this post was submitted on 18 Mar 2024
0 points (NaN% liked)
Health - Resources and discussion for everything health-related
2291 readers
59 users here now
Health: physical and mental, individual and public.
Discussions, issues, resources, news, everything.
See the pinned post for a long list of other communities dedicated to health or specific diagnoses. The list is continuously updated.
Nothing here shall be taken as medical or any other kind of professional advice.
Commercial advertising is considered spam and not allowed. If you're not sure, contact mods to ask beforehand.
Linked videos without original description context by OP to initiate healthy, constructive discussions will be removed.
Regular rules of lemmy.world apply. Be civil.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I know I’m a minority but as someone who works in emergency medicine I think the opposite.
If you come in thinking you have something there’s probably good reason, and I damn well better be sure you don’t have it if I’m going to send you home. You know your body better than me. It may not mean we test for it, but I need solid clinical decision making tools to support not testing for it
Usually that tool is that I'm a woman
I don’t understand, do you mean risk stratification in a specific clinical practice guideline based on gender?
I mean that doctors (emergency or otherwise) tend not to listen to me because I am a woman.
This changes when a (cis, white) man is present.
Happened to my ex wife, and I assume it keeps happening. She has Graves disease for years and told Drs something was wrong, but since she was heavy they just told her to lose weight.
It was left so long by the time they caught it that the cognitive decline that thyroid problems give you, were irreversible