause him to react this way,” said Rishe, who is Black, about the Midwest cardiologi­st. “And, yes, racism crossed my mind.”

Women say doctors frequently blame their health problems on their mental health, weight or a lack of self- care, which can delay effective treatment. For instance, Spencer’s research suggests that women are twice as likely as men to be diagnosed with a mental illness when their symptoms are consistent with heart disease.

When Sarah Szczypinsk­i, a journalist in Seattle, began experienci­ng knee pain and swelling in 2016 after giving birth to her son, she said that one doctor told her she had postpartum depression, while another told her she needed to lose weight and do squats — when in fact she was suffering from hip dysplasia exacerbate­d by her pregnancy.

She felt as though the doctors were telling her that her excruciati­ng pain “was something that a woman needs to just live through,” she said. The condition had gotten so bad it ultimately required surgery, in 2020, to saw her leg bone in half and realign it with her hip. When she finally got the diagnosis, “I felt vindicated in a lot of ways,” she said. But ultimately, “it took three years to get a diagnosis and another two to heal.”

Some patients are more likely to be “gaslit and ignored.” Women may be misdiagnos­ed more often than men, in part, because scientists know far less about the female body than they do about the male body, even though “there are biological difference­s that go down to the cellular level,” said Chloe Bird, a senior sociologis­t at Pardee RAND Graduate School who studies women’s health.

In 1977, the U. S. Food and Drug Administra­tion began recommendi­ng that scientists exclude women of childbeari­ng years from early clinical drug trials, fearing that if enrolled women became pregnant, the research could potentiall­y harm their fetuses. Researcher­s were also concerned that hormonal fluctuatio­ns could muddle study results.

Today — thanks in large part to a law passed in 1993 that mandated that women and minorities be included in medical research funded by the National Institutes of Health — women are more systematic­ally included in studies, yet there are still huge knowledge gaps.

For instance, women with heart disease often have different symptoms from men with heart disease, yet doctors are much more familiar with the male symptoms, said Dr. Jennifer Mieres, a cardiologi­st with Northwell Health in New York. When “women show up with symptoms that don’t fit into the algorithm we’re taught in medical school,” she said, they get “gaslit and ignored.”

By the time Michelle Cho, 32, was diagnosed with systemic lupus erythemato­sus, a disease in which the body slowly attacks its own tissues, she had developed kidney failure, a heart murmur and pneumonia — yet the first doctor she went to diagnosed her with allergies, she said, and the second doctor thought she was pregnant.

“I left each time feeling disappoint­ed, sad and uneasy, because I knew they had not solved my problem or helped me in any way, and it had been yet another wasted day,” said Cho, a New York City- based medical student. “It felt like they were saying, ‘ It’s all in my head.’ ”

How doctors and patients can elevate care.” It’s hard to know how to begin to address these systemic problems, experts said, but scientists argue that at the very least, there needs to be more research on women’s health conditions.

Doctors should also be given more time with their patients and see fewer patients overall, Spencer suggested. Research has shown that when people are juggling many cognitive tasks, they are more likely to make biased decisions. One study found, for instance, that male doctors were less likely to prescribe pain medication­s to

Black patients with lower back pain when the doctors were under stress.

Physicians are often working under difficult conditions that “make it easy to make mistakes and oversights,” Spencer said. “It’s like a gauntlet of problemati­c systems and processes that invite bias.” Researcher­s have also called for more training in medical school about unconsciou­s bias and racism in health care. In 2019, California passed a law requiring hospitals to implement implicit bias programs for all health care providers who provide perinatal care.

Until more changes occur, women and patients of color might want to consider bringing a friend or relative with them to their medical appointmen­ts, said Dr. Alyson Mcgregor, cofounder and director for the sex and gender in emergency medicine division at Brown University. “It really helps if you have an advocate there that can intervene and say things like, ‘ She is not normally in this much pain,’ ” she said.

And “see another doctor if you feel dismissed,” Mcgregor said. You might even want to consider seeking out a female physician or a provider with better cultural competence, who may better “understand your perspectiv­e and language.”

 ?? Marta Monteiro, © The New York Times Co. ?? Studies show female patients and people of color are more likely to have their symptoms dismissed by medical providers. Experts say: Keep asking questions.
Marta Monteiro, © The New York Times Co. Studies show female patients and people of color are more likely to have their symptoms dismissed by medical providers. Experts say: Keep asking questions.

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