User:Sr183155/Gender disparity in American healthcare

In the US, women have worked tirelessly to make huge strides towards gender equality. However, there is still much work that needs to be done. The healthcare system in the US under serves women in a variety of ways. Women face many obstacles in getting proper medical care in the US.

History
Throughout history, women have received different healthcare based solely on their gender. One startling example is Hysteria, which was a disease thought to only affect women. While the symptoms are muddled, hysteria was a used to characterize some unknown mental and physical condition stemming from the uterus. Plato speculated that hysteria was caused by the uterus wandering through the body. Even when that theory was dismissed, there was no clear reason behind what caused hysteria. After a long and murky history, hysteria is no longer accepted as a medical diagnosis. In the Third Edition of the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders hysteria was finally removed from being a specific clinical disorder in February 1980.

Another striking historical instance of women receiving worse healthcare is the Salem Witch Trials. It has been speculated that the strange behavior of those accused of being witches was due to asthma, encephalitis, Lyme disease, epilepsy, child abuse, delusional psychosis, or convulsive ergotism from a fungus infection in bread. However, the local doctor, William Griggs blamed supernatural causes when he could not provide any medical explanation.

Published Works
In today's society, the gender disparity in healthcare has been receiving more attention. There have been a number of pivotal writings that have shown the struggle that women have gone through in getting proper healthcare. Women have started speaking out about being met with disbelief when explaining their symptoms to their doctors. Porochista Khakpour's book, "Sick: A Memoir" became popular for conveying the struggle that the author went through in an effort to get a diagnosis for her Lyme disease. There have been many more similar works that serve to highlight the struggle some women go through just to get some answers about what is afflicting them. "Through the Shadowlands" by Julie Rehmeyer is a memoir that takes the reader through her struggle to get a proper diagnosis for what is afflicting her. Similarly, Jennifer Brea's documentary "Unrest" follows Brea's struggle to get doctors to believe in her sickness.

Diagnosing
Women have significant delays in receiving diagnoses for various conditions. A Danish study showed that these delays were significant: two and a half years for cancer diagnoses, and four and a half years for diabetes. These delays were found in over 700 different diseases. While such a study cannot be conducted in the US due to privatized healthcare, there is reason to believe that the US would have similar delays in treatment of women. The root cause of this issue can be traced to how research is conducted. Most of the time, research about a disease is conducted on male cells. This is due to the common perception that males and females differ only in their reproductive system, thus what is true of one sex can be assumed to be true of the other as well. However, in many diseases this is not the case. Oftentimes women experience different symptoms. If these symptoms are not known or given less importance, women can go without a diagnosis. Women were left out of clinical trials until 1993 when Congress mandated their inclusion after lobbying from the Society for Women's Health Research.

Treatment
There is a broad range of treatments for a variety of diseases, however in many different cases women receive different treatment for the same diagnosis. Women have been found to be less likely to receive painkillers in emergency rooms. The gender disparity in treatment of pain may stem from doctors considering women to be more emotionally driven. The assumption being made is that women are overstating their pain or making it up due to their emotional nature. It is this same reasoning that leads to women being more likely to be prescribed psychotropic drugs for chronic pain, further enforcing the misconception that the pain is all in their heads. Essentially, women are not being given analgesics when they are necessary because doctors do not believe the pain that they are experiencing.

When women are given analgesics, they have to wait longer. For the same intensity of abdominal pain, men wait less time to receive analgesic treatment. Women are perceived by healthcare providers to be exaggerating the amount of pain they feel. It plays into the stereotype that women are extra dramatic which leads to them overstating how much pain they are really in. Additionally, women face delays in the treatment of heart attacks. Women were found to be more likely to receive reperfusion therapy outside of the recommended time frame when treating myocardial infractions. Part of this is due to women being more likely to delay getting medical attention for their myocardial infarction symptoms which can be combated with increased education about myocardial infractions in women. Women display different symptoms of heart attack than men do, but many people are only educated about male symptoms.

Outcomes
The trend for women's health outcomes has been declining. This can be attributed to issues in diagnosing and treating diseases. While women in have a higher life expectancy than men in the US, this can be attributed to women leading generally healthier lives.